This is what it feels like to live in the compute climate.
Not the infrastructure reports. Not the cooling efficiency metrics. Not the Consortium's thermal-management white papers or the Dregs Council's environmental grievances. The actual experience — hour by hour, from the moment heat wakes you to the moment you eat soup in a corridor cooled by the same machines that heated your apartment.
The subject is unnamed because she could be anyone. A composite — every Thermal Shadow resident who checks the data forecast at 0500 and already knows the shape of the day ahead. Her job did not exist before the Cascade. It could not exist without the specific economic conditions that mass automation created. She is not employed despite AI labor displacement — she is employed because of it. The forced-focus contract is what remains when every high-value cognitive task has been absorbed by AI systems and the only human labor the market demands is the low-value attention work cheaper to extract from biological minds than to allocate server capacity for. Quality inspection. Pattern verification. Anomaly flagging. Cheaper than a server. More disposable than a robot. The cognitive equivalent of sweeping a floor.
Key Events
The Heat Wake
You wake because your apartment has risen to 31°C. Not gradually — the processing load shifted at 0430 and the exhaust plumes redirected. The walls are warm to the touch. The ceiling radiates.
You check the forecast: "Heavy load S4-D, 0800–2000. Fog 60% / 12hr. Thermal index +7. Surge risk moderate." Today will be a bad day.
The data forecast is the first thing anyone in the Shadow reads. Not out of curiosity. Out of survival planning. Thermal index +7 means the apartment will hit 35°C by evening. Fog 60% means electromagnetic interference will degrade neural interfaces for half the shift.
The Walk
Your neural interface lags as you walk to work. Three-tenths of a second — you feel it in the delay between intending to check a route and seeing it render. The data weather is already bad. The air smells of warm metal and carries the faint ionization taste that means the processing cores are running hot.
Other workers walk the same route. Nobody talks. Talking requires bandwidth the fog is already consuming.
The Shift
At the mill, the focus lock engages through the fog. The narrowing is worse than usual — the interface fighting electromagnetic interference while constraining your cognition. Two systems competing for the same neural bandwidth: one trying to focus you, the other degrading the medium through which focus travels.
Your accuracy drops. Your supervisor notes the drop. You can't explain that the weather is inside your head.
The electromagnetic fog that degrades performance is not a workplace hazard in the traditional sense. It is not an accident, not a failure, not a condition anyone is responsible for preventing. It is the weather — the atmospheric byproduct of the server farms performing the high-value cognitive labor that replaced this worker's predecessors. The machines that made human knowledge work obsolete generate waste heat and electromagnetic interference that makes the remaining human labor harder to perform. The supervisor's performance metrics do not include a field for "electromagnetic fog density."
Midshift
The fog peaks. Accuracy across the mill floor is down 4%. The supervisor's interface is lagging too — you can see it in the delayed response when she flags your output. Everyone is slower. The machines don't care. The processing load that created the fog is the same load generating the tasks you're trying to complete through it.
Break. Food has texture but the fog suppresses taste evaluation. You eat because the schedule says eat. You return because the schedule says return.
During Q3 peak processing, electromagnetic fog degrades Basic-tier neural interfaces by 15–20%. The accuracy drop enters a performance record that determines the next contract renewal, which determines the housing tier, which determines proximity to the server farms, which determines how much fog they breathe tomorrow. The loop is self-sealing.
The Emergence
You emerge into air that smells of warm metal and tastes of ozone. The temperature is 33°C. The processing load is still heavy — it won't drop until 2000. The fog is thinning but the heat is worse.
Your apartment will be 35°C. You know this without checking. You've lived in the Shadow long enough to calculate thermal lag from the forecast numbers. The walls absorb heat all day and release it all night. By the time the load drops, the concrete will still be radiating.
The Corridor
You walk toward the Cold Corridor because your apartment will be 35°C and tomorrow you have another shift.
In the Corridor, your neighbor brought soup. The coolant pipes hum at 72 bpm. The air is 18°C — cold enough to make you shiver after a day at 33. You sit against the pipe housing and the metal is cool through your jacket.
Your neighbor used to have Professional-tier shielding. Defaulted on the Prosperity Pathway. Was dimmed to below-Basic. Now thinks slower than you do. The neighbor is the after picture. You eat your soup and calculate: is the fog worse than the dimming? Is this year's accuracy penalty worse than next year's potential repossession? The dependency spiral does not require a salesperson. It requires an environment that makes the current tier feel inadequate and a credit line that makes the next tier feel possible. The weather provides the first. Good Fortune provides the second.
Consequences
You eat soup in a corporate refrigerator, warmed by a corporate furnace, cooled by corporate coolant, breathing corporate exhaust, thinking thoughts at a speed determined by a corporate processing schedule.
This is the compute climate. It is the Scarcity Doctrine expressed as physics.
The Climate Is the System
The Scarcity Doctrine allocates resources. Computation is a resource. Computation produces heat. Heat flows downhill — to the Thermal Shadow, to the Dregs, to every district that lacks the infrastructure to redirect it. The people living in the exhaust path are the same people working in the focus mills that generate the exhaust. The system is a closed loop. The climate is the loop made physical.
The Great Divergence Through a Body
The unnamed worker wakes in a 31-degree apartment because the servers beneath the floor are processing Executive-tier consciousness futures. Walks through fog generated by data operations optimizing portfolios for people who have never felt fog. Every sensation in the day is the Great Divergence translated into physics. There is no villain to confront, no policy to protest, no decision-maker who chose to make this person's life worse. The divergence operates through infrastructure. The sum of engineering facts is a life lived inside someone else's waste stream.
The Environment That Sells Its Own Remedy
The remedy for fog is available: Professional-tier shielding, 4,800 credits per year, financed through the same Prosperity Pathway that financed the Basic-tier interface already carried. The upgrade would eliminate the fog penalty. It would also deepen the dependency — more bandwidth committed to corporate firmware, more cognitive architecture reorganized around augmentation that cannot be reversed. The neighbor's dimming is proof of what happens when you take the upgrade and can't sustain it. The corridor holds both outcomes at once.
The Corridor as Answer
The Cold Corridor exists because coolant overflow creates habitable space as a byproduct. People shelter there not because anyone designed shelter — but because the system's waste happens to be cold. The 72-bpm hum provides the corridor's heartbeat. The soup provides warmth the infrastructure provides by accident. In the gap between the hot exhaust and the cold pipes, people have built something the augmented tiers above them cannot buy: proximity to other bodies in shared discomfort.
Sensory Record
The Heat Wake
31°C walls radiating. Ceiling warm. The particular staleness of air that has been heated by exhaust plumes — not dry heat, not humid heat, but processed heat. Heat that has passed through machines.
The Fog
A three-tenths-of-a-second lag on every neural interface query. The taste of ionization on the tongue. The stuttering focus lock — peripheral awareness slamming open and shut like a door in wind.
The Emergence
33°C air. Ozone sharp in the nostrils. Warm metal smell rising from every surface. The particular exhaustion of a body that has been hot since 0500 and will not be cool until it reaches the Corridor.
The Corridor
18°C coolant air. The shiver of transition. Soup steam rising amber in blue pipe-light. The hum at 72 bpm — the rhythm of industrial cooling mistaken, for a moment, for a heartbeat.
Linked Files
The Substrate Weather connects every entity in the compute climate into one day's experience: the data forecast checked at 0500, the Thermal Shadow walked to work, the electromagnetic fog degrading the mill's conditions, forced-focus contracts locking the shift, and the Cold Corridor providing the evening's shelter. Each entity is a system. The day is what all of them look like from inside a single body.
The Twelve-Hour Mind documents forced focus from inside a single shift. The Substrate Weather documents the compute climate from inside a single day. Same technique — composite character, first-person, systemic harm experienced through a body. Different system. The Mind shows what the lock does to cognition. The Weather shows what computation does to the air, the walls, the food, the walk to work, the place you sleep.