Is nuclear the answer to AI's problems?
Welcome to AI Collision đ„,
In todayâs collision between AI and our world:
AI is not the bomb some expect
Underground sites
Taco cats
If thatâs enough to get the energy atomising, read onâŠ
AI Collision đ„ breakthrough power is the masterkey for AI
In May 2023, The New York Times ran an article that reads:
A.I. Poses âRisk of Extinction,â Industry Leaders Warn
Leaders from OpenAI, Google DeepMind, Anthropic and other A.I. labs warn that future systems could be as deadly as pandemics and nuclear weapons
Itâs about an extreme a take on AI that youâll find.
The crux of the argument (donât bother trying the link, itâs behind a paywall) was that AIâs existential risk to humanity is up there with the highest of threats we face in our modern world.
I mean, they quote âleadersâ so it must be taken seriously, right?
Right?
Well, it seems these leaders might have got their nuclears mixed up.
The threat of AI is minimal. In fact, Iâd go so far as to say there is no threat at all.
And that with every great technology revolution, early on, even from those in the industry, there is fear and uncertainty.
Change is scary, even when youâre the ones making the change. And itâs easy to think of the bad things it can do⊠but you also need to look at the good things, the unforeseen things, the opportunities it opens up.
And itâs in the nuclear realm that things get interesting with AI.
Not nuclear weaponsâŠ
But nuclear energy.
You see itâs these same AI leaders that are well aware that the future of their technology relies on something that we all heavily rely on.
Energy.
The thing about our modern world is that itâs built on foundations of technology. Layers of it, that build up and up over time to resemble what we use today. And that will continue into the future as we build better tech using the great tech that we have access to today. And that unlocks huge opportunities that we see unfold in markets all the time.
I call this technological compounding.
HoweverâŠ
It is all built on a technology that none of it can exist without â energy in the form of electricity.
If you remove electricity from the equation, all of it, and I really mean all of it, ceases to function.
Ever tried using a computer without electricity?
How good is your smartphone to you if the battery isnât powered by electricity?
Sure, sure, you can get energy from sources like solar and wind, these are âfreeâ energy sources right? Well last time I checked there was no commercially viable smartphone with solar panels on it.
And where are those solar-powered cars?
You need the technology that creates energy, regardless of the source, to enable our world to exist.
Not only that but you also need an increasing abundance of it. And hereâs the thing, as AI grows, it demands more power to operate. Bitcoin sceptics use this as an argument as to why bitcoin shouldnât exist, that itâs too energy-intensive. These same sceptics are levelling their ire at AI too now.
To a point, theyâre right. The power demands of these technologies are huge. But they often omit (we wonder if intentionally) the work underway to ensure new tech like AI isnât a huge impact to the energy demands of everything else in the world.
The same AI leaders have quickly figured out that for AI to have its full impact on the technology of the future, it needs more energy and, realistically, the cheapest, safest, cleanest and most abundant energy source we have access to right now is nuclear energy.
This is why the price of uranium has more than doubled in the last year as the realisation of the need for more nuclear energy has hit the market.
The spot price went from around $47 this time last year to now over $100. That alone is a great investment.
But it means the race is on for nuclear development. The problem is that building traditional nuclear power plants is long, laborious and take years and years⊠and years to get to commissioning.
Unless there was a way to build, smaller, perhaps, modular reactors that were easier to build, faster to get pumping out the energy and cheaper to build and runâŠ
This is a still image from one of my CES videos. Itâs one that I took at the Doosan Corporation (KS:000155). Itâs the companyâs development project of small modular reactor (SMR) technology in partnership with NuScale Power (NASDAQ:SMR).
Called the VOYGR-12, itâs the latest generation of NuScaleâs SMR development. Doosan is helping them to make all the bits and pieces that come together to make the SMR function.
What I loved about this is that at a consumer technology show, I was looking at the latest in SMR tech. Now, NuScale is early stage, developmental and itâs not the only SMR tech company in the world trying to build out new nuclear technology.
Doosan, is a giant of industry, so for it to be working on this too is saying something about the importance and potential of SMR tech.
For me, itâs also crucial to the future of AI. And possibly any other new technology that comes around, be it spatial computing quantum computing or any levelling up of our high-tech world.
Itâs one of the more interesting areas of energy, and something to pay a lot more attention to in 2024.
AI gone wild đ€Ș
Part of how I first got into bitcoin in 2010 was when on some deep web forums people were talking about how a guy had paid for pizzas using this online digital currency called bitcoin.
And heading to the âBitcointalkâ forum you could see what was going on. It was all new, weird, kind of cool and still very fringe.
Then in 2011 an article emerged on the popular blogging site, Gawker, by a guy called Adrien Chen.
The title of the piece was, âThe Underground Website Where You Can Buy Any Drug Imaginable.â
This piece went viral, mainstream, and was picked up on news sites everywhere. It highlighted the Silk Road, which was a deep web site where you could actually buy any drug imaginable.
Its primary currency was⊠bitcoin.
Anyway, it blew up, the price of bitcoin at the time, awareness, notoriety, etc, etc.
I bring all this up because Iâm suffering from a case of Deja-vu (kind of).
An article hit my feed in the last couple of days, the headline reads, âInside the Underground Site Where âNeural Networksâ Churn Out Fake IDs.â
I donât know if this was a nod to Chenâs piece from 13 years ago, but it has similar kinds of themes. New breakthrough tech, weird (criminal) applications of it, all of that. It smells a lot like 2011 to me.
Anyway check out the article, itâs great. And itâs a sure-fire sign to me at least about how much AI is going to change our world.
Boomers & Busters đ°
AI and AI-related stocks moving and shaking up the markets this week. (All performance data below over the rolling week).
Boom đ
Gorilla Technology (NASDAQ:GRRR) up 90%
Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA) up 12%
Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) up 3%
Bust đ
Symbotic (NASDAQ:SYM) down 10%
Duos Technology Group (NASDAQ:DUOS) down 6%
iRobot (NASDAQ:IRBT) down 10%
From the hive mind đ§
Trust me, you can go down a deep rabbit hole about unread texts from Mount Vesuvius and other âlostâ ancient scrolls. So rather than go down that rabbit hole, why not get AI to do it, and pocket $700,000 along the way.
Do you think that extra croissant you snuck into the bag was a âwinâ at the self-checkouts? Were you a little apprehensive that youâd be found out? Well, thanks to AI your thieving ways will no longer get past the exit!
What have we learnt from earnings season this quarter? What did big tech tell us is the future of earnings? Ok, itâs not hard to guess. Yahoo Finance! takes a look at it anyway, and whatâs coming next.
Artificial Polltelligence đłïž
This weekâs poll is all about the king of AI stock kings, Nvidia. Iâve been in long debate with my brother about where it heads next. I donât want to influence your view though, so have your say below.
Weirdest AI image of the day
Taco Cat may be palindromic, but Cat Taco is weird â r/Weirddallee
ChatGPTâs random quote of the day
âThere are 10 kinds of people in the world: those who understand binary numerals, and those who don’t.” – Ian Stewart
Thanks for reading, see you on Tuesday. And if youâre enjoying our work, please like, share and leave comments below,
[…] I explained I believe thereâs only one answer to the future of our energy needs â nuclear. […]