The Great Digital Arms Race
Every time a new chatbot writes a poem or a bit of software generates a surreal image of a cat playing the banjo, the world goes a little bit mad. We’re told, breathlessly, that this is the future. And it might well be. But I find myself far more interested in the less glamorous side of this revolution. To me, it feels a bit like a gold rush. While everyone is frantically panning for a nugget of software gold, a select few are getting very rich selling the shovels, pickaxes, and sturdy denim trousers.
The numbers are, frankly, staggering. When a behemoth like Alphabet announces it’s cranking up its spending on infrastructure, it’s not just for a press release. It’s a signal of a brutal, expensive arms race. The tech giants are pouring billions, not into whimsical side projects, but into the fundamental nuts and bolts required to make artificial intelligence work. Think of it as the modern equivalent of building the railways. You can have the most brilliant locomotive design in the world, but it’s utterly useless without the tracks, the signals, and the stations. Today’s tracks are data centres, the signals are networking gear, and the stations are vast cloud platforms.