This was above the article text: "High-Bandwidth Memory (HBM) Roadmap" under the heading Toms Hardware Premium Roadmaps. It's also spelled out in the 2nd paragraph of the article.
> The VC arms of Alphabet
and Nvidia
have invested in Swedish vibe coding startup Lovable’s $330 million Series B at a $6.6 billion valuation, the company announced on Thursday.
I find this approach strange. Surely if you're sorting data, don't do it naively by raw bytes. Use your knowledge of the data type and sort using the appropriate comparison operations of the data type. E.g. sorting by 64 bit ints little endian, do the comparison based on that. If using packed numbers, they must be unpacked first.
Generic data stores often don’t have this luxury — if you’re designing a system in which data is relatively opaque, you’re often forced to work with bytes. (e.g. rocksdb, etc)
NVidias share price will take a hit when consolidation starts in AI, because their business won't be growing as fast as their PE ratio implies. Also the circular deals could hurt them if one of the AI providers they've invested in goes bust.[1],[2]. They won't go out of business but holders of their shares may lose lots of money. But will this happen after Anthropic and OpenAI have their IPOs, possibly next year? NVidia stands to make a lot on paper if those IPOs do well.
If OpenAI has their IPO, this is likely going to result in retail getting fleeced, given how their return on their investments to date has been absolutely pitiful. They are seeing revenues of around $13 billion for 2025, with an alleged over $100 billion or more by 2030, but the investments they are making are orders of magnitude greater. Who is ultimately going to pay for this?
Surely OpenAI has customers buying their pro packages for ChatGPT, but that can't really be it. And businesses are starting to realize that AI can't replace the workforce that easily either.
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