March 7, Thursday afternoon
16:00—18:00 at De Willem.


Traces of Power is organized by the permacomputing evenings,
with support from SURF, RIPE NCC, KC WdKA,
an unsustainable research group, and Regieorgaan SIA.

Benjamin
Benjamin Czaja

Energy footprint of the Dutch National Supercomputer

The Dutch national supercomputer Snellius facilitates research across the Netherlands. The research can vary from topics like climate modelling, to drug discovery, and from fluid dynamics to artificial intelligence. Understanding the energy required to support such research is crucial. Understanding the energy usage of a system like Snellius can open the door on our understanding of energy usage of data center’s in general. Benjamin Czaja is a High Performance Computing advisor at SURF. He supports the Dutch National Supercomputer Snellius, and in particular focuses on Energy efficiency. Ben is interested in understanding how much energy scientific research uses, and wants to explore the ways to reduce energy usage.

Vensa
Vesna Manojlovic

Internet Governance & Environmental (un)Sustainability

We are in an environmental emergency! As a part of Internet Governance community, technical communities must focus on immediate actions of decreasing material & energy consumption, reducing GHG emissions and decelerating growth. Let’s build the Internet within planetary boundaries. Vesna Manojlovic is a hacker, mother, activist, feminist and community builder at RIPE NCC, a regional internet registry. https://labs.ripe.net/author/becha/

Maeloes
Marloes de Valk

A Tale of Two Data Centres

This lecture-performance traverses a time line bringing together local, national and international events to reconstruct the decision making process that allowed for the arrival of 200 hectares of energy hungry data centres, 6 meters below sea level, in the North of Noord-Holland, in the midst of the climate crisis. Marloes de Valk is a software artist and writer in the post-despair stage of coping with the threat of global warming and being spied on by the devices surrounding her. Surprised by the obsessive dedication with which we, even post-Snowden, share intimate details about ourselves to an often not too clearly defined group of others, astounded by the deafening noise we generate while socializing with the technology around us, she is looking to better understand why.