fb

Jeff Bezos spent $42million building a clock that will outlast human civilization

Powered by Earth's thermal cycles - it won't need a battery change when we're all dust.
  • Jeff Bezos is bankrolling a $42m clock to outlast human civilization
  • It will run for 10 millennia
  • It’s powered by Earth’s thermal cycles.

Published on Nov 28, 2023 at 9:42PM (UTC+4)

Last updated on Nov 29, 2023 at 5:27PM (UTC+4)

Edited by Amelia Jean Hershman-Jones
Jeff Bezos spent $42million building a clock that will outlast human civilization

Billionaire, Jeff Bezos, has once again proven his super-villain credentials by building a $42m clock to outlast human civilization.

Said to be able to run for 10 millennia, it’s powered by Earth’s thermal cycles.

Jeff Bezos is one of the richest people on the planet.

READ MORE! Lauren Sánchez reveals who the goddess-like figurehead on top of Bezos’ $500m yacht actually is

Forbes estimates he has $169.1 billion in the bank.

Cash means nothing to the Amazon founder who can afford a $79 million home on ‘Billionaire Bunker’, $75m ‘support yacht’ for his $500m ‘mega yacht’ and $78 million private jet.

Now it seems time and space are meaningless too.

Bezos announced the project back in 2018.

He invested in the idea of putting a giant, 10,000-year clock inside a mountain in West Texas.

Construction on the clock, part of The Long Now Foundation, is now well under way.

Once finished, it will stand at 500 feet (152 meters) high.

As per a statement on the clock’s official website:

“The Clock is hundreds of feet tall, engineered to require minimal maintenance, and powered by mechanical energy harvested from sunlight as well as the people that visit it.

“The Clock will mark time with astronomic and calendric displays and a chime generator designed with the help of Brian Eno that can produce over 3.5 million unique bell chime sequences — one for every day the Clock is visited for the next 10,000 years.”

Bezos is footing the bill but the idea came from a man named Danny Hillis who co-founded the foundation.

The idea is supposed to help people invest in thee long-term future of humanity – and the planet.

It’s hoped to encourage people to “conjure with notions of generations and millennia”.

“If you have a Clock ticking for 10,000 years what kinds of generational-scale questions and projects will it suggest?” the website asks.

“If a Clock can keep going for ten millennia, shouldn’t we make sure our civilization does as well?”

That idea has been labelled ‘The Clock of the Long Now’.

Hillis build an actual, working smaller version of the proposed clock.

And, while Bezos is building the full-size timepiece, Hillis is still very much involved in its design.

When completed, it will only tick once a year and its chime will only be heard once per millennium.

Now if that doesn’t make you feel insignificant I don’t know what will.

You might be interested in

Related Articles

Meta's chief AI scientist predicts smartphones will be obsolete within 10-15 years
World's fastest electric surfboard is controlled by remote
Richard Hammond incredibly restores 1930s Rolls-Royce before returning it to museum
Robo-taxis are now driving around on the roads in Las Vegas
One of the most advanced robots in the world looks like something out of Power Rangers
Content creator passes out after traveling at 300mph in a fighter jet
The Vision Jet can fly to an airport and land all by itself
Lockheed Skunk Works unveils first images of its next-generation aerial tanker