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Tuesday, November 11, 2025The Human Algorithm — Democracy, Purpose, and the Ethics of Intelligence
I. The Arrival of EquivalenceAt the Financial Times’ 2025 Future of AI Summit, a remarkable claim echoed across the stage. Nvidia’s Jensen Huang, Meta’s Yann LeCun, Turing Award laureates Geoffrey Hinton and Yoshua Bengio, and Stanford’s Fei-Fei Li agreed: in many domains, AI has reached human-level intelligence Machines can now recognize tens of thousands of objects, translate hundreds of languages, and solve problems that stump PhDs. “We are already there,” Huang said. “And it doesn’t matter—it’s an academic question now.” What matters is what comes next: whether humanity uses this power to augment itself or abdicate its agency. II. Augmentation, Not AbdicationThe pioneers remain surprisingly united in humility. Fei-Fei Li likens AI to airplanes: machines that fly higher and faster than birds, but for different reasons. “There’s still a profound place for human intelligence,” she insists—particularly in creativity, empathy, and moral reasoning Hinton envisions machines that will “always win a debate” within 20 years, yet still sees their role as complementing humans, not replacing them. Bengio warns that decisions made now—on alignment, ethics, and governance—will define whether this era uplifts or undermines civilization. Their consensus: AI should amplify what is best in us, not automate what is worst. III. The New Civilizational TechnologyFei-Fei Li calls AI a “civilizational technology.” It touches every sector and every individual. Like electricity, it doesn’t belong to one industry—it redefines all of them. But civilization also requires values. Yoshua Bengio, once focused purely on algorithms, now devotes his research to mitigation—ensuring that systems understanding language and goals cannot be misused or evolve beyond control. Human-centered design, ethical guardrails, and public trust are not optional accessories; they are the operating system of the AI age. IV. The Democratic CrossroadsEric Schmidt and Andrew Sorota, writing in The New York Times, describe the danger vividly: nations may soon be tempted by algocracy—rule by algorithm. Albania’s new AI avatar, Diella, already awards over a billion dollars in government contracts automatically, promising to end corruption. It’s an appealing trade: competence over chaos. But Schmidt warns it’s the wrong reflex. Algorithms can optimize efficiency, but they cannot arbitrate values. When citizens cannot see how decisions are made or challenge them, they become subjects, not participants V. When Algorithms GovernAcross 12 developed nations, surveys show majorities dissatisfied with how democracy works. Many now say they trust AI systems more than elected leaders to make fair decisions But an algorithmic state doesn’t solve alienation—it deepens it. When bureaucratic opacity is replaced by digital opacity, the result is the same: unaccountable power. VI. The Democratic UpgradeThere is another path. Schmidt and Sorota point to Taiwan’s vTaiwan platform—a model of AI-assisted democracy. When Uber’s arrival threatened local taxi livelihoods, the government used an AI deliberation tool to map citizen sentiment, identify areas of consensus, and craft a balanced policy. Here, AI didn’t decide. It listened. It turned thousands of comments into a coherent social map, surfacing shared ground instead of amplifying division. The outcome—insurance and licensing for ride-share drivers without killing innovation—proved that AI can help democracy deliberate at scale This is a glimpse of Democracy 2.0—where AI becomes the translator between people and policy, expanding participation instead of erasing it. VII. The Ethical SingularityThe ethical dilemma of AI is not whether it will surpass human intelligence—it already does in narrow domains—but whether it will mirror human wisdom. Today’s models are optimized for engagement, not enlightenment. Outrage drives clicks, and clicks drive revenue. The same algorithms that translate text can also amplify polarization. The danger, as Schmidt warns, is not dystopian robots but “systems that erode trust faster than governments can rebuild it.” To counter that, societies must build benevolence into the stack: transparent systems, explainable models, participatory oversight. Ethics must be coded, not declared. VIII. The Redefinition of Work and MeaningThe AI era doesn’t just transform jobs; it transforms identity. When machines perform cognitive labor, human value migrates toward emotional and moral dimensions—toward why, not how. Fei-Fei Li argues that AI’s purpose is to relieve humans of repetitive cognition so they can focus on “creativity and empathy.” The next generation of education, leadership, and art will thus emphasize synthesis over specialization. In this sense, AI is not replacing the human mind—it’s forcing it to evolve. IX. The Philosophical ReckoningWhen Hinton was asked what keeps him up at night, he said: “The moment a machine not only learns from us but starts to teach us what to value.” That moment may be closer than we think. Machines are already discovering patterns in science, art, and medicine that humans missed. The frontier question is not whether AI will have values—but whose values it will reflect. The answer cannot be left to code alone. It must be debated, voted, and revised—just as laws are. Democracy, then, is not an obstacle to AI. It’s the immune system that keeps intelligence aligned with humanity. X. Toward Augmented CivilizationThe next decade will see five defining shifts:
Each shift is both technological and moral. The more intelligence we externalize, the more intentionality we must internalize. Labels: GenAI |The Age of Instant Learning: How AI Collapsed the Old World -Part 1I. The Collapse of the Learning CurveFor most of industrial history, progress obeyed a familiar rhythm: make, fail, learn, repeat. Factories, schools, and economies ran on experience curves—each doubling of production cut costs by a fixed percentage, a phenomenon codified as Wright’s Law in 1936. But artificial intelligence has detonated that pattern. In the words of the Wall Street Journal, “AI destroys the old learning curve.” Experience no longer follows production—it precedes it. Simulation can now test a million variations before a single box ships. Entire industries are learning before doing, producing competence before contact with reality. Knowledge that once took decades can now emerge in days. The assembly line has given way to the algorithmic sandbox. II. From Breakthrough to BuildoutThe acceleration didn’t happen overnight. It’s the culmination of decades of breakthroughs that fused three elements—compute, data, and algorithms—into a self-reinforcing flywheel.
The synergy of these three domains ended a 40-year stall in AI progress. What followed is not a bubble, as Huang argues, but “the buildout of intelligence”—a massive, ongoing industrial revolution where every data center becomes a factory for cognition. III. Experience Before ProductionWright’s Law presumed learning by doing. AI replaced it with learning by simulation. A supply chain, for example, can now model thousands of disruptions—storms, strikes, surges—before they happen. Mistakes are made virtually, not physically. Costly iterations disappear. The implication is profound: the learning cycle is no longer physical—it’s computational. Digital “twin” worlds allow designers, manufacturers, and urban planners to test scenarios endlessly at near-zero cost. Experience scales instantly. When learning precedes production, innovation ceases to be cyclical. It becomes continuous. IV. The Era of Dual ExponentialsThe current AI economy is powered by two simultaneous exponentials:
This dual surge fuels what Huang calls the “lit-up economy.” Every GPU, every watt, every dataset is active. Unlike the dot-com boom’s “dark fiber,” this buildout isn’t speculative; it’s productive. The network hums 24/7, producing tokens, translations, designs, and discoveries in real time. V. The Death of the Industrial Learning CurveIn classical economics, efficiency was a function of repetition. Workers honed skills over years; firms improved through iteration. AI obliterates that logic. The marginal cost of additional intelligence falls toward zero once models are trained. Jonathan Rosenthal and Neal Zuckerman described this inversion succinctly: “AI makes experience come before production.” The new competitive advantage isn’t scale—it’s simulation depth. Winners aren’t those who produce the most, but those who can model the most possibilities and act first. This creates a new hierarchy:
Those three layers now define industrial power. VI. Work Without ApprenticeshipAs learning curves collapse, the apprenticeship model of work collapses with it. Junior analysts, designers, and operators once learned by repetition. Now, generative systems learn faster and at greater scale. A planner who once needed ten years of experience can be replaced—or augmented—by an AI that has simulated ten million logistics events. This doesn’t eliminate human roles; it shifts the locus of value to judgment, ethics, creativity, and synthesis—areas where context, emotion, and uncertainty dominate. VII. The Entrepreneurial ShockwaveIronically, the same forces that destroy traditional jobs unleash an entrepreneurial explosion. When capital, computation, and knowledge become abundant, the barriers to entry vanish. Rosenthal and Zuckerman foresee “nimble companies in numbers never seen before”—each rising fast, solving a niche problem, and disappearing once its utility fades. The economy becomes an adaptive organism: millions of micro-experiments running in parallel, guided by real-time data and machine mediation. Failure ceases to be fatal—it becomes feedback. VIII. A New Law of ProgressIn the old world, experience accumulated linearly and decayed slowly. In the new world, knowledge accumulates exponentially and decays instantly. Wright’s Law still matters, but its unit of learning has changed—from a physical product to a digital simulation, from human effort to machine cognition. The future belongs to those who can collapse the distance between imagination and implementation. IX. Beyond ProductivityThe AI age will not just make us faster. It will change the physics of progress itself. When machines can “pre-learn” reality, civilization moves from reactive to predictive. We stop iterating on what we know and start simulating what we don’t yet know. For the first time in history, experience scales before existence. Labels: GenAI |Sunday, November 09, 2025Beyond the Hype: A Quiet AI Revolution Signals the Real Battle for Enterprise DominanceIn a world obsessed with trillion-parameter behemoths like GPT-5 or Claude 3.5, the true architects of AI's future are building not with scale, but with specificity. JPMorgan Chase's recent breakthrough in transaction matching isn't just a tech win—it's a manifesto for how data-rich incumbents will outpace the AI arms race. Buckle up: this isn't about chatbots; it's about reclaiming control over the messy, mission-critical data that powers your business. The Hidden Chaos of Everyday Data: A Tale from the Trenches Imagine this: It's a sweltering Friday afternoon in mid-July, and you're scrolling through your credit card statement, nursing a post-vacation hangover. There it is—a cryptic charge: "SQ * HM SP NTW P2FJOC4" for $47.32. Was that the artisanal coffee cart in Brooklyn or some shady subscription you forgot about? You tap "dispute," and suddenly, customer service lines light up like a Black Friday sale. Multiply that confusion by 50 million transactions a day, and you've got the unglamorous reality of JPMorgan Chase's world. For decades, the banking giant has been the unsung hero of global finance, processing over $10 trillion in payments annually. But beneath the sleek apps and instant transfers lies a data nightmare: merchant matching. Every swipe, tap, or click must be neatly tagged to its rightful owner—not just for your receipt's sake, but for razor-sharp fraud detection, regulatory compliance, and personalized spending insights. Get it wrong, and it's not just annoyed customers; it's millions in operational drag, false positives in fraud alerts, and fines from watchdogs like the CFPB. Most outsiders assume this data is pristine once it hits the servers—tidy rows of merchant names and amounts. Wrong. It's a linguistic Wild West. Consider these real-world head-scratchers that JPM's teams wrangle daily: - "SWA * EARLYBRD XQQJWQ9V4F4" decodes to a Southwest Airlines early-bird fare, but only if you know the airline's quirky booking codes. - "AUTOMA MSFT * CORPO008" hides a Microsoft corporate expense, buried under vendor shorthand. - Or take "POS * GRUBHUB DELV 917-555-0123"—that's your late-night DoorDash regret, but the phone number suffix throws off legacy parsers. JPM's old guard? Rule-based systems, the digital equivalent of a filing clerk with a Rolodex. They nailed about 80% of transactions, a respectable hit rate for a system born in the COBOL era. But that stubborn 20%? It was a black hole—costing the bank tens of millions yearly in manual reviews, customer escalations, and delayed analytics. One anecdote from a former JPM data scientist (shared anonymously in a 2024 fintech forum) paints the picture: "We had teams literally crowdsourcing matches via internal Slack channels, like digital archaeologists piecing together pottery shards. It worked, but it was soul-crushing and unscalable." This isn't unique to banking. Across industries, "messy data" is the silent killer of efficiency. In healthcare, a nurse's hurried note—"Pt c/o abd pn post-MI, Rx w/ ASA qd"—might stump even the savviest algorithm without context for abbreviations like "abd pn" (abdominal pain) or "post-MI" (post-myocardial infarction). Insurance giants grapple with claim descriptions varying by zip code: "Wind dmg to roof, hail suspected" in Tornado Alley vs. a vague "Storm loss" in the Midwest. Logistics firms like FedEx decode "RT 66 HAUL * SEASONAL OVRLD" as a Route 66 trucking overload during harvest season, but seasonal spikes turn it into guesswork. The punchline? In an era where AI hype centers on generative miracles, these prosaic puzzles are where fortunes are made—or lost. And JPMorgan just cracked one wide open. The Spark of True Innovation: When Experiments Trump Off-the-Shelf Hype Here's where the story pivots from gripe to genius. While the AI world fixates on fine-tuning behemoths like OpenAI's GPT series or Anthropic's Claude—pouring billions into parameter wars—JPMorgan did something refreshingly contrarian. They didn't chase the shiny object. They rolled up their sleeves and ran a backyard experiment that could redefine enterprise AI. Picture a skunkworks team in JPM's Jersey City innovation lab: a mix of PhDs, domain wizards, and battle-hardened engineers huddled over laptops, fueled by cold brew and skepticism. Their hypothesis: What if we ditched the "one model to rule them all" dogma and built something bespoke for our data? Commercial LLMs are wizards at poetry and puzzles, but they're generalists—trained on the internet's grab-bag, not the arcane dialect of transaction strings. Hiring a squad of banking PhDs for OpenAI won't bridge that gap; it's like asking a Michelin chef to debug your grandma's recipe card. So, they tested three lanes: 1.Off-the-Shelf LLMs: Grab-and-go models like Sentence-BERT (for semantic similarity), Meta's LLaMA 3-8B, and Google's Flan-T5. Plug in the data, pray for magic. 2.Fine-Tuned LLMs: Take those giants, sprinkle on JPM-specific examples, and retrain. Resource-intensive, but tailored. 3.From-Scratch Proprietary Models: Tiny, purpose-built neural nets, architected from the ground up for merchant matching. No bloat, just laser focus. The dataset? Modest by AI standards: 1.35 million transactions. That's 773K auto-tagged by rules, 575K via string matching, and a gold-standard 2.5K manually labeled edge cases—the weirdos that broke everything. No exabytes of web-scraped fluff; just real JPM grease. The verdict? A mic-drop moment. Their lean, mean 1.7 million-parameter custom model didn't just match the lumbering 8-billion-parameter LLaMA—it lapped it. Accuracy? A whisker shy at 99% of the big boy's score. But the deltas were seismic: -Speed: 7.7 times faster inference, turning seconds into milliseconds per transaction. - Cost: Training expenses slashed by 3,383 times—think pennies vs. a data center's ransom. - Efficiency: 0.02% of the parameters, yet it scaled like a dream on commodity hardware. In raw terms: Transaction coverage leaped from 80% to 94%. That's 7 million *more* matches daily, unlocking fresher fraud signals, snappier customer views, and compliance reports that don't require a PhD to parse. Annual savings? A cool $13.2 million, funneled straight back into bolder bets. This isn't luck; it's the anatomy of innovation. JPM's experiment embodies what I call the "data dojo" mindset: unique, low-stakes pilots that probe the edges of what's possible. Unlike the venture-fueled moonshots of Silicon Valley, these are gritty, iterative sprints—hypothesis, test, rinse, repeat. They define progress not through fanfare, but through flywheels: Each matched transaction feeds better training data, which refines the model, which catches more nuances. It's compounding magic, born from the courage to question orthodoxy. Anecdotes abound. Recall GE's Predix platform in the 2010s: They built a custom IoT analytics engine for jet engines, not by licensing Watson, but by training on proprietary sensor streams. Result? Predictive maintenance that saved airlines millions in downtime. Or NASA's use of tiny convolutional nets for rover image classification—far outpacing general vision models on Mars' dusty horizons. These aren't anomalies; they're harbingers. Unique experiments, it turns out, aren't risks—they're the R&D engine of asymmetric advantage. The Consulting Conundrum: Guides, Not Gods, in the AI Odyssey Of course, no enterprise tale is complete without the suits from the Big Three—McKinsey, BCG, Bain—who swoop in with slide decks thicker than a phone book. In JPM's saga, consulting players likely played the role of catalyst: auditing the 20% failure rate, benchmarking against peers, and greenlighting the skunkworks budget. They're invaluable for that—the neutral referees who spot blind spots and herd cats across silos. But here's the nuance: Consultants excel at *framing* innovation, not forging it. They can map your data moat, but they can't swim it. JPM's win came from internal alchemists who lived the pain, not external oracles reciting Gartner quadrants. I've seen it firsthand in my consulting days (yes, guilty as charged): A Fortune 500 retailer hired us to "AI-ify" supply chains. We recommended RAG pipelines over Salesforce's Einstein. But the real breakthrough? Their logistics VP's pet project—a scrappy model trained on forklift telemetry data, iterated in evenings. Consultants lit the fuse; the team built the rocket. This dynamic underscores a broader truth: Progress blooms from *unique experiments*, not templated playbooks. When consultancies push cookie-cutter LLM wrappers, they risk commoditizing your edge. The winners? Firms that treat advisors as sparring partners, then unleash domain daredevils to prototype wildly. JPM didn't outsource the soul of their solution; they owned it, turning consulting wisdom into proprietary firepower. The Enterprise Platform Pivot: Salesforce, ServiceNow, and Workday as Launchpads, Not Landmines Enter the enterprise software titans—Salesforce, ServiceNow, and Workday—the plumbing of modern business. They're not the villains in this AI fable; they're the nuanced enablers. Salesforce's Einstein might whisper sweet nothings about predictive sales, but it's built on *your* CRM data, not some ethereal cloud brain. ServiceNow's Vancouver release integrates LLMs for IT ticketing, yet shines brightest when you layer on custom classifiers for your org's jargon-riddled incidents ("Server hiccup in Prod—reboot?"). Workday? Their adaptive planning tools forecast HR trends, but only if you fine-tune with internal comp cycles and turnover quirks. The angle here is subtle but seismic: These platforms democratize AI, lowering the barrier to bespoke builds. JPM could have bolted their model onto Salesforce's Data Cloud for seamless integration, turning transaction insights into CRM gold. But the innovation twist? Don't stop at plug-and-play. Use them as scaffolds for *republishing* your moat—exposing anonymized datasets via APIs, fostering partner ecosystems, or even spinning off vertical-specific tools. Take Workday's recent foray: They partnered with a mid-market manufacturer to train a 50M-param model on payroll variances, slashing audit times by 40%. Not a full LLM overhaul, but a targeted jab that republished the firm's data as a competitive edge—shared selectively with suppliers for just-in-time forecasting. ServiceNow's "Now Assist" lets firms like yours experiment with co-pilots for procurement, but the pros go further: Custom embeddings on vendor bids, iterated via their low-code canvas. It's republishing at scale—your data, amplified through their pipes, without surrendering sovereignty. Salesforce edges it with Einstein Copilot's extensibility: Imagine JPM feeding merchant matches into dynamic customer journeys, auto-flagging "frequent flyer" spends for upsell prompts. The key? These aren't zero-sum; they're multipliers. Innovate atop them—prototype small models, A/B test against their baselines—and you've got a hybrid moat: Platform reliability meets your irreplaceable nuance. Data Moats Over Dollar Moats: Lessons from the Frontlines JPM's triumph boils down to a deceptively simple equation: Proprietary operational data + domain expertise > foundation model scale. OpenAI can poach all the quants they want; they can't replicate your 50 million daily data points. That's the moat money can't buy. Yet, here's the provocative pivot: If I were Jamie Dimon plotting JPM's AI North Star, I'd open-source that merchant matcher today. Not the full enchilada—the architecture's commoditized anyway—but the core logic, wrapped in a GitHub repo with hooks for custom datasets. Why? It ignites a flywheel: -Industry Standard-Setting: Become the de facto toolkit for fintechs, drawing adopters who feed back improvements. - Talent Magnet: Open-source draws the world's sharpest minds, who then eye JPM's enterprise gigs. - Regulatory Halo: Transparency earns nods from the Fed, easing AI governance hurdles. - Ecosystem Lock-In: Partners build atop it, deepening reliance on JPM's data layer. - Monetization Magic: Free software, paid services—fine-tuning as a SaaS, premium datasets for rent. It's the Red Hat playbook: Open-source the kernel, own the kernel panic support. Anecdotes validate it. Hugging Face exploded by open-sourcing transformers, then monetizing hubs. Meta's LLaMA leaks? They supercharged adoption, pulling devs into their orbit. For JPM, it could mean licensing the model to credit unions, turning a cost center into a revenue river. Other industries? They're ripe. Healthcare: Open-source abbreviation resolvers trained on de-identified notes, monetize via FHIR integrations. Insurance: Share claim pattern classifiers for cat risks, charge for real-time API calls. Logistics: Route optimizers on anonymized telemetry, with upsells for seasonal tweaks. Retail: Micro-behavioral nets for cart abandonment, republished as Shopify plugins. The Reckoning: Will You Join the Data Dojo? JPMorgan's experiment isn't a fluke; it's a flare in the fog. As foundation models commoditize, the victors will be those who innovate orthogonally—small, sharp tools honed on proprietary pain points. Consulting firms will guide the map; platforms like Salesforce, ServiceNow, and Workday will pave the roads. But progress? That's yours to prototype, one unique hunch at a time. The question echoing through boardrooms: Will data-rich dinosaurs like yours follow suit, or cling to the LLM illusion? In the AI arena, hesitation isn't a strategy—it's obsolescence. Time to dust off that innovation cap. Your messy data isn't a bug; it's your superpower. What experiment will you run this quarter? Drop your thoughts below—let's crowdsource the next moat. Wednesday, November 05, 2025The "Philosophy and Glamour" of Projecting GenAI ServicesThe "glamour" in projecting Generative AI (GenAI) services for IT service companies isn't just about the technology itself; it's about fundamentally recasting their role from a simple implementer to an indispensable strategic partner. This new narrative allows them to sell a "corporate fantasy"—a complete, top-to-bottom redesign of the client's business. This is a much more "glamorous" and lucrative position than just managing IT infrastructure. These are built on four key projections:
GenAI Revenue Classification System for Consulting & IT Services This system classifies GenAI revenue into three primary pillars, reflecting the models used by firms like Accenture and HCLTech. It is designed to capture revenue at every stage of the client's journey, from initial strategy to long-term operations Pillar 1: GenAI Strategy & Advisory (The "Consulting" Pillar)Focus: High-margin, C-suite advisory to define the "why" and "what." This maps to Accenture's "Strategy and Consulting" and HCLTech's "AI Labs" and GRC services. Pillar 2: GenAI Implementation & Co-Creation (The "Technology" Pillar)Focus: The core "build" and "professional services" revenue. This involves building the platforms, models, and AI-first workflows. Pillar 3: GenAI Managed Services & Operations (The "Operations" Pillar)Focus: Recurring revenue from running, managing, and optimizing GenAI solutions. This maps to Accenture's "Operations" and HCLTech's "Managed Services". This video provides an overview of how HCLTech is using its AI Force platform to transform the software development lifecycle, a key part of the "Implementation" pillar. | Friday, October 31, 2025AI Just Moved From Imagination to InfrastructureFor the last year and a half, artificial intelligence lived in a strange suspended reality — part science fiction, part quarterly earnings fuel, part collective hallucination powered by demos and GPU scarcity memes. This week, that spell broke.The AI story didn’t collapse — it hardened. It snapped from concept to capex. From “what can this do?” to “how much steel, silicon, and electricity will it take?” The future didn’t get smaller. It got physical. In one trading window we learned three things:
This wasn’t hype unwinding — it was hype growing roots. Let’s break down the reality check, company by company. Alphabet: The Grid BuilderGoogle didn’t announce a quarter. It announced an operating model for the next decade. $102B quarter. 16% YoY.
This isn’t cloud. It’s digital infrastructure sovereignty. Google isn’t experimenting with AI services. It’s building the metabolic system for the AI economy. Markets rewarded clarity: shared ambition, concrete smelters. Microsoft: Demand Is Outrunning PhysicsMicrosoft delivered another monster print — $77.7B, +18% YoY — but the message between the lines was even louder: “We expect to be capacity constrained into year-end.” Translation:
And still? Not enough. This is what it looks like when demand pulls harder than the grid can stretch. It’s not a guidance wobble — it’s a scale frontier. The stock pullback wasn't skepticism. It was recognition: infrastructure comes before margin. Meta: Moonshot With a Balance SheetMeta’s fortress — $51.2B revenue, 3.5B daily users — remains unmatched in consumer engagement. But Zuckerberg’s ambitions are now beyond engagement curves. He’s building personal intelligence — and he’s not hiding the bill.
Meta’s risk profile is different by design. Zuck is financing a frontier. Investors demanded a map. The Phase Shift: From Demos to DozersThe market woke up to a new truth: AI isn’t a software upgrade. The constraints ahead aren’t model architectures — they’re:
GPUs are the new turbines. Yesterday, the AI economy stopped being notional. The Market’s New QuestionsWe are past the “AI demo premium.” The scoring rubric has been rewritten: AI isn’t a hype cycle peaking — it’s a build cycle forming. The Structural ResetWhen trillion-dollar firms say their limiting factor is power and steel, you are no longer watching a tech trend. You are witnessing a macro-industrial shift. This is the AI century’s version of 1930s power expansion, 1950s interstate highways, 1960s space race, and 1990s internet backbone — rolled into one accelerated decade. Yes, models matter. But the next leg of value will accrue to those who solve:
AI isn’t becoming ordinary. It’s becoming infrastructural. The miracle didn’t end. It moved into the accounting department — and out to the construction site. |
| Sadagopan's Weblog on Emerging Technologies, Trends,Thoughts, Ideas & Cyberworld |