16 comments

  • pizlonator 11 hours ago

    The recent news that feels most fishy to me is nvidia’s investment in OpenAI.

    Like if you have to invest in your customer then what is even going on

    • naveen99 7 hours ago

      It would be problematic if OpenAI wasn’t the torchbearer of ai. Think of it as vertical integration. Normally antitrust would stop it, but given the competition from China, that’s a nonstarter. so it’s not so different from microsoft investing in OpenAI. Basically everyone and their mother wants to invest in OpenAI. It’s not so much that they have to invest in OpenAI to sell their gpu’s which are chronically under supplied.

      I think Amazon buying compute from oracle is a lot more questionable.

    • 10 hours ago
      [deleted]
    • gsky 10 hours ago

      Google invested in lot of their customers business. It's not odd at all

      • pizlonator 10 hours ago

        For example?

        • DaveZale 9 hours ago

          big tech tends to buy out conpetitors to let them die?

    • DaveZale 10 hours ago

      I've seen this term describing the interrelationships of AI companies, chip companies, banks

      https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ouroboros

      if that makes sense to you

  • camgunz 10 hours ago

    Listen, guys, I'm so much more productive now. I've founded 10 companies and Claude's building the products for all of them. It's gonna be huge. Unrelated: can you front my rent for the next few months?

  • its-kostya 8 hours ago

    From a different article on the same Deutsche Bank warning [1]

    > However, there isn’t a consensus on Wall Street regarding AI’s longevity. Goldman Sachs took a more bullish view this morning. “We expect productivity gains from artificial intelligence (AI) to boost GDP significantly, by about 0.4% through the next few years and 1.5% cumulatively as adoption rises over the long run. Once it is widely adopted, AI is likely to allow workers and firms to produce more output for a given set of inputs, which will raise [total factor productivity] growth,”

    [1]: https://fortune.com/2025/09/23/ai-boom-unsustainable-tech-sp...

  • DaveZale 10 hours ago

    I was dreamin' when I wrote this So sue me if I go too fast But life is just a party And parties weren't meant to last War is all around us My mind says, "Prepare to fight" So if I gotta die I'm gonna listen to my body tonight Yeah

    [Chorus: Prince and All] They say 2000, zero-zero, party over, oops, out of time So tonight, I'm gonna party like it's 1999 Yeah, yeah, shh

  • david927 11 hours ago

    AI bubble is the only thing keeping the US [stock market from crashing]

    • DaveZale 10 hours ago

      that graph showing zero growth without "tech spending" seems to indicate that.

      What puzzles me is that human brains require only about 20 watts of power, plus food, shelter, relationships, medical care, and 20 years of experiential and educational training effort, so why do LLMs need so much more power, if they are piggybacking on digital human training data?

      • appcustodian2 8 hours ago

        is your comment supposed to be pessimistic or optimistic? my interpretation of your post is that we should be investing more into AI because eventually we will achieve human-like AI running on 20 watts of power. we know it's possible because as you said, our brains are doing it.

        • DaveZale 5 hours ago

          neither p nor n. Just a question

  • frenchmajesty 11 hours ago

    Time to sell

  • andsoitis 11 hours ago

    I’d Deutsche is so certain they are gonna make a killing when they pick up assets at low prices.