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Press Enterprise

Modular approach could help data center boom

The race to build artificial intelligence infrastructure has triggered the largest construction cycles in recent U.S. history. Tech companies are investing billions into new data centers that must come online at unprecedented speed to support rapidly expanding AI models.
Yet America’s construction capacity cannot match the pace of digital investment. Traditional building relies on slow, sequential processes. Even standard projects take years. AI campuses are planned in months. This gap is becoming the defining bottleneck of the AI era.

Modular approach could help data center boom

The race to build artificial intelligence infrastructure has triggered the largest construction cycles in recent U.S. history. Tech companies are investing billions into new data centers that must come online at unprecedented speed to support rapidly expanding AI models.
Yet America’s construction capacity cannot match the pace of digital investment. Traditional building relies on slow, sequential processes. Even standard projects take years. AI campuses are planned in months. This gap is becoming the defining bottleneck of the AI era.

Modular approach could help data center boom

The race to build artificial intelligence infrastructure has triggered the largest construction cycles in recent U.S. history. Tech companies are investing billions into new data centers that must come online at unprecedented speed to support rapidly expanding AI models.
Yet America’s construction capacity cannot match the pace of digital investment. Traditional building relies on slow, sequential processes. Even standard projects take years. AI campuses are planned in months. This gap is becoming the defining bottleneck of the AI era.

Modular approach could help data center boom

The race to build artificial intelligence infrastructure has triggered the largest construction cycles in recent U.S. history. Tech companies are investing billions into new data centers that must come online at unprecedented speed to support rapidly expanding AI models.
Yet America’s construction capacity cannot match the pace of digital investment. Traditional building relies on slow, sequential processes. Even standard projects take years. AI campuses are planned in months. This gap is becoming the defining bottleneck of the AI era.

‘Paint the Plow’ winners declared

The youth at the North Central Secure Treatment Unit in Danville won a PennDOT contest in Columbia and Montour counties.

“Paint the Plow” is a statewide outreach program that promotes winter driving safety by challenging children to create original renderings to put on plows.

The PennDOT District 3 program theme was “Don’t Race. Allow Some Space,” and the students won the contest by depicting a winter scene with a driver on Interstate 80 with plenty of space around him.

‘Paint the Plow’ winners declared

The youth at the North Central Secure Treatment Unit in Danville won a PennDOT contest in Columbia and Montour counties.

“Paint the Plow” is a statewide outreach program that promotes winter driving safety by challenging children to create original renderings to put on plows.

The PennDOT District 3 program theme was “Don’t Race. Allow Some Space,” and the students won the contest by depicting a winter scene with a driver on Interstate 80 with plenty of space around him.

‘Paint the Plow’ winners declared

The youth at the North Central Secure Treatment Unit in Danville won a PennDOT contest in Columbia and Montour counties.

“Paint the Plow” is a statewide outreach program that promotes winter driving safety by challenging children to create original renderings to put on plows.

The PennDOT District 3 program theme was “Don’t Race. Allow Some Space,” and the students won the contest by depicting a winter scene with a driver on Interstate 80 with plenty of space around him.

‘Paint the Plow’ winners declared

The youth at the North Central Secure Treatment Unit in Danville won a PennDOT contest in Columbia and Montour counties.

“Paint the Plow” is a statewide outreach program that promotes winter driving safety by challenging children to create original renderings to put on plows.

The PennDOT District 3 program theme was “Don’t Race. Allow Some Space,” and the students won the contest by depicting a winter scene with a driver on Interstate 80 with plenty of space around him.

‘Paint the Plow’ winners declared

The youth at the North Central Secure Treatment Unit in Danville won a PennDOT contest in Columbia and Montour counties.

“Paint the Plow” is a statewide outreach program that promotes winter driving safety by challenging children to create original renderings to put on plows.

The PennDOT District 3 program theme was “Don’t Race. Allow Some Space,” and the students won the contest by depicting a winter scene with a driver on Interstate 80 with plenty of space around him.

Speak up about school funding

Last April, I wrote a letter to the editor about the need for Pennsylvania to budget more money for K-12 education and also to reform cyber charter schools. I asked others who share my concerns about Pennsylvania’s neglected public schools to contact their state representative and senator to encourage them to adopt a budget that includes those provisions. I’m grateful to those of you who did.

As you know, the budget process was contentious and the final approval was months late, but for those of us supporting improved public education, it was good news.