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Forget tiny "chips". You need to think BIGGER.

Welcome to AI Collision šŸ’„,

In todayā€™s collision between AI and our world:

  • Chips arenā€™t little things, theyā€™re BIG

  • Free Netflixā€¦ at a cost

  • Elonā€™s fake news

If thatā€™s enough to get the servers racking, read onā€¦

AI Collision šŸ’„ the race to one trillion

Mooreā€™s Law ā€“ you might have heard of it before. If not, hereā€™s the lowdownā€¦

It was first described by Gordon E. Moore, co-founder of Intel, in 1965.

He observed that the number of transistors on computer chips doubles approximately every two years. This trend isnā€™t a law of nature (like gravity) but rather a long-term observation of how technology evolves.

Mooreā€™s original graph, drawn in 1965, showed this regularity on a logarithmic scale, showing the exponential growth of transistor count.

Source: Intel

He hypothesized that this relationship would continue for at least a decade, and he was right.

For over half a century, Mooreā€™s Law has held true. Transistor counts have indeed doubled roughly every two years, leading to more powerful and efficient computers.

However, surely at some point Mooreā€™s Law needs to simply be physically impossibleā€¦ right?

RIGHT?

After all, Nvidiaā€™s B200 chip, which the company debuted just a few weeks ago, has 208 billion transistors. That means by 2030 we should have 1.664 trillion transistors on a chip.

Honestly I have no idea if thatā€™s possible. Maybe, probably. Although some seriously influential people have said maybe not.

Even Nvidiaā€™s CEO/founder, Jensen Huang, said in 2022 that ā€œMooreā€™s Law is deadā€. Thatā€™s quite something considering less than two years later his company dropped the B200 on everyoneā€¦

But what Iā€™m starting to see more and more is a revitalisation of the idea that perhaps Mooreā€™s Law isnā€™t dead, and that itā€™s not slowing.

Instead weā€™re starting to rethink the idea of what a ā€œchipā€ is and how we can mash as many transistors in a tiny space and then mash as many chips as we can into one giga-chip.

Mooreā€™s Law was all about the idea of getting smaller with greater efficiency and processing power. But what if the solution to Mooreā€™s Law keeping on keeping on is to think about chips that are BIGGER?

What if the idea of a ā€œchipā€ isnā€™t nanometre scale anymore but square-kilometre scale?

Maybe the next great ā€œchipā€ isnā€™t 4nm but instead around 0.04km2.

Note: thatā€™s 40,000 square metres for what itā€™s worth.

Now admittedly a 0.04km2 ā€œchipā€ isnā€™t going to fit in your phone. But maybe it wonā€™t have to. Now when I talk about chips at that scale what I really mean is a data centre.

Perhaps in order to really start to comprehend the path forward for processing power and Mooreā€™s Law we need to start talking about data centres as chips. Or at the very least talking about a server rack as a chip.

We covered Nvidiaā€™s new B200 chips a couple of weeks ago when the company held its GTC developers conference. If you missed that bumper broadcast, make sure to check it out here.

What youā€™ll notice is that Nvidia talked a lot about the B200 chip. But it also spoke a lot about its Blackwell ā€œplatformā€.

And when it speaks of Blackwell it isnā€™t really talking ā€œchipsā€ and it doesnā€™t show a tiny little thing in the hand. When it speaks about the power of Blackwell it means thisā€¦

Source: Nvidia

So when Nvidia talks about Blackwell GPU architecture and companies adopting Blackwell, this is what itā€™s talking about.

Itā€™s why Nvidiaā€™s press release has the following people singing the praises of the company in it:

  • Sundar Pichai, CEO of Alphabet and Google

  • Andy Jassy, president and CEO of Amazon

  • Michael Dell, founder and CEO of Dell Technologies

  • Demis Hassabis, cofounder and CEO of Google DeepMind

  • Mark Zuckerberg, founder and CEO of Meta

  • Satya Nadella, executive chairman and CEO of Microsoft

  • Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI

  • Larry Ellison, chairman and CTO of Oracle

  • Elon Musk, CEO of Tesla and xAI.

And as Elon puts it, ā€œThere is currently nothing better than NVIDIA hardware for AI.ā€

So for me, forget about ā€œchipsā€ in the way in which weā€™ve always thought about them. I say, think bigger literally.

Which means once we get our head around the direction of processing power, the march towards one trillion transistors and the scale of what next-generation ā€œchipsā€ really look like, then the idea of a server or even data centre-as-a-chip (DCaaC) isnā€™t that wild.

It also means that when you start to think of the importance of a data centre and what goes into making that thing ā€œchip likeā€ then you start to figure out that the rising demand for ancillary industries and companies to make next-gen ā€œchipsā€ opens up a world of investment potential.

This coming Thursday Iā€™m going to show you what some of those companies look like, including one involved in cooling that has been one of the stock marketā€™s best performers in the last year that almost no one knows about.

There might not be anything better than Nvidia hardware for AI right now, but I guarantee you that without some of these other companies and other industries, Nvidia is nowhere near as important and effective and valuable as it currently is.

AI gone wild šŸ¤Ŗ

Admittedly itā€™s hard to keep track of all the anti-trust lawsuits getting filed against big tech at the moment.

There was one against Apple, one against Google, and thereā€™s also one currently against Meta.

Theyā€™re a funny beast the anti-trust suits. The free market is free until something becomes so big and powerful that itā€™s no longer allowed to be free in the market.

We encourage growth and companies becoming roaring successesā€¦ until a certain point when they become the enemy.

Anyway, Meta, which is literally a company that was built from nothing into one of the most powerful companies on earth, is in the middle of an anti-trust suit where some interesting revelations have come to light.

Meta refutes these allegations for what itā€™s worth, but the circulating news over the weekend was that Facebook (Meta) had sold user data to Netflix ā€“ or at least given Netflix access to usersā€™ direct messages.

As creepy as that sounds ā€“ and itā€™s wrong on a number of levels if proven to be true, though isnā€™t surprising on a number of levels ā€“ it does reinforce the importance of your data.

Itā€™s one thing that Facebook knows a lot about you and most certainly trains its AI on your data. But to unlock data to an external company, one as big and data-fed as Netflix, it is an interesting outcome (if proven to be true).

When I look at my message history though, it makes more and more sense. My messages (in no particular order) are typically about work, golf, F1 and movies.

Netflix is in the business of content. Content creation, content acquisition, content hoarding. The company wants to bring you into the Netflix ecosystem and never let you go.

Iā€™ve written a lot about Netflix over the years and how I always saw it heading deeper into gaming and live sports. Thatā€™s now just starting to come to fruition. I might republish some of that old content so you can see how years out you can see the direction that big tech takes and moves in.

But as I say, the only way they get you in, keep you in and keep you paying, is to provide content that matters.

Sports matter to people, gaming matters to people, but when it comes to TV and movie content, Netflix has had an on-and-off relationship with people.

Netflix has spent up big for the occasional hit, but clearly it wants to try to figure out the perfect formula for success. That means itā€™ll likely be training its AI or at least leveraging someone elseā€™s AI (maybe Metaā€™s) to figure out what to spend up on next.

After the success of ā€œThe Gentlemenā€ series, which broke Netflix records by getting 44 million views in just four weeks, maybe its data skimming has proven to be quite usefulā€¦

Still, you have to ask, how much data would you be prepared to share with a company like Netflix if it asked and paid for it?

I donā€™t want a company stealing access to my messages, thatā€™s just shady and wrong. But if Netflix said to me, ā€œHey Sam, hereā€™s six months of Netflix on us if we can get you to share with us any messages that are related to movies and TV shows,ā€ then Iā€™d maybe be up for that.

Big tech gets it wrong when they think theyā€™re bigger than their customers. But if one of them were to turn around and maybe think about the customer first, these lawsuits would probably end up as a relic of the past.

What do you think? Would you trade a bit of data for some gratis months of Netflix?

Boomers & Busters šŸ’°

AI and AI-related stocks moving and shaking up the markets this week. (All performance data below over the rolling week).

man in black suit jacket and black pants figurine

Boom šŸ“ˆ

  • Veritone (NASDAQ:VERI) up 19%

  • Brainchip (ASX:BRN) up 12%

  • Zeta Global Holdings (NYSE:ZETA) up 11%

Bust šŸ“‰

  • Lantern Pharma (NASDAQ:LTRN) down 11%

  • WiMi Hologram Cloud (NASDAQ:WIMI) down 14%

  • Predictive Oncology (NASDAQ:POAI) down 23%

From the hive mind šŸ§ 

  • Remember that saying regarding AI, ā€œcrap data in equals crap data outā€? Well we do need to be careful of what our AI ā€œfeedsā€ on and what it cooks up for us. And for all the things Elon Musk does, when something like this happens, youā€™ve really got to wonder what our AI-infused social media looks like in a few yearsā€™ time.

  • While on the subject of data, if you think the race was on to build the best AI, the real race is on to see who can buy up all the training data.

  • Hates crypto, loves AI. I mean he is in control of a lot of money, a lot of people and a lot of what the market thinks, reacts to and does. So you canā€™t ignore what he says, and sometimes heā€™ll be right, sometimes wrong. On AI though, heā€™s probably closer to the mark than heā€™s been with bitcoin.

Artificial Polltelligence šŸ—³ļø

Todayā€™s poll is supposed to be the results of last weekā€™s poll. But then I got all crazy and we did back-to-back polls last week.

Anyway, to cut a long story short, Iā€™m going to have a poll today that will last two days. Then weā€™ll get back onto our regular poll schedule come Thursday.

So, for nowā€¦

Answer me thisā€¦

Weirdest AI image of the day

Give this movie a title ā€“ r/Weirddallee

r/weirddalle - Give this movie a title

ChatGPTā€™s random quote of the day


ā€œTechnology is a useful servant but a dangerous master.ā€ ā€“ Steve Jobs


Thanks for reading, and donā€™t forget to leave comments and questions below,

Sam Volkering

Editor-in-Chief
AI Collision
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Jim Daly

Interesting selection of thoughts. Looking forward to hearing more thoughts on the data centre support industries. AI, chips, big chips, data centres, brain data capture, bigger chips, trans-humanism expansion – so much to take in and form opinions on!! Time for a coffee!

Martin Atkinson

Give this movie a title -“Told you – you should have listened to Sam!”

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