I didn’t set out to care about data centers. No one does. You don’t wake up one morning thinking, you know what would really spice up my life? Hyperscale compute infrastructure. But here we are—living in a world where the most important real estate isn’t beachfront property or Manhattan office towers. It’s windowless warehouses filled with blinking lights, screaming fans, and enough electricity consumption to make a small country nervous. Welcome to the data center arms race—where the weapons aren’t missiles, they’re megawatts, GPUs, and whoever can pour concrete the fastest without tripping over their own capital expenditure. And if you’re an investor? This is where things get interesting. The Moment I Realized This Wasn’t Optional At some point, AI stopped being a buzzword and started becoming infrastructure. That’s the shift most people miss. We’ve been conditioned to think about technology as products—apps, platforms, devices. But what’s happening right now is much more p...
I used to think AI was software. Clean. Abstract. Floating somewhere in the cloud like a polite hallucination. Models, prompts, APIs—everything felt weightless, like intelligence had finally escaped gravity and taken up residence in a server rack labeled “innovation.” Then I started pulling the thread. And like most things in tech, the deeper I went, the less magical it looked—and the more brutally physical it became. Because AI doesn’t start in the cloud. It starts in heat. In sand. In factories that look less like Silicon Valley and more like something between a chemistry lab and a nuclear facility. It starts in places where mistakes aren’t bugs—they’re scrap. And once you see that, you can’t unsee it. So let me walk you through what I’ve come to realize—the actual map of value creation in AI hardware. Not the polished version. Not the investor deck. The real one. The one that explains who actually makes money, who pretends to, and who quietly prints cash while everyone else a...