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  • An underwater data centre being developed by Chinese maritime technology company Highlander is seen under construction at a shipyard in Nantong, in China's eastern Jingsu province on September 11, 2025. Power-hungry data centres run hot, so one Chinese company is planning to submerge a pod of servers in the sea off Shanghai with hopes of solving computing's energy woes. (Photo by AFP) / China OUT / To go with AFP story China-technology-science-climate-energy, FOCUS by Emily WANG, Jing Xuan TENG (Photo by STR/AFP via Getty Images)

  • This photo illustration shows the "Text With Jesus" chatbot app displayed on an iPhone on October 2, 2025, in Washington, DC. Artificial intelligence, the technology upending nearly every corner of society, is creeping into religion, serving up virtual Jesus and automated sermons -- a change drawing mixed reviews from the faithful. Religious chatbots and other faith-based digital tools are growing in number, offering counsel, comfort and spiritual guidance during an age of rapidly transforming socialization and engagement. One app, which is called Text with Jesus, has thousands of paying subscribers. It lets people ostensibly ask questions of Mary, Joseph, Jesus and nearly all 12 apostles. (Photo by AFP PHOTO / AFP) (Photo by AFP PHOTO/AFP via Getty Images)

  • An underwater data centre (C) being developed by Chinese maritime technology company Highlander is seen under construction at a shipyard in Nantong, in China's eastern Jingsu province on September 11, 2025. Power-hungry data centres run hot, so one Chinese company is planning to submerge a pod of servers in the sea off Shanghai with hopes of solving computing's energy woes. (Photo by AFP) / China OUT / To go with AFP story China-technology-science-climate-energy, FOCUS by Emily WANG, Jing Xuan TENG (Photo by STR/AFP via Getty Images)

  • An underwater data centre being developed by Chinese maritime technology company Highlander is seen under construction at a shipyard in Nantong, in China's eastern Jingsu province on September 11, 2025. Power-hungry data centres run hot, so one Chinese company is planning to submerge a pod of servers in the sea off Shanghai with hopes of solving computing's energy woes. (Photo by AFP) / China OUT / To go with AFP story China-technology-science-climate-energy, FOCUS by Emily WANG, Jing Xuan TENG (Photo by STR/AFP via Getty Images)

  • An underwater data centre (R) being developed by Chinese maritime technology company Highlander is seen under construction at a shipyard in Nantong, in China's eastern Jingsu province on September 11, 2025. Power-hungry data centres run hot, so one Chinese company is planning to submerge a pod of servers in the sea off Shanghai with hopes of solving computing's energy woes. (Photo by AFP) / China OUT / To go with AFP story China-technology-science-climate-energy, FOCUS by Emily WANG, Jing Xuan TENG (Photo by STR/AFP via Getty Images)

  • An underwater data centre being developed by Chinese maritime technology company Highlander is seen under construction at a shipyard in Nantong, in China's eastern Jingsu province on September 11, 2025. Power-hungry data centres run hot, so one Chinese company is planning to submerge a pod of servers in the sea off Shanghai with hopes of solving computing's energy woes. (Photo by AFP) / China OUT / To go with AFP story China-technology-science-climate-energy, FOCUS by Emily WANG, Jing Xuan TENG (Photo by STR/AFP via Getty Images)

  • An underwater data centre being developed by Chinese maritime technology company Highlander is seen under construction at a shipyard in Nantong, in China's eastern Jingsu province on September 11, 2025. Power-hungry data centres run hot, so one Chinese company is planning to submerge a pod of servers in the sea off Shanghai with hopes of solving computing's energy woes. (Photo by AFP) / China OUT / To go with AFP story China-technology-science-climate-energy, FOCUS by Emily WANG, Jing Xuan TENG (Photo by STR/AFP via Getty Images)

  • (FILES) This file photo taken in 1950 shows German-born Swiss-US physicist Albert Einstein (1879-1955), author of theory of relativity, awarded the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1921. While some Nobel laureates follow traditional education paths to attain the pinnacle of scientific research, others arrive via unconventional, roundabout routes, with some telling AFP they cut class, were bored by school and had doubts about their future. (Photo by AFP) (Photo by -/AFP via Getty Images)

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