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Cryptocurrency News Articles

Bitcoin Miners Are Pivoting to AI to Survive. Core Scientific Entered the Race Years Ago

Oct 23, 2024 at 09:51 pm

AI clusters and bitcoin mining operations have vastly different needs. Core Scientific's chief development officer gets down to the nitty gritty.

Bitcoin Miners Are Pivoting to AI to Survive. Core Scientific Entered the Race Years Ago

Bitcoin miner Core Scientific (CORZ) announced a deal on Tuesday to help cloud-computing firm CoreWeave expand its artificial intelligence capabilities.

The agreement will see Core Scientific build a data center suited for AI clusters, while CoreWeave provides high computational services to clients and ultimately owns the machines and software stack.

Core Scientific is able to customize every bit of infrastructure to make it application specific, catering to the specific needs of AI fleets and bitcoin mining.

For example, the power infrastructure is completely different for mining and AI applications. If the power goes down in a bitcoin mine, it’s not the end of the world, because the ability to switch your machines on and off depending on the price of electricity is an essential facet of bitcoin mining, to the point that many firms use that function in a strategic manner.

But AI fleets need constant uptime, and that means implementing expensive power redundancy measures, including batteries, backup generators and uninterruptible power supply, or UPS, systems.

Another example: Whether you’re mining bitcoin or running an AI cluster, machines must be cooled to avoid overheating – but the optimal cooling method will depend on the application. Most bitcoin rigs are cooled by fans or by being submerged in a pool of dielectric fluid, which comes at little cost. The GPUs used for AI, on the other hand, require some form of air conditioning, or to pass fluid over the machine’s silicon chip – two methods that consume large amounts of energy.

Other differences emerge when you look at the kind of hard drives used for AI fleets compared to bitcoin mining operations, or the amount of fiber and connectivity that is needed for each site.

Big picture: AI sites tend to be much more expensive and less versatile than bitcoin mining operations, which can be plopped in all kinds of remote locations all around the world. That’s why Core Scientific, as a rule of thumb when examining a new site, will determine whether the economics of it makes sense for AI purposes first, and, if not, look at it from a bitcoin mining perspective.

“If I built a world-class air-cooled bitcoin mining site, I'm going to spend probably between $500,000 to $750,000 per megawatt,” Cann said. But that cost climbs up to $10 million to $12 million by megawatt for AI-related GPUs, he said.

That certainly puts the size of the 500-megawatt deal with CoreWeave into perspective. By that measure, it will cost roughly $5 billion to build the infrastructure CoreWeave needs. The project will be big enough that it could power roughly 100,000 homes, according to data from the Electric Reliability Council of Texas – the Lone Star State’s electrical grid operator. Most of that power will be coming online in 2025 and 2026.

It’s still just a fraction of Core Scientific’s total footprint. The firm currently owns 1,600 megawatts worth of heavy electrical infrastructure and has 1,200 megawatts of power purchase agreements.

Lots of experience to draw on

According to Cann, the reason Core Scientific is so good at building application-specific infrastructure is because the firm has a wealth of experience using all kinds of high compute machines.

For example, the company used GPUs to mine ether (ETH) back before Ethereum switched its consensus mechanism from proof-of-work to proof-of-stake in 2022. Using similar GPUs, Core Scientific started hosting AI clusters in early 2019, Cann said, way before ChatGPT and chipmaker Nvidia shook the world.

The firm stopped running its unit in November 2022, soon before entering Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. Core Scientific emerged from bankruptcy in January after receiving approval for its restructuring plan.

“A lot of people talk about us pivoting into AI, but we've been doing AI for a long time,” Cann said. “We’re taking advantage of market conditions and expanding our AI piece back again.”

And the fast-paced world of bitcoin mining has shaped the team – which counts people with decades of experience building traditional data centers – in a way that gives it an edge over their competitors who’ve never been involved with bitcoin, Cann said.

“Bitcoin is a 24/7, 365 days a year, global market. It's always moving,” Cann said.

“Some of the traditional guys that don’t have experience mining bitcoin, they're just going to be a little bit behind, because they have to catch up on that fast iteration,” he added. “AI is the only thing I've ever seen that iterates as fast as bitcoin mining.”

News source:www.coindesk.com

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