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Quantized Float Exposed

https://www.quant.exposed
1•charles_irl•38s ago•0 comments

The Cantor Experiment: Forcing a GPT-5-Class AI to Forget a Century of Math

https://romainpeter.substack.com/p/the-cantor-experiment-forcing-a-gpt
1•coffeeaddict1•1m ago•0 comments

Validation Machines

https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2025/10/validation-ai-raffi-krikorian/684764/
1•strangattractor•3m ago•1 comments

A simple illusion can unlock your childhood memories

https://www.psypost.org/a-simple-illusion-can-unlock-your-childhood-memories-according-to-new-psy...
1•amichail•3m ago•0 comments

Tech giants brace to spend billions more in CapEx as AI race heats up

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/companies/tech-giants-brace-to-spend-billions-more-in-capex-as-ai...
1•pera•7m ago•0 comments

Norway Leads Global EV Adoption

https://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/Norway-Leads-Global-EV-Adoption.html
4•PaulHoule•8m ago•0 comments

Naïve Shuffle Algorithm (2007)

https://blog.codinghorror.com/the-danger-of-naivete/
1•indigodaddy•8m ago•0 comments

Kimberly-Clark is buying Tylenol maker Kenvue in cash and stock deal worth –$48B

https://apnews.com/article/kimberly-clark-kenvue-tylenol-98d5fd39c12b25524e3188da2e840436
1•healsdata•10m ago•0 comments

Coca-Cola – Holidays Are Coming [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yy6fByUmPuE
2•gnabgib•10m ago•0 comments

Boost your Codex CLI productivity with scripts

https://promptcoding.substack.com/p/the-only-guide-you-need-for-10xing
1•AgentMatrixAI•10m ago•0 comments

AI Is Teaching the Next Generation of M.B.A.s the Classic Case Study

https://www.wsj.com/tech/ai/ai-is-teaching-the-next-generation-of-m-b-a-s-the-classic-case-study-...
1•lodrein•13m ago•0 comments

Duffy says he would shutter US airspace if he thought it was unsafe

https://www.reuters.com/world/us/duffy-says-he-would-shutter-us-airspace-if-he-thought-it-was-uns...
3•twiddling•13m ago•0 comments

I Tracked 10k Top Podcasts: Here's Who Hosts Their Feeds

https://www.adithyan.io/blog/who-hosts-top-podcasts
1•speckx•14m ago•0 comments

Show HN: React-like Declarative DSL for building synthetic LLM datasets

https://github.com/qforge-dev/torque
2•arturwala•15m ago•0 comments

Building a 2.5kWh battery from disposable vapes to power my workshop [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dy-wFixuRVU
1•rsanek•16m ago•0 comments

Windows 7 slimmed down to 69 MB

https://www.theregister.com/2025/10/31/windows_7_limbos_down_to/
1•TMWNN•16m ago•1 comments

This Month in Ladybird: October 2025

https://buttondown.com/ladybird/archive/this-month-in-ladybird-october-2025/
3•samtheDamned•18m ago•1 comments

Snapit: Snapshot Testing for C

https://mattjhall.co.uk/posts/snapit-snapshot-testing-for-c.html
2•ingve•20m ago•0 comments

Intellectual Ventures: Mosquito Laser Shootdown Sequence (2010) [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l4tPrcePdGM
2•stmw•21m ago•0 comments

Writing Music with Emacs (2020)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gimjJH73wxI
1•brudgers•21m ago•0 comments

The Year of a Thousand Rooms

https://dxdt.ch/blog.php?blog=year_of_rooms
1•lkm0•21m ago•0 comments

OpenAI Made a $12B Loss Last Quarter, Microsoft Results Indicate

https://www.wsj.com/livecoverage/stock-market-today-dow-sp-500-nasdaq-10-31-2025/card/openai-made...
2•thm•22m ago•1 comments

An Experimental Program for AI-Powered Feedback at STOC

https://scottaaronson.blog/?p=9283
1•amichail•22m ago•0 comments

Temml: A TeX-to-MathML conversion library in JavaScript

https://temml.org/
2•susam•22m ago•0 comments

Coca-Cola's new AI holiday ad is a sloppy eyesore

https://www.theverge.com/news/812559/coca-cola-ai-holiday-christmas-commercial-2025
4•stalfosknight•22m ago•1 comments

Trust Your Intuition in the Face of Uncertainty

https://lindynewsletter.beehiiv.com/p/when-should-you-trust-your-intuition
1•walterbell•23m ago•0 comments

Hosting your static web site with Firebase Hosting

https://www.peterbe.com/plog/hosting-your-static-web-site-with-firebase-hosting
2•speckx•23m ago•0 comments

Writing an LLM from scratch, part 26 – evaluating the fine-tuned model

https://www.gilesthomas.com/2025/11/llm-from-scratch-26-evaluating-the-fine-tuned-model
2•gpjt•26m ago•0 comments

Credentials Evidence or Simulate

https://preludes.eu/op/2025/i/
2•sandij•26m ago•0 comments

Portable documents host new file formats

https://preludes.eu/op/2025/ii/
1•sandij•27m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

OpenAI signs $38B cloud computing deal with Amazon

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/03/technology/openai-amazon-cloud-computing.html
129•donohoe•5h ago

Comments

thelastgallon•5h ago
How much is Amazon 'investing' in OpenAI for this deal?
throw03172019•5h ago
Will OpenAI models be available in Bedrock?
easton•4h ago
Last week's Microsoft deal said Azure was still exclusive: https://openai.com/index/next-chapter-of-microsoft-openai-pa...

But that feels weird combined with this. You can buy OpenAI API access which is served off of AWS infrastructure, but you can't bill for it through AWS? (I mean, lots of companies work like that. but Microsoft is betting that a lot of people move regular workloads to Azure so they can have centralized billing for inference and their other stuff?)

f4uCL9dNSnQm•3h ago
It says

> Non-API products may be served on any cloud provider.

I am not sure if Bedrock counts. There are 2 OpenAI models already there: https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/openai-open-weight-models-n...

samcat116•1h ago
I would imagine they couldn't offer models through Bedrock. I think this means training and traditional computing workloads for their products (such as the workspaces for Codex cloud)
JCM9•5h ago
Does OpenAI have $38 billion to buy this? Does AWS have sufficient free cash flow to pay for this “infrastructure” investment they speak of?

Recent analysis shows AWS is burning through Amazon’s free cash on AI buildouts which is very concerning if the bubble pops, leaving Amazon holding the bag of invested capital not making returns.

Amazon is a bit late to the party on these headlines, and lots of unanswered questions about what’s really going on here.

gizajob•3h ago
No, they don’t have the money at the bottom of their burning pit of other peoples cash.
vessenes•57m ago
oAI is growing rapidly at over $1bn a month in revenues, maybe as much as $2bn if you read between the lines from Sam's interviews. Over 7 years will they see $38bn of revenue demand against inference? ABSOLUTELY. Is it an incredibly good trick to get access to that much infrastructure without having to run a datacenter while you pilot the fastest growth ever consumer tech company? I'd say it is. Others might disagree
cmiles8•4h ago
Amazon is a bit late to the announcements party on this front so this comes across as a bit “hey guys, us too!”

Lots of questions on if this makes sense, and highly likely Amazon never gets $38B cash from OpenAI out of this.

mocha_nate•4h ago
i think this shows Amazon filling a need Microsoft couldn't. They probably tried, but decided to use Amazon cloud services after reviewing infrastructure needs.
Handy-Man•3h ago
MSFT is power constrained.[0]

[0] https://www.tomshardware.com/tech-industry/artificial-intell...

mike_d•2h ago
Everyone is. The grids always had a problem supplying enough power to even modestly sized commercial datacenters. This is what kicked off the trend of companies building their own datacenters in obscure cities that used to house large steel mills or other power hungry businesses.

I remember when everyone was racing to produce "datacenter in a shipping container" solutions. I just laughed because apparently nobody actually bothered to check if you could actually plug it in anywhere.

bespokedevelopr•1h ago
Amazon still does this. The customers aren’t saas companies in the bay though. It’s militaries, and they’re sent to FOBs.
ahmeneeroe-v2•46m ago
>"hey guys, us too!"

In what context? This isn't fashion, being the 2nd mover has benefits which often outweigh the costs.

Havoc•4h ago
They sure seem to be writing a lot of cheques. Hope they all cash ok because if they don’t it’ll suck the entire tech industry down with it
gizajob•3h ago
Those cheques absolutely are going to bounce at some point and will bring the entire tech industry down. At least on the stock market.
jgbuddy•4h ago
This is crazy, satya punching the air rn
Handy-Man•3h ago
I don't think they care that much. They just aren't able to keep up with the infra that OpenAI wants.

https://www.tomshardware.com/tech-industry/artificial-intell...

ChrisArchitect•4h ago
Official post: https://openai.com/index/aws-and-openai-partnership/ (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45799021)
datax2•4h ago
Looks like someone knew about this on Thursday, gotta love those over efficient market trends.
silisili•4h ago
Thursday was their last earnings call.
PKop•1h ago
No they just had a great quarterly earnings report that day. Try to put the absolute minimal effort into checking the obvious before you revert to conspiracy.
netdevphoenix•4h ago
This looks quite concerning imo. We all know this is a bubble. When the transformer implosion happens, you can be sure that OpenAI will be ground zero. All these investors feeding OpenAI and all these adjacent companies exposing themselves to OpenAI will suffer huge losses. Everyone is chasing growth so hard that they are making questionable choices regarding returns from a far future that may never come. And let's be clear, the future that is going to pay this off is a future where this tech or a direct successor to this tech brings about a level of general learning skills and autonomy that should be pretty close to a third revolution. Anything else is massive loves for all of these companies.
lm28469•4h ago
Like in politics, all they care about is getting out before shtf and pass the bag to the next sucker while making $$$ in the meantime
empath75•3h ago
You are stating a lot of things as fact that aren't really supported. We don't know this is a bubble, we don't know that there will be a transformer implosion, whatever that means, we don't know that OpenAI would ground zero if this is a bubble and it pops, etc..
indigodaddy•3h ago
No one ever knows before these things happen. These predictions are obviously always conjecture, they can’t be stated as fact, ever— at best you can give some supporting evidence often based on similar prior art
indigodaddy•3h ago
loves is typo for losses I assume?
treis•3h ago
Nah this is a repeat of Google's early days. They built storage at such a scale that it was hard for anyone else to compete in anything that required storage like email.

OpenAI is doing the same with compute. They're going to have more compute than everyone else combined. It will give them the scale and warchest to drive everyone else out. Every AI company is going to end up being a wrapper around them. And OpenAI will slowly take that value too either via acquisition or cloning successful products.

kilroy123•3h ago
Google, too, has a lot of compute. Not to mention the chips to power the compute.
pityJuke•3h ago
And they own the compute, as opposed to renting some of it. And they have the engineers to utilise that compute.
gizajob•3h ago
If only everyone in the world had compute in their pockets or on their desk…
sipjca•3h ago
seems like a flawed assumption when the cost of tokens -> 0
mdasen•3h ago
But is OpenAI building that compute or are they renting it?

OpenAI and Anthropic are signing large deals with Google and Amazon for compute resources, but ultimately it means that Google and Amazon will own a ton of compute. Is OpenAI paying Amazon's cap ex just so Amazon can invest and end up owning what OpenAI needs over the long term?

For those paying Google, are they giving Google the money Google needs to further invest in their TPUs giving them a huge advantage?

treis•3h ago
Practically, it doesn't matter like it didn't matter for Google that storage got many orders of magnitude cheaper. By the time training a novel LLM and serving it to a billion users is trivial in the way that providing 1GB of email storage is today there will be other moats. They'll have decades of user history and a monitization framework that will be hard to overcome.

Google is a viable competitor here.

Everyone else is missing part of the puzzle. They theoretically could compete but they're behind with no obvious way of catching up.

Amazon specifically is in a position similar to where they were with mobile. They put out a competing phone but with no clear advantage it flopped. They could put out their own LLM but they're late. They'd have to put out a product that is better enough to overcome consumer inertia. They have no real edge or advantage over OpenAI/Google to make that happen.

Theoretically they could back a competitor like Anthropic but what's the point? They look like an also ran these days and ultimately who wins doesn't affect Amazon's core businesses.

esafak•2h ago
How is Anthropic an also-ran when they lead the enterprise market?
bespokedevelopr•1h ago
FB seems to have figured it out finally and their stock took a huge hit for the investment of infra. Also, despite being behind in sota models and huge human capital investments for research, I believe they are benefiting greatly from oai and the likes.

Every image/video/text post on a meta app is essentially subsidized by oai/gemini/anthropic as they are all losing money on inference. Meta is getting more engagement and ad sales through these subsidized genai image content posts.

Long term they need to catch up and training/inference costs need to drop enough such that each genai post costs less than net profit on the ads but they’re in a great position to bridge the gap.

The end of all of this is ad sales. Google and Meta are still the leaders of this. OpenAI needs a social engagement platform or it is only going to take a slice of Google.

JimDabell•3h ago
> OpenAI is doing the same with compute.

No, it’s Amazon that’s doing this. OpenAI is paying Amazon for the compute services, but it’s Amazon that’s building the capacity.

pphysch•1h ago
Pretty sure this "compute is the new oil" thesis fell flat when OAI failed to deliver on GPT-5 hype, and all the disappointments since.

It's still all about the (yet to be collected) data and advancements in architecture, and OAI doesn't have anything substantial there.

Keyframe•1h ago
Every AI company is going to end up being a wrapper around them.

the race is for sure on: https://menlovc.com/perspective/2025-mid-year-llm-market-upd...

lizknope•1h ago
Are we at the Pets.com stage of the bubble yet?

I started working in 1997 at the height of the dot com bubble. I thought it would go on forever but the second half of 2000 and 2001 was rough.

I know a lot of people designing AI accelerator chips. Everyone over 45 thinks we are in an AI bubble. It's the younger people that think growth is infinite.

I told them to diversify from their company stock but we'll see if they have listened after the bubble pops

weeeeelp•4h ago
https://archive.is/6DtPq
JCM9•4h ago
At this point these announcements are more PR posturing than anything that makes financial sense for shareholders.

I do worry what the other side of this looks like when the circular feedback loop driving hype up eventually reverses and drives things down with amplifying effect.

justchad•3h ago
Came to post something with a similar sentiment. It's going to have broad market effects when the circle dealing doesn't work out as intended. OpenAI is losing so much money every quarter that they will undoubtedly have to raise prices I would think and people may not be willing to pay them.
whalesalad•3h ago
> At this point these announcements are more PR posturing than anything that makes financial sense for shareholders.

corporate would like you to find the difference between these two photos

bwfan123•1h ago
The negative drumbeat has started, and the narrative is changing to become critical. Every new fad reaches a saturation point, and people's attention spans are short. Already, I see folks piling onto the quantum bandwagon as if LLMs are passe.

Here, the clouds have pulled a trick to inflate their revenues with their own cashflows, and have not been punished yet for it by shareholders - except meta which is getting asked some difficult questions.

hypeatei•4h ago
We all know this is going to pop at some point but I personally think Amazon would be a good investment for the next 6 months or so. They just did layoffs, can ride the OpenAI hypetrain, and they beat recent earnings. If they beat next earnings with a lower headcount and mention "AI" a couple times, I think their stock price easily goes to $300.

Not financial advice, obviously, but that's my personal outlook. I've said it before: Alphabet is probably the safest play long term as they haven't been infected by any NVIDIA or OpenAI deals (yet)

treis•3h ago
OpenAI is an existential threat to Google. They're both solving the same problem for consumers. Something like "there's information on the Internet that I want but don't know where it is". Almost all of Google's value derives from being the default solution to that problem. They can't give up that space to OpenAI. And, at least IMHO, it's obvious LLMs are the future in this area.

The other side to that coin is monetization. Google is dominant there as well. OpenAI can't yield that space to Google because it's how the value is extracted from the consumer.

bwfan123•1h ago
reverse that. Google is the existential threat to openAI. Google can price tokens to make openAI never profitable.
naveen99•9m ago
Google gave birth to openai by trying to bottle up the gpt genie.
Marazan•3h ago
At this point it is getting beyond parody
xnx•3h ago
All these stories should have the dollar amounts in quotes as they are farcical.
damnesian•3h ago
Great, can I buy hallucinated products now?
JCM9•3h ago
Reading between the lines of Trainium left out of the announcement says they tried it, weren’t impressed, and wanted NVidia chips instead.
Insanity•3h ago
I don't think that's super surprising though. Nvidia has deals with OpenAI as well, so not using Trainium might have as much to do with OpenAI keeping Nvidia happy, as with Trainium not being on-par.
JCM9•3h ago
Didn’t stop OpenAI doing a mega deal with AMD.

They just didn’t like the chips is the most logical answer. Particularly given AWS has been doing everything they can to pump up interest, and this huge PR release doesn’t even mention it at all. That omission speaks volumes.

Insanity•18m ago
Ah that's true, I missed that AMD announcement.
Yizahi•3h ago
Only 38 billion dollars? I thought we are in the age of triple digit billion sums by now in the LLM space. What is that paltry change worth for, a couple seconds worth of OpenAI daily expenses?
jcranmer•3h ago
The main question I have with all of these deals: how much of the deal is OpenAI actually required to buy, versus how much of it is an option for OpenAI to buy? Because if you tot up all of these numbers, it's something like 10× current annual revenue that OpenAI is signing deals for, and if OpenAI is actually committing to all of that spend... there is a serious cash crunch looming. But if OpenAI is merely optioning to spend up to that much, and only has to commit to a tenth of those numbers, well, that's not as threatening to OpenAI as a going concern.
JCM9•3h ago
This does all smell a bit like when WeWork was buying up seemingly every available office for rent. When it came time to actually pay for said offices… oops.
mike_d•3h ago
> When it came time to actually pay for said offices… oops

I was at WeWork around the time of its downfall. I have a lot of opinions about how that place was ran, but I can assure you pre-pandemic they were buying up every office space because they were filling them with tenants. Not paying for offices was a result of tenants not paying due to the pandemic.

JCM9•2h ago
And these GPUs aren’t sitting idle either. Nobody is questioning that they “need” the compute, it’s the lack of a viable business model to pay for all this long term that has folks worried.

That’s the same as what happened when WeWork was buying up office space pre-pandemic and then using handwavy nonsense like “Community Adjusted EBITDA” as part of the smoke and mirrors to pretend like there was an actual business there.

The pandemic expedited the pain, but the business model was broken and folks called BS long before Covid hit.

treis•2h ago
>it’s the lack of a viable business model to pay for all this long term that has folks worried.

They're going to sell ads at the moment people are looking to buy stuff. It's the single most viable business model we've ever seen.

jcranmer•2h ago
I know that "ads" is the popular assumption for how you're supposed to make money, but most sites don't really make all that much money with ads. Facebook and Google aren't rich from selling ads, they're rich from all of the ad infrastructure and quite frankly their ability to follow you around on the internet.

Besides, how are ads on ChatGPT supposed to work? If some student is asking it to write their paper for them, is ChatGPT going to stop in the middle of it and go "Hey, you know what sounds good right now? A nice bowl of soup..." Although admittedly that would make for some hilarious proof of people using AI for things they shouldn't...

vlovich123•2h ago
People regularly ask ChatGPT for product recommendations of all kinds, explicit and implicit.

ChatGPT will also probably be selling ad infrastructure to inject ads just like Google injects ads into search. They probably will pay out little to websites that include the “ChatGPT” widget to integrate ChatGPT with their site that also has ads.

Right now the barriers are technical for injecting ads into AI responses.

jonfw•1h ago
> ChatGPT going to stop in the middle of it and go "Hey, you know what sounds good right now? A nice bowl of soup..."

Google/facebook do that today, because the content they're showing is created pre-ad, and the ads have to be injected after the fact.

With AI- the content is being generated in the same place that the ads are being injected, which allows us to be much more subtle about it.

How much do you think a car company would pay for to put special training weight on their marketing materials? I would guess big money

candiddevmike•1h ago
I don't think you'd want to do this at the training weight level. That could lead to wildly inappropriate references to your product, potentially to the determinant of your brand.

"While we're on the topic of self-harm, did you know the ABC Co Truck has the highest safety rating?"

mossTechnician•1h ago
Those ads would also get mixed into content the advertisers would probably not appreciate.
dktp•1h ago
I am also in the camp believing they will sell ads the second they find a viable way (churn worth it, base infrastructure for it built, enough people trusting ai with product recommendations...)

I think the queries will fall into profitable (product recommendations) and non profitable (writing an essay or code) just the way they do for Google. Probably former will have a generous free tier and latter will be largely paywalled. I don't know how they'll do that, but I imagine they'll find some way

It's a mass consumer (software) product and they need new revenue venues and ads have a history of working well. Even Spotify, Netflix, Amazon Prime, ... Companies that historically don't have the ad infrastructure of Google or Facebook have increasingly profitable ad tiers

Zambyte•1h ago
> Facebook and Google aren't rich from selling ads, they're rich from all of the ad infrastructure and quite frankly their ability to follow you around on the internet.

https://openai.com/index/introducing-chatgpt-atlas/

> Besides, how are ads on ChatGPT supposed to work?

"How do I do XYZ?" "Product ABC can do XYZ for you."

treis•1h ago
OpenAI is positioned to be something like Adwords is/was. Think free LLM for your app/website/store or as the backend for products like character.ai. That will let them vacuum up a ton of user data.

Plus like Google search they have a ton of organic traffic. Chatgpt has replaced Google search as my starting point to investigate anything. Lots of that is related to things where I will eventually spend money

mike_d•2h ago
I was simply addressing the implication that WeWork was just buying up office space for fun and not paying for it.
jsnell•1h ago
It's actually more like 100x their current revenue; they stated last week[0] that they have spending commitments for $1.4T of compute.

Or, well, they stated that the TCO of the compute they have commitments for is $1.4T, which is a somewhat strange phrasing. I assume it's due to it being a mix of self-owned vs. rental compute, and what they mean is the TCO to OpenAI rather than the TCO to the owner of the compute.

[0] https://x.com/sama/status/1983584366547829073

JCM9•1h ago
That’s absolutely insane.

I get that folks are now just engaged in “keeping up with the Jones’” FOMO behavior but none of this is making any sense.

gooodvibes•35m ago
The real massive revenues that the big tech companies are having aren't going to disappear just because OpenAI goes away.
jcranmer•34m ago
I went to 10× revenue because I figured the ~$1 trillion was over something like a decade, rather than over a year.
mkhattab•3h ago
These deal numbers have lost all meaning for me.

There’s been some buzz around the official opening of the Grand Egyptian Museum, which I visited last month. That project took 1.1 to 1.2B USD. Double its original budget estimate but still the museum looks fantastic and it feels, tangibly, like it’s worth a billion.

In contrast with all the money spent on AI, it just feels like monopoly money. Where’s the monument to its success? We could’ve built flying cars or been back to the moon with this much money.

whycome•3h ago
I’d rather useful AI tools than a flying car or someone else going to the moon.

But I agree that the numbers are increasingly beyond reasonable comprehension

Aperocky•3h ago
I've been using AI and so did many people I knew. It's resulted in tangible difference in my life.

It's much less likely that I'd drive a flying car and there is 0 chance that I would be the one going to the moon if we spent the equivalent money on those things instead.

malux85•2h ago
Me too, once you’ve had a lot of practice with it (like anything) and know how to mitigate some of its weaknesses, then it’s a superpower.

I currently pay 200 USD a month for AI, and my company pays about 1,200 USD for all employees to use it essentially unlimited - and I get AT LEAST 5x the return on value on that, I would happy multiply all those numbers by 5 and still pay it.

Domain knowledge, bug fixing, writing tests, fixing tests, spotting what’s incomplete, help visualising results, security review generation for human interpretation, writing boilerplate, and simpler refactors

It can’t do all of these things end to end itself, but with the right prompting and guidance holy smokes does it multiply my positive traits as a developer

pphysch•1h ago
How certain are you that you need to pay $200/mo/seat for this value?
righthand•6m ago
> I currently pay 200 USD a month for AI

> and I get AT LEAST 5x the return on value on that

You make $800 by paying OpenAI $200? Can you please explain how your the value put in is 5x and how I can start making $800 more a month?

> holy smokes does it multiply my positive traits as a developer

But it’s not you doing the work. And by your own admission, anyone can eventually figure it out. So if anything you’ve lost traits and handed them to the Llm. As an employee you’re less entrenched and more replaceable.

paxys•3h ago
What percent of the world is going to set foot in this museum in the next few years? What percent has used or will use AI tools?
ahmeneeroe-v2•41m ago
>it feels, tangibly, like it’s worth a billion

Lot of feeling going on in this comment, but that's not really how money works.

throw_m239339•3h ago
I wouldn't be surprised if a few weeks later, Amazon was investing $38B in NVIDIA for new server processors... like nothing to see here folks, totally not a giant circular bubble...
Insanity•3h ago
And so the bubble grows.

I'd be happy if the industry/stock market proves me wrong, but I can't see this ending any other way than with a major crash that makes the dot-com boom seem like a minor blimp.

PeaceTed•5m ago
I really don't know with this. By that I mean all logic says that, yes this is absolutely a bubble. But the markets have been irrational for a very long time now, just look at Tesla stock and it wild valuations for years now as an example. This could go on for a lot longer than anyone would think reasonable.
random9749832•3h ago
What is the end goal? GPT-5 wasn't even a step up from o3.

ChatGPT has 800 million weekly users but only 10 million are paying.

vessenes•54m ago
GPT 5 codex is definitely a step up from o3. I could use o3 still for chat, but prefer 5-thinking. Do you still use o3?
JCM9•1h ago
OpenAI is generating $13B a year in revenue. Let’s be generous and say $20B. They’ve signed commitments to spend something like $1.4 trillion on compute. An asset that to date has proven to have a hyper-depreciation cycle.

Someone has to come up with $1.4 trillion in actual cash, fast, or this whole thing comes crashing down. Why? At the end of all this circular financing and deals are folks that actually want real cash (eg electricity utilities that aren’t going to accept OpenAI shares for payment).

If the above doesn’t freak you about a bit at how bonkers this whole thing has become then you need a reality check. “Selling ads” on ChatGPT ain’t gonna close that hole.

hluska•1h ago
Is there a reason you’re posting so often on this thread? Everyone gets your point.
JCM9•1h ago
Fair enough. I guess I’m just like those guys at the investors conference in The Big Short and can’t believe what I’m seeing.
gretch•1h ago
Why does it matter if everyone else knows or cares?

If you were actually the guys from the big short and you have strong conviction, you should short the market (literally like the guys from big short) and get really rich.

Money is the language they understand, so hit them where it hurts.

Uehreka•1h ago
People always talk about shorting like it’s an efficient and reliable way to make money being right when everyone else is wrong. But it isn’t.

When you go long, you can still make money by being “sort of right” or “obliquely right” or “somewhat wrong but lucky”or by just collecting dividends if the market stays irrational long enough. If you short something you have to be exactly right (both about what will happen and precisely when) or your money will end up in the hands of the people you’re betting against. It’s not a symmetrical thing you can just switch back and forth on.

lesuorac•1h ago
I think the main issue with your theory is that it's $38B in today's dollars. In the 1970s we saw a lot less independence between the Fed and White House and as a consequence severe inflation. Trillions of dollars of liabilities is not going to sound so bad after 4 years of double-digit inflation ...

Also, IIUC the guys in The Big Short would've lost everything if the government stepped in sooner since the banks controlled the price of the CDSs and could've maintained the incorrect price if they had a bunch of extra cash.

ceejayoz•59m ago
> Also, IIUC the guys in The Big Short would've lost everything if the government stepped in sooner since the banks controlled the price of the CDSs and could've maintained the incorrect price if they had a bunch of extra cash.

Yeah. "Markets can remain irrational longer than you can remain solvent."

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Burry had an investor panic and nearly lost everything. He was right, but he nearly got the timing wrong.

confirmmesenpai•1h ago
did the price of NVIDIA made sense to you 2 years ago, when a lot of people were screaming it's in an obvious bubble?

if no, and you thought it was a bubble, does that price of NVIDIA from 2 years ago (not from today) makes sense to you now?

vessenes•1h ago
You'll have your shot at shorting oAI soon apparently. I'm in a lot of these threads on the bull side, and I'll say - please be careful if you do, and only short what you can afford to lose. I'm sure the stock will be crazy volatile, but I don't see signs of anything unsustainable in oAI's ops right now, with the sole exception of increasing training spend using investor money. We're not in a good position outside the company to know if that will pay off. The parts we do know about, inference, users, growth, revenue growth and net income, are all generationally significant, and make shorting really risky.
Razengan•1h ago
> electricity utilities that aren’t going to accept OpenAI shares for payment

What if AI invents fusion power?

(Thanks for the downvotes I wanted to keep my karma at 69)

jdlshore•40m ago
1. There’s no indication that AI is capable of doing so.

2. Outside of software, inventions have to be turned into physical things like power plants. That doesn’t happen overnight and is expensive.

3. The industry is already going through a power revolution in the form of battery + solar and it’s going to take a while for a new technology to climb the learning curve enough to be competitive.

4. What if AI gives us all a pony?

Razengan•31m ago
What if ChatGPT invents the Matrix? Electricity problem solved.
jonas21•1h ago
The $1.4T commitment is spread over multiple years. Let's assume 4 -- then that's $350B/year. Coincidentally, Google had $350B in revenue in 2024 (and projected to be ~$400B in 2025).

It's certainly possible to imagine OpenAI eventually generating far more revenue than Google, even without anything close to AGI. For example, if they were to improve productivity of 10% of the economy by 10% and capture a third of that value for themselves, that would be more than enough. Alternatively, displacing Google as the go-to place for search and selling ads against that would likely generate at least Google levels of revenue. Or some combination of both.

Is this guaranteed to happen? Of course not. But it's not in "bonkers" territory either.

Aurornis•1h ago
> The $1.4T commitment is spread over multiple years. Let's assume 4

The Amazon deal is actually spread over 7 years. Other deals have different terms, but also spread over multiple years.

Deals like these have cancellation terms. OpenAI could presumably pay a fee and cancel in the future if their projections are too high and they don't need some of the compute from these deals.

The deals also include OpenAI shares. The deals are being made with companies that have sufficient revenue or even cash on hand to buy the compute and electricity.

The claim above that someone needs to come up with $1.4 trillion right now or everything will collapse isn't grounded in any real understanding of these deals. It's just adding up numbers and comparing them to a single annual revenue snapshot.

cmiles8•3m ago
I don’t think the OP is saying $1.4 trillion cash is needed “right now.” The point being made is simply that with all the circular deals and financing for this to make sense OpenAI does need to generate $1.4 trillion in cash that can eventually work its way through the economy to pay all this. Even under the most bullish cases for AI that looks iffy at best.

I think we all know that a big part of the angle here is to keep the hype going until there’s a liquidity event, folks will cash out and then at the like they won’t care what happens.

ivape•46m ago
Google is under existential threat. In that case, OpenAI has a very legitimate trillion dollar case for carving out a piece of Google.

Search engines were never a user friendly app to begin with. You had to know how to search well to get comprehensive answers, and the average person is not that scrupulous. Google’s product is inferior, believe it or not. There will be nothing normal about seeing a list of search results pretty soon, so Google literally has a legacy app out in the wild as far as facts are concerned.

So imagine that, Google would have to remove Search as they know it (remove their core business) and standup a app that looks the same as all the new apps.

People might like one AI persona more than others, which means people will seek out all types of new apps. LLMs is the worst thing that could have ever happened to Google quite frankly.

Aurornis•1h ago
> Someone has to come up with $1.4 trillion in actual cash, fast, or this whole thing comes crashing down.

These deals aren't for 100% payment up front. The deals also include stock, not just cash. So, no, they do not need to come up with $1.4 trillion in cash quickly.

This AWS deal is spread over 7 years. That's $5.4 billion per year, though I assume it's ramping up over time.

> At the end of all this circular financing and deals are folks that actually want real cash (eg electricity utilities that aren’t going to accept OpenAI shares for payment).

Amazon's cash on hand is on the order of $100 billion. They also have constant revenue coming in. They will not have any problem accepting OpenAI shares and then paying electricity bills with cash.

These deals are also being done in the open with publicly traded companies. Investors can see the balance sheets and react accordingly in the stock price.

mandevil•49m ago
Interestingly, it looks like there is a move away from financing these data centers with tech company cash-on-hand and moving to Special Purpose Vehicles over the past 18 months or so. So now there is a lot more debt involved in funding DC's than equity, in ways that are a sudden change to what was largely a funded-by-equity process at the beginning of 2024.

The one I found best documented (1) is a Meta's SPV to fund their Hyperion DC in Louisiana, which is a deal that is 80% financed by private credit firm Blue Owl. There is a lot of financial trickery to getting the SPV to be counted by the ratings agencies as debt belonging to a different entity that does not count against Meta's books but treated by the market as basically something that Meta will back. But xAI's Memphis DC is also a SPV, and Microsoft is doing that as well. I'm not sure about AMZN, but that we're starting to see that from their competitors suggests they will also be going to this way.

1: By the invaluable Matt Levine, here: https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/newsletters/2025-10-29/put... but the other major companies have their own SPV's

jgbuddy•1h ago
The obvious answer is that they are going to IPO
officeplant•3m ago
I hope so just so I can watch the funny line graph of people burning money.
confirmmesenpai•1h ago
token usage is growing exponential at all providers.

it will grow even more with the next generation of models.

mv4•57m ago
This circular game is wholly dependent on OpenAI's ability to access public funds via IPO.
rdsubhas•33m ago
The proportion of the utilities involved are a fraction of 1.4T.
fathermarz•1h ago
Doesn’t this mean that some percentage of Microsoft’s investment is being given directly to their competitor? This feels like a bubble moment.
StarterPro•1h ago
Millions of people run out of money? Govt: "Too bad, have fun being homeless"

A few billion dollar businesses run out of money due to negligence and greed? Govt:"THEY ARE JUST WITTLE GUYS WHO NEED HELP"

markus_zhang•1h ago
I don’t know but this feels more and more like jumping by stepping one’s own feet…
system2•1h ago
If it is a bubble, why are huge companies like Amazon and Microsoft feeding it? What do they get by doing this nonstop? All I hear is that this is a bubble on the internet, yet big companies are making these huge deals. Don't they see what we, the uspeasants, see with their highly paid finance departments?
pfortuny•55m ago
It is not a panic if you are the first out…
jdlshore•13m ago
Big companies are made out of people, and those people are just as fallible as everyone else… and more so, in fact. They’re prone to group-think and suppressing bad news.

The existence proof is, well, every financial crisis ever. Start with the housing bubble and ask, why did huge banks whose entire job was financial modeling get caught up in it? What makes companies today immune to those same types of decision-making errors?

mellosouls•31m ago
@dang/@tomhow original (and non-paywalled) link submitted by me here, that or another news source would be preferable:

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45799083

Eg. BBC:

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cgqlzje32pjo

chaosprint•3m ago
https://founderboat.com/interviews/2025-11-01-openai-sam-sat...

> A central theme of the discussion was the staggering demand for computational power. Gerstner highlighted OpenAI’s reported commitment of $1.4 trillion for compute over the next five years, questioning how a company with reported revenues of $13 billion could manage such an outlay.

> Altman pushed back forcefully. “First of all, we’re doing well more revenue than that. Second of all, Brad, if you want to sell your shares, I’ll find you a buyer,” he quipped. He expressed profound confidence in the company’s trajectory. “We do plan for revenue to grow steeply. Revenue is growing steeply. We are taking a forward bet that it’s going to continue to grow.”

This seems to be just the tip of the iceberg; what about the rest?