
The Internet Taught Us How to Run a Grid. We Just Haven't Noticed Yet.| Ep 264 | Bruce Nordman [Re-edited]
Bruce Nordman spent nearly 40 years at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory asking one question: what if we ran electricity the way we run the internet?
His answer reframes everything. A notebook computer is already a nanogrid — it can run on battery or grid power, and it distributes electricity to every USB device plugged into it. Scale that idea up, add a price signal that machines (not people) respond to, and you have a model for the entire electricity grid — one that works the same way whether you're in California or an off-grid village in Sub-Saharan Africa.
We cover the three things every grid actually needs to coordinate — energy, power, and capacity — why Bell Labs dismissed the internet before it existed, and why Bruce believes electricity technology is still trapped in the 19th century.
This conversation ends on a teaser: direct current power distribution, and why your house might one day run almost entirely on it.
Part 2, coming soon.
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