And at TechGrapple, we’ll be watching every punch thrown. What’s your take on the edge vs. cloud debate? Is the latency problem overblown, or are the hyperscalers already losing? Drop your take in the comments or hit us up on X @TechGrapple.
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No discussion of edge computing is complete without the elephant in the server rack: . And at TechGrapple, we’ll be watching every punch thrown
For the past decade, the story of cloud computing was simple: bigger is better . Hyperscalers like AWS, Microsoft, and Google raced to build sprawling data centers in rural Iowa and desert Nevada. But a tectonic shift is underway. The new battleground is not the cornfield—it’s the crowded colocation facility in downtown Chicago, the basement of a telecom exchange in London, or a converted warehouse next to a freeway in Tokyo. Is the latency problem overblown, or are the
The edge is not a philosophy. It’s a survival tactic.
NVIDIA’s H100 and B200 GPUs are power-hungry beasts. Running 100 of them in a suburban edge facility requires liquid cooling infrastructure that most urban buildings simply do not have. Startups are now retrofitting old factories and even underground parking garages, not because they want to, but because the power grid can’t handle any more density in traditional business districts.