2young badazz Profile picture
Dec 15, 2020 47 tweets 17 min read Read on X
cloud/fog/edge:
i havent forgotten about the original target, i am drawing a big circle around elon musk and dont want to rush the process. besides, the benefit of 'exposing' elon musk comes from placing him into context
'cloud computing', 'fog computing' etc are terms that sound gimmicky and annoying. 'cloud computing' itself has been overloaded to mean multiple unrelated things, which is alienating and discourages people from seeking a concrete understanding.
these terms, cloud or fog or edge, refer to a system of distributed computing. one of the main arcs in the history of high technology is the shifting around of computational power, particularly back and forth between end user device and centralized facilities:
in the early years computational power was centralized. to allow many users to access it, systems of time sharing were developed (see MULTICS). this is one significant thrust in the arc, access to centralized computing power.
in the early to mid 60s, the idea of centralized computing as a public utility was widespread theatlantic.com/past/docs/unbo… ImageImage
and already the issues with achieving this were well understood ImageImage
then came a shift to microprocessors, and the ability to deliver computational power in the user's own device ImageImageImage
and this led to the rise of personal computers in the 1980s. where computational power is available, is subject to various concerns from the ruling class perspective, for example a shift towards end-user devices meant less surveillance but also wider faster adoption.
the history of distributed computation is a balancing act of these concerns and goals. re: goals, think again to the kill chain. pc and commercial internet improve early links in the chain, but there are limits to their utility because pc are in a fixed location.
without mobile devices, there is no way to truly track or monitor targets. mobile devices must sacrifice computing power to achieve small size. but they also need to be engaging to encourage adoption:
the entire 'silicon valley' gambit is to disguise a global military transformation as a consumer industry, to place the entire world in the crosshairs and launder this as consumer choice. people may see through it but its been very successful regardless.
one company that is famous for addressing mobile issues in the 90s is an apple spinoff called General Magic. 'cloud' predates 94 contra to the image but the company was nonetheless important in advancing centralized computation in personal devices. Image
the company was another 'get investors to pay for it' scheme, labbing out issues with mobile devices on investor dollars, and then its staff spun out and created the REAL mobile device industry ImageImageImage
in the 90s it was already recognized that to conserve battery and deal with computing limitations, mobile devices would need to offload computation to an external location. mobile faced the same problems as the utility computing paradigm, lack of adequate network infrastructure.
the infrastructure laid during dotcom boom solved this problem, per early cloud computing book 'the big switch' ImageImageImage
remember after the bust the infrastructure began to come back online in earnest around 2006. this is when they said the fiber glut was over. this roughly inaugurates the era of 'cloud', when this term began to be used in earnest.
06 through 08 marks the big initial push of PR related to 'cloud computing'. google started to offer an online document software, and companies like IBM started to push towards utility computing.
its worth separating what is encompassed by 'cloud computing' into separate ruling class goals. one major thrust was to push everything into centralized locations in order to capture more data. centralized 'cloud' software storage *and* infrastructure all enable
unprecedented gathering and processing of data. i will cover 'big data' as a separate topic, the focus here is the maturation of the ruling class' distributed computing paradigm, the delivery of computing power.
so in the 'beginning', there was the 'cloud'. offloading mobile device computation was something examined since the 90s, as shown by general magic. here is a 2001 paper referring to this as 'cyber foraging'. Image
a more widely used term now is 'mobile offload' or 'cloud offload'. use cases include image processing (face rec) and natural language processing (siri). Image
these things, and indeed any pure 'mobile to cloud' offload i think still relates more to the gathering of 'big data'.
so what do i mean by saying that distributed computing is a separate thrust? pure cloud offload alone has significant problems when it comes to achieving *low latency*. ImageImageImage
the surveillance system exists to enable some kind of kinetic response. *thats why* its important to achieve low latency. this is still one of the greatest weaknesses in the kill chain. 'cloudlets', or 'fog' computing are the solution to this problem.
'fog' computing refers to computational power delivered *closer* to the target than central cloud processing. it is an extension of the cloud, *closer* to the device that requires offload. ImageImageImage
ImageImageImageImage
ImageImageImage
there is deliberate confusion of the terms 'fog' and 'edge' computing, but roughly speaking:

cloud refers to centralized, powerful and highly secure computational infrastructure.

fog refers to outposts of cloud computing power closer to the target.

edge refers to computation
done on the device itself.
it should be becoming very clear that the 'military' and 'consumer' paradigm for delivering computation are indeed the same and solve the same problems ImageImageImage
interestingly, in the 2005-2007 era of early cloud computing there were several projects to modularize 'data centers', put them in shipping containers. ImageImage
a lot of hype aside this never took off though it saw military usage even dating back to the ~05 era. Image
this was i think a case of a technology being trialed before its time, the concept is being revived as a flexible way to deliver fog/edge computing power (only a relevant paradigm since ~2014), notably by azure: Image
'azure space' is a very new microsoft offering that includes azure modular datacenters with an option for satellite internet powered by starlink. ImageImageImage
as the picture mentions, aws is also expanding its space efforts. i highlighted iridium because we will come back to this company at some point, they were one of the companies that trialed LEO internet back in the 90s. ImageImageImage
so the 'cloud', the distributed network of computing power, is extending up into space and out towards the very edge where most of the sensors and devices live, and this period marks a very significant degree of maturity i think. many of the pieces of the puzzle are now in place.
in addition to the possibilities of LEO internet, 'cloud providers' are partnering with telcos to place fog/edge computing power closer to the mobile devices requiring computational offload.
one of these offerings is aws wavelength: ImageImageImageImage
another is 'azure edge zone' ImageImageImageImage
these imo are more usefully thought of as 'fog' nodes because they are static and not distributed on edge *devices* themselves. again the jargon isnt as important as understanding the paradigm of distribution
in addition to shipping containers, which could conceivably be transported by autonomous vehicles, UAVs themselves have been studied as possible fog nodes: ImageImageImageImage
using other UAVs in a swarm to distribute computational burden in conjunction with cloud connectivity has also been studied: ImageImageImage
again to me this seems to be a paradigm reaching maturity where delivery of computation is entirely flexible and liquid, and sensors/devices can use complex reasoning to determine where to offload computation to. 'big data' that is less urgent can go towards highly secure clouds,
whereas data requiring low latency decision making can be sent towards fog or edge nodes. this is a major step towards the realization of what i imagine has been the plan since the 1960s.
the sloppiness of the earlier eras has given way to something that i think will more or less remain the shape of global computing architecture well into the future.
the 'next wave' of technologies will all be enabled by this flexible and low latency computing

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More from @2youngBadazz

Jan 16
zionism:
its been awhile since i've done a proper thread on here, so i thought it was about time to get back to the old ways and just let it rip with no capitalization or editing. i will post the result, properly edited into "article" form, after this is done.
naturally, there have been a lot of comparisons lately between zionism and nazism. and this is of course a correct comparison - but to what degree do we understand the depth of the relationship between these two phenomena?
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a brief review of the war in iraq:
id like to start by apologizing for the long gap between the previous entry and the current, it was a busy year for me. i wouldnt like to give the impression that these longer-form explorations - which represent a massive improvement from say the earlier threads - take an entire
year to produce, or that such massive delays are necessary. hopefully, i will be more productive with regards to these threads in 2023. i havent finished writing this one, but i think it is time to get started anyway. i am not going to shorten any aspect of it, so bear with me.
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@apollosthirdeye to this i would say "yes" with some major caveats. the first one being that "intel" is a label that is imo applied incorrectly here - the fortunes of the drug trade belong to individual members of the ruling class, not to the agencies that work on their behalf. these agencies
@apollosthirdeye simply perform administrative work as a service and extract some kind of fee. not only does the label of 'intel' narrow the scope of the agencies involved - the entire state apparatus is involved - but it confuses the principals of the trade itself.
@apollosthirdeye and this view is very popular of course by design. "military" would be a more appropriate label in terms of the amount of executive burden that they bear imo. but to get back to the point - there *is* something that these elons and fronts are covering up, right? surely. so,
Read 39 tweets
Jun 6, 2022
i challenge anyone who is promoting the 'competing factions of the ruling class' to actually outline and explain and substantiate what the factions are and how are they competing and why
and ill be clear on what i mean here because these are vague and unfortunate terms and imo vague and unfortunate framing. 'ruling class' is itself a nebulous term the way it is often used, so lets put a very specific set of definitions on it that can be examined:
definition 1: "terrorist" attacks and mass shootings.

definition 2: root-level decisions such as to run the covid operation and how to shape covid policy, or the "supply chain shortage", or how to manage isis and drug cartels

definition 3: management of police and military
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Mar 12, 2022
seeing people gear up to defend russia against false flags despite their obvious complicity in the entire show, that imo is the big iteration here from say syria.
non-rhetorical question, what *is* the value of exposing the millionth painfully obvious paid actor, the beauty blogger in the hospital? it can be instructive to people who are less familiar with psyops, to demonstrate in real time how the news works -
particularly, i think the speed with which they had an actor ready and on the scene is food for thought re: the mechanical process of producing this sort of fodder
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Mar 9, 2022
ill try to get back to business soon but meanwhile i think that people tended to miss the point of the nato black sun post -
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