They sell rack-as-compute.[0] Their minimum order is one rack: You plug in power and network, connect to the built-in management software (API), and start spinning up VMs.
[0] With built-in networking and storage.
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modular_data_center
Also:
* https://www.deltapowersolutions.com/en/mcis/data-center-solu...
* https://atos.net/en/solutions/high-performance-computing-hpc...
* https://www.zelladc.com/zella-max
Search for "shipping container data centre" or "containerized datacenter".
Sun did that experiment:
This achievement is clearly worth a lot to people.
It's nice, it's just nothing new.
"no cables no assembly just cloud" wtf is that
When people hear cloud, it means that aspects such as electricity costs, electricity stability, Internet, bandwidth, fire protection, safety, etc etc are abstracted away.
Oxide IS on-premise, right? The website is very vague and wishy-washy.
I believe the episode name was "Virtualizing Time"
Ehrm. What is that exactly?
Are you alluding to cute design, different user interface? Or ditching then common PC component modularity? "Thinking differently"?
One difference is that Oxide development was done in the open and they don't seem hell bent on creating a closed ecosystem. (Yet, at least)
You are also correct that we diverge from Apple in other ways, such as our commitment to openness, rather than secrecy.
The first iMac famously made it easy to connect to the Internet; The 'i' in iMac was for "Internet". Its setup manual was a couple of pages long, mostly pictures and IIRC, just 37 words.