Jobs was right. Gates was wrong

20 points
1/21/1970
a day ago
by lrsaturnino

Comments


goodmythical

Published today, leading with "Recently, I ran an AI model locally and reached a conclusion that is hard to ignore: the major LLM providers are probably operating with substantial subsidies to sustain their services at current prices." is wild.

How do you get all the way to running a local model without having heard that this is the case? Like...it's so well documented...I wonder if author knows that a portion of the subsidy is that the models are being trained on free, cheap, and chat models...

20 hours ago

lrsaturnino

Thanks - yes, I agree, and already I knew this was a thing. I just haven't yet concretely made the actual math, and it left me baffled - Anthropic and OpenAI are charging 1/3 of the COST tops.

16 hours ago

goodmythical

Ah, yes, it is always interesting to see loss leaders and just general revenue wizardry that can be accomplished at scale. Things like "It can be more cost effective to take on debt than to earn additional revenue". Imagine how much it costs Alphabet to run hundreds of thousands of terabytes of not only streaming but transcoding every single day for youtube and you get a similar sense of "holy shit where is the money coming from".

3 hours ago

superxpro12

This seems incredibly obvious to me I guess, because its an industry standard play.

Establish marketshare, then monetize.

And right now, the industry is caught in this feedback loop that seems to inflate the stock prices of everyone involved. AI needs gpu's, which grows the gpu sector, which AI needs, because if its userbase. And then it buys more gpus.

The growth has to stop at SOME point...

I'm waiting for a massive shoe to drop on token pricing. It's unsustainable.

20 hours ago

avmich

The quote at the beginning is of Alan Kay though. https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Alan_Kay

20 hours ago

lrsaturnino

Thanks - fixed.

16 hours ago

[deleted]
a day ago

hyperhello

[dead]

17 hours ago