Recognizing that over-provisioned but underutilized servers represent wasted potential, applying Taoist concepts of emptiness and void to right-sizing infrastructure.
Paradoxically, Taoism values emptiness and void as sources of potential and utility. A cup is useful because of its empty space, not its material. Data centers often maintain excessive idle capacity for theoretical peak demands that rarely occur, creating energetically expensive emptiness. This violates the principle: useful emptiness should be dynamic and proportional, not static and bloated. Right-sizing infrastructure means accepting that some void is necessary—but continuously evaluating whether that void serves actual need or merely represents fear-based over-provisioning. Laozi teaches that the useful emerges from proper emptiness. Applied here: maintain enough spare capacity to handle real demand spikes, but eliminate the phantom capacity that serves no function except anxiety reduction. This requires trust in system responsiveness and honest assessment of actual usage patterns, allowing infrastructure to breathe with appropriate emptiness rather than suffocating under unnecessary hardware.
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