Yeah, Linus did a "whole-room of editing PCs with shared water-cooling" project a few years back... the whole shebang; huge radiator out the window, quick-disconnects, sweated copper tubing, etc... turned into a epic 7-part project that makes mansaxel's "CPU cooling via swimming pool" project seem downright plebian.
Oh, my project is much more a traditional server room cooling. For starters, the computers are air cooled, unmodified rack mount machines. Then a 19" cabinet, closed up, wrong side of the tracks style, with walls and a sliding door. On the side of the cabinet a Rittal air/water cooler is fitted, the kind you will find on the machine cabinet of your multi-axis CNC machine, joined via flexible steel-braided hoses to a 3/4" steel pipe system with a Danfoss bronze circulation pump from a bog-standard domestic heating system. Under the raised flooring this gets converted into HDPE stiff direct burial hose, which takes it out through the floor and in under the house where the water/water heat exchanger is fitted. It goes after the pump and filter for the pool, so pressurised filtered water from the pool is run through, on to another exchanger that's against the geothermal pump, and then into the pool.
I fully expect this to not work very well, mostly because the pool water will be too hot. I test-ran the system last winter, and successfully extended the filtration season for the pool to Dec 27th or so. That worked
wonderfully but with 5-6° C pool water, and the heat load in the room was partially dissipated as heating the room itself. The efficiency problem I had initially was bad air flow in the cabinet, but I found a hack, and have since implemented a better variant. Anyway, I expect to push a few BTU into the pool, and that in and of itself is good.
The real deal will be when I manage to get a heat exchanger against the geothermal loop. That will give me sub-10° C coolant all year, and direct reuse of the heat in making hot water and heating the house. If and when I do this, I'll also fit coolers for the top floor of the house, which gets uncomfortably hot all summer.
The present heat exchanger on the pool circuit will then be repurposed to circulate water from solar water panels, with a liberal sprinkling of sensors and stats collection, to manage circulation as well as possible.