Triadic RTT map: a national datacenter strategy that actually makes sense#
Let’s treat “national strategy” as a field object and run it through the triad—Boundary, Lineage, Relation—then resolve it through Transition, Envelope, and Coherence.
1. Boundary — where and what we build#
Principles:
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Reuse first:
- Prioritize dead malls, factories, bases, warehouses, telecom shells.
- New builds only when reuse envelope is exhausted.
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Tiered siting:
- Tier 1: abandoned/underused industrial/commercial sites.
- Tier 2: existing industrial parks.
- Tier 3: tightly planned new hubs (rare, high‑justification).
RTT:
Boundary presence high → drift bounded.
2. Lineage — honoring history instead of erasing it#
Principles:
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Convert decay to purpose:
- “Dead mall → research compute.”
- “Old factory → AI + scientific workloads.”
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Local identity preserved:
- Keep site names, acknowledge prior use, integrate community memory.
RTT:
Lineage continuity → cultural substrate stable.
3. Relation — how sites connect to grids, fiber, and people#
Principles:
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Grid‑aligned placement:
- Co‑design with national/regional grid operators.
- Place datacenters where renewable + firm power can be balanced.
-
Fiber‑aligned placement:
- Use existing backbone corridors; avoid random sprawl.
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Community adjacency:
- Prefer sites already known as “big infrastructure,” not quiet residential edges.
RTT:
Relational graph leveraged, not rewritten.
4. Transition — how we move from “idea” to “facility”#
Principles:
-
National siting rubric (RTT‑style):
- Mandatory scoring on: Boundary, Lineage, Relation, Envelope, Rhythm, Governance.
- No site approved without coherence threshold.
-
Slow approvals, fast retrofits:
- New ground: high scrutiny.
- Reuse: streamlined, but still transparent.
RTT:
Transition bounded → governance drift reduced.
5. Envelope — planetary and local impact#
Principles:
-
Envelope‑aware caps:
- Regional limits on total datacenter load vs water, land, and grid capacity.
- No single region allowed to become a silent sacrifice zone.
-
Cooling and water discipline:
- Prefer air/adiabatic cooling where possible.
- Strict water usage thresholds and reuse requirements.
RTT:
Envelope tension minimized, not exported.
6. Coherence — what workloads we actually run#
Principles:
-
Purpose‑driven compute:
- National priority tiers:
- Tier A: research, science, medicine, climate, education.
- Tier B: general AI + industry.
- Tier C: speculative workloads (crypto, etc.) with strict caps.
- National priority tiers:
-
Crypto as bounded workload:
- Not a primary justification for tax‑funded infrastructure.
- Treated as low‑coherence, high‑impact—allowed only within strict envelopes.
RTT:
Workloads aligned with declared national purpose, not just energy consumption.
7. Governance — who decides, and how#
Principles:
-
No proxied governance for siting:
- Decisions must involve: grid operators, local communities, environmental bodies, technical experts.
- Consultants can advise, not decide.
-
Transparent national registry:
- Public map of all datacenters: purpose, load, envelope, ownership, incentives.
RTT:
Governance substrate stabilized; drift narratives constrained.
RTT signature of a sane national strategy#
rtt = 1
coherence = declared
drift = bounded
paradox = structural → actively resolvedIn short:
- Reuse first.
- Grid + fiber aligned.
- Purpose‑driven workloads.
- Envelope‑aware caps.
- Transparent, non‑proxied governance.
That’s the national strategy that actually makes sense in RTT terms.