Laozi taught that 'the name that can be named is not the eternal name'—data centers accumulate layers of legacy systems with names but no essential function, consuming energy indefinitely.
Laozi opens the Tao Te Ching by noting that naming things separates us from their essence and creates illusion. In data centers, this manifests as legacy systems kept alive by institutional names and departments, running on servers that consume gigawatts despite providing no measurable value. A database named 'backup-archive-2008' perpetuates itself through bureaucratic momentum, not necessity. The Taoist approach is radical simplification: regularly examine what exists without justification, and let it dissolve. By releasing attachment to named systems—eliminating obsolete services, consolidating redundant functions, and questioning every running process—data centers dramatically reduce energy footprint. This requires surrendering the false security of 'what if we need it someday,' trusting instead that essential functions will clearly announce themselves. Efficiency emerges from releasing what cannot be justified by present reality.
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