
As the issue of “DATA CENTERS” becomes increasingly national my worry is that the nature of the conversation will become increasingly retarded as poorly informed community members enter the sausage-making process for local development to realize there’s not much they can do to stop what’s coming.
No one from Krambu was at the meeting last night in Bonner because why would they be? The community meeting they did appear at last month, hosted by the Friends of Two Rivers, was similarly non-obligatory, but Steve Wood understood the strategic benefit of putting a few crumbs of information out to the public. Hopefully “the public” understands it’s going to be up to them to educate themselves going forward.
Before I get to who was at last night’s meeting, let’s look at Newport, Washington, where Krambu is further along in the process of building their template for an environmentally friendly data center:

“In 2017 we developed some technology on the power and cooling side that was energy efficient and environmentally friendly,” Jank said. He said the technology allowed them to remove refrigerants and made the computers more energy efficient. “We got rid of waste.”
They were able to repurpose the heat from the computers. Steve Wood, former Ponderay Newsprint and Merkle Standard executive and now Krambu CEO, said the technology is the newest on the planet.
“We have been issued several patents,” Wood said, with additional patents filed.
“We partnered with Supermicro,” Wood said. Supermicro, Super Micro Computer, Inc., is a multibillion dollar global company that builds servers, storage systems and switches. Supermicro will be one of Krambu’s channel partners, he said, meaning they will help sell Krambu products.
The computers being built and located at the Newport site will be solving problems with Artificial Intelligence for clients, he said, using a computer network made up of 72 servers.
“These will be the highest performing computers in the world,” Wood said, using what is known as a 72-node cluster.
Missoula County officials at last night’s meeting confidently and proudly reminded those of us in the school cafeteria how they crafted a globally innovative provision to require data centers to use NEW, RENEWABLE energy for their computing infrastructure. My question was if the County officials had seen any indication that provision would be legally targeted with high-paid lawyers. While I got a non-answer answer local bureaucrats excel at providing, the question was more or less rhetorical, and that’s because companies like SUPERMICRO will have vastly more resources at their disposal than “the public” will.
For context, this comes from Supermicro’s Wikipedia page:
In September 2014, Supermicro moved its corporate headquarters to the former Mercury News headquarters in North San Jose, California, along Interstate 880, naming the campus Supermicro Green Computing Park. In 2017, the company completed a new 182,000 square-foot manufacturing building on the campus, which was designed to meet LEED gold certification. The company expanded its San Jose campus in September 2021 with a manufacturing facility for advanced storage and server equipment. Supermicro was reported to have 2,400 people working in San Jose.
In February 2025, Supermicro began building its third California-based manufacturing campus. The new campus is being developed with the intention to increase production of liquid-cooled services for data centers. The company produces a majority of its servers in California. Following a push for more state-side manufacturing by American President Donald Trump, Supermicro considered expanding server production in states like Mississippi and Texas. A few months later, in July 2025, Supermicro expressed its interest in expanding investment regarding manufacturing in Europe to meet artificial intelligence demand in the area.
In October 2025, Supermicro created a subsidiary focusing on American federal agencies, which would provide cloud-services and data center materials manufactured from its facilities in Silicon Valley, California.
One of my comments last night focused on the deplorable media landscape that exists, hence my retardation concerns. I mean, the irony of Supermicro moving into the former headquarters of the Mercury News is not lost on me.
When perennial Democrat candidate, Monica Tranel, made her comments about the Data Center, my re-dar (retard radar) alerted me to the hilarity of this “public defender”, who was recently busted for using AI to get a burglary charge dismissed, educating the room about a special Tariff we should all know about.
For a quick reminder about Tranel’s AI transgression, here’s the incident that inspired me to give her a specific shout-out:
A top attorney for the Office of Public Defender may have violated local artificial intelligence rules after the county attorney’s office discovered a case filing generated with AI.
Managing public defender Monica Tranel filed the motion Feb. 9 to dismiss a case about a local burglary, according to documents obtained by the Missoulian.
One week later, she asked the court to strike that document from the record after a county prosecutor suggested Tranel made the filing without properly disclosing the artificial intelligence use, or fact-checking its contents. She subsequently filed a corrected motion.
When Tranel said “Tariff”, it was clear many of the young people in attendance were immediately triggered. It was cute to see their fragile minds softly held by Tranel as she reassured them this wasn’t one of THOSE Tariffs, it was a really cool “large-load” Tariff, brought to you by the clown show currently running the Public Service Commission. Here’s the deets:
NorthWestern Energy recently filed an application with the Montana Public Service Commission (PSC) seeking approval of a new tariff aimed at governing how the utility serves large new or expanding electricity users, including data centers and other energy-intensive operations.
The proposal, submitted by NorthWestern Corp., would apply to customers with electric loads of 5 megawatts (MW) or greater, and it outlines contract requirements and service terms designed to manage the costs and operational demands of serving such large users while shielding existing customers from potential cost increases.
When Tranel told the room “large loads” meant 5MW loads or greater, my non-retarded buddy immediately turned to me and said, “then 4.9 MW Data Centers”. Sounds about right.
I’ll be writing more specifically about the PSC soon, but something about this proposal from Northwestern Energy makes me think that Tariff’ing large loads is just a PR move ahead of their MASSIVE merger with Black Hills Corps., which was announced last August:
NorthWestern Energy announced Tuesday it plans to merge with Black Hills Corp “to create a premier regional regulated electric and natural gas utility company” in a process expected to take 12 to 15 months and result in an enterprise valued at $15.4 billion.
The director of the Montana Public Service Commission said regulators will scrutinize the deal, and an energy watchdog group said the merger could be an improvement for clean energy compared to the “current stagnant utility.”
NorthWestern Energy is a monopoly utility that operates in Montana, South Dakota and Nebraska and serves 787,000 customers. It counts 413,400 electric and 214,500 natural gas customers in Montana.
The other notable person in the room last night was Tom Sergios, the Cognizant sellout I wrote about last week and who I immediately saw enjoying beer on the patio of Cranky Sam’s after posting my article. It’s important to enjoy the money you make in tech. I mean, why else compromise your morals, ethics, and soul for the child-fucking class?
May the odds be ever in their favor.

Thanks for reading!






















