Favoring simple, single-purpose hardware architectures over complex over-engineered systems, reducing energy overhead through architectural restraint.
The Tao Te Ching frequently references the uncarved block (pu)—the natural, unadorned state that contains infinite potential. Laozi critiques over-elaboration and unnecessary refinement. Modern data center hardware often reflects this problem: servers designed to handle every possible workload, featuring components and capabilities that remain unused in specific deployments, consuming power for features that serve no purpose. The uncarved block approach asks: what minimal, purposeful hardware serves this actual function? Specialized processors for machine learning don't waste energy on general computation; appliances built for single tasks consume less than general-purpose systems trying to be everything. This doesn't mean crude design, but rather elegant simplicity—each component earning its place through genuine necessity. By embracing hardware simplicity and avoiding the bloat of speculative capability, data centers reduce energy overhead and achieve greater efficiency through restraint rather than exhaustive feature parity.
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