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Balancing Building Right with Shipping Fast

Several years back I was in a program role supporting high-visibility digital platform launches. As usual for such a role, I was responsible for driving an on-time release tied to contractual distribution milestones. Meanwhile, a senior engineer was focused on refactoring part of the integration layer to improve long-term maintainability. We were seemingly at cross-purposes, because my goal was to schedule adherence and certification readiness, and the senior engineer was technical sustainability and reducing future defects. These priorities seemed to be in tension, as deeper refactoring risked delaying launch. How could we move forward? Thinking it through, I decided that instead of forcing a trade-off, I would facilitate a working session to break the work into phases. That is, we would identify what refactoring was critical for launch stability versus what could be sequenced into a fast-follow release. Through this process we aligned on a minimal, high impact improvement set that re...

What Happens If the Chips Stop

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The recent surge in the stock market has been driven largely by seven technology giants often called the Magnificent 7, whose valuations have soared on the promise of artificial intelligence. At the center of this rally sits Nvidia , now one of the largest companies in the S&P 500 and responsible for more than seven percent of the index. Its high price to earnings ratio reflects investor confidence that AI demand will continue to expand rapidly. Yet beneath this optimism lies a structural vulnerability that receives far less attention than quarterly earnings and product announcements. Nvidia’s dominance rests on its ability to design cutting edge GPUs such as the H100 and B200, which power modern AI systems. However, Nvidia does not manufacture these chips. It designs the architecture and software stack, then outsources production. The physical fabrication of nearly all of its most advanced chips is handled by a single company, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company . The same...

The Debt-Fueled AI Bubble

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 The current AI boom is often framed as an inevitable technological revolution, but a closer look at how it is being financed tells a more fragile story. Major technology companies are borrowing at historic levels to fund AI infrastructure, even as real demand remains uncertain. In 2024 alone, companies such as Amazon , Google , Meta , and Oracle raised tens of billions of dollars each in new debt to expand data centers, buy chips, and scale AI capabilities. Total tech debt issuance has surpassed six trillion dollars. The scale of borrowing is unprecedented, especially for an industry still searching for durable, widespread profitability. Some prominent financial voices are openly skeptical. Michael Burry, known for predicting the 2008 financial crisis, has criticized the earnings narratives surrounding companies like Nvidia , questioning whether accounting practices obscure underlying risks. Investors also point to the imbalance between massive spending commitments and comparati...

The Structural Risk Beneath the AI Boom

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The AI boom has become so dominant that it now poses a structural risk to the global economy. A handful of technology companies focused on artificial intelligence account for nearly half of global stock market value. The so-called Magnificent 7, including companies like Nvidia and Microsoft , collectively represent market capitalizations comparable to the entire economy of China . When so much financial weight is concentrated in so few firms, the system becomes fragile. A modest shock to demand, regulation, geopolitics, or technical capability could ripple outward with outsized consequences. At the core of this concentration is a strange economic inversion. Historically, technology companies benefited from scale. The more customers they served, the lower their marginal costs and the higher their profits. In AI, the math often runs in reverse. Each additional query processed by a large model consumes vast amounts of electricity and specialized hardware. Training and inference require ...

The AI Bubble and the Systemic Risk Executives Cannot Ignore

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AI is no longer just a technology story. It is a market structure story, a governance story, and increasingly a global economic risk story. By multiple estimates, capital concentration around AI now exceeds prior speculative cycles by a wide margin. Comparisons place the current AI-driven market expansion at many times the scale of the dot-com bubble and several times larger than the global real estate bubble that preceded the 2008 financial crisis. Unlike those earlier cycles, this one is not confined to a single sector. That difference matters. Market Concentration and the Illusion of Growth Seven companies now dominate the public markets: Apple, Microsoft, Nvidia, Amazon, Meta, Google, and Tesla. Together, these firms represent roughly 34 percent of the total value of the S&P 500. Each is deeply entangled in AI infrastructure, tooling, data, or distribution deals. This concentration masks a troubling reality. Strip out these firms, and broad market growth over the past two ...

AI Is Not Replacing Workers, But It Is Breaking the Pipeline

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 The story most often told about AI and jobs is one of mass replacement. The reality looks different and in some ways more damaging. Only a small fraction of recent layoffs have been directly attributed to AI. What AI is actually doing is reshaping hiring behavior in ways that quietly undermine the workforce. The most striking effect is at the entry level. Rather than replacing existing workers, AI is being used as a justification to stop hiring new ones. Service firms have implemented hiring freezes tied to AI far more often than they have eliminated jobs outright. This shifts risk away from companies and onto workers trying to enter the labor market. Graduates Caught in the Middle The consequences are already visible. Recent college graduates face elevated unemployment and widespread underemployment. The traditional on-ramp into professional life is eroding. Entry level roles that once trained workers, built experience, and transmitted institutional knowledge are disappearing....

AI Is Being Used to Cut Wages, Not Expand Possibility

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 Much of the public conversation about artificial intelligence treats it as a creative breakthrough or a new form of intelligence. A more sober analysis suggests something far less inspiring. AI is being adopted primarily as a labor strategy. Its main appeal to corporations is not innovation or delight, but the ability to reduce wage costs by eliminating or devaluing human workers. This framing matters because it cuts through the hype. When companies talk about AI as inevitable or transformative, they are often masking a much simpler goal. They want fewer people on the payroll. Large tech firms consistently present AI adoption as unavoidable, as if there were no viable alternatives. This rhetoric echoes an older political move that insists there is no alternative to the current system. Framing AI this way shuts down debate before it begins and discourages exploration of different economic or technological paths. Even the branding around AI reinforces this narrative. Corporate la...