Category: Big Tech Strategy

  • The Gold Rush Lesson for the AI Age

    During the gold rush of the late 1800s, thousands of people rushed west hoping to strike it rich digging for gold. Some did. Many didn’t. But there was one group that made steady money almost the entire time: the people selling the tools.

    Shovels. Picks. Pans. Boots. Tents. Food.

    If you were a miner, you needed those things whether you found gold or not.

    A famous example is Levi Strauss, who sold durable pants to miners during the California Gold Rush. That small business eventually became Levi Strauss & Co.. He didn’t dig for gold. He sold the miners what they needed.

    I think we are seeing something very similar today with Artificial Intelligence.

    Right now, thousands of companies are rushing into AI hoping to strike the “next big thing.” Chatbots, image generators, AI assistants, automated research tools, coding tools, video tools… the list grows every week.

    Some of these companies will become huge successes.

    Many will disappear.

    But just like the gold rush, there are companies quietly making money from every single AI project, whether that project succeeds or fails.

    They are the modern shovel sellers.

    For example, companies like NVIDIA design the powerful GPUs that train AI models. Without those chips, modern AI simply would not run. Other companies like TSMC manufacture the advanced semiconductors used in those systems. And companies like ASML build the incredibly sophisticated machines required to manufacture those chips in the first place.

    In other words, they are selling the picks and shovels of the AI gold rush.

    Then there is the infrastructure layer. AI requires massive computing power and enormous data centers. Companies such as Microsoft, Amazon Web Services, and Alphabet provide the cloud infrastructure that allows AI companies to train and operate their systems.

    Every new AI startup needs that computing power.

    Every new AI model requires data centers.

    Every new AI service consumes electricity, chips, cooling systems, and networking.

    So while the world is focused on which AI chatbot will win, there is a deeper layer underneath the entire ecosystem: the infrastructure that makes AI possible.

    History often rhymes.

    In the internet boom of the 1990s, thousands of websites appeared and disappeared. But companies that built the underlying infrastructure—servers, networking equipment, software platforms—became long-term giants.

    The same dynamic may be playing out again today.

    We may remember the AI era for the clever applications people use every day. But the biggest and most durable businesses may end up being the ones quietly supplying the tools, chips, data centers, and power that make the entire system work.

    In every gold rush, miners chase the gold.

    But the shovel sellers build the real foundations of the boom. ⛏️

  • Canada Just Became Microsoft’s Secret AI Superpower

    Canada just quietly became the secret turbocharger of Microsoft’s planetary AI computer. 🇨🇦⚡️

    While everyone is still losing their minds over the Atlanta ↔ Wisconsin 1,000-mile fiber link… Microsoft has been wiring up Quebec like it’s the new Silicon Valley North.

    $500M+ poured in since 2022. 240% more compute in Quebec alone by end of 2025. 750% increase in total Canadian Azure capacity. All of it AI-native, liquid-cooled, Blackwell-ready.

    Here’s how Canada fits into the “superfactory” playbook nobody is talking about yet:

    🧵 1/6

    ❄️ Cold + Hydro = the ultimate cheat code → 99% renewable power in Quebec → Free-air & liquid cooling (closed-loop, basically zero water waste) → Power so stable Texas wishes it was Canadian

    🌐 The AI-WAN now officially crosses borders → Quebec GPUs are microseconds away from Wisconsin & Atlanta racks → One giant brain stretching from Georgia to the Arctic Circle → Latency so low it feels like the clusters are in the same room

    ⚡ Power hedging on a continental scale → US grid having a meltdown? Pivot north. → Need another 300 MW yesterday? Quebec’s hydro has your back. → Virtual gigawatt clusters that don’t care about state lines (or country lines)

    🛡️ Sovereignty + sustainability flex → Sovereign Canadian cloud coming 2026 → Perfect for healthcare, banks, and governments who want AI without sending data to Virginia → Carbon-negative goals actually look achievable when half your fleet runs on waterfalls

    Bottom line: The US superfactory was the opening act. Canada is the quiet scale-up that turns North America into one unstoppable AI fabric.

    Everyone else is still fighting for the last megawatt in NOVA. Microsoft is building a continent-sized supercomputer where geography is just… optional.

    Investors → start looking at cross-border dark fiber routes. Operators → your next fabric better include Toronto & Quebec City. Governments → your grid problems just got outsourced to waterfalls.

    The planetary computer isn’t American. It’s North American. And Canada is the part nobody priced in.

    Who’s ready for the fiber arms race up here next? 👀🇨🇦