X, formerly known as Twitter, declares bankrupcy.
That tech will regress due to the greed of tech corporations.
Tech is regulated by the big corporations that consistently either throttle innovation or degrade what already is established because they all want to figure out how to squeeze as much profit out of everything possible while blocking or preventing anything new that might compete with them.
Any new innovation that will occur will be military and will either have a machine gun attached to it or can deliver a high explosive.
One potential regression that I see is that the current generative models are abandoned, after being ruled as “infringing copyrights” by multiple countries. The tech itself won’t disappear but it’ll be considerably harder to train newer ones.
The most problematic part is however if one of them survives; likely Google. That would lead to a situation as in your second paragraph.
VR tv shows?
I think VR is going the other way.
Zuckerberg killed VR with the metaverse…
My domain provider increasing prices “due to increased electricity costs”. Already happened to my VPS and email.
Air fryer 2
Open source AI models will overtake for profit ones in complexity, power, and usefulness.
I like this one. I’ve been hoping for some host-your -own AI models that I can dump into a system with a bucket of TPUs and a decent GPU for processing and get my own version of something like chat GPT at home then train it on the entire collective works of documentation and help articles about the software I usually do support for so it can act as a defacto repository of “natural language” chat/search for troubleshooting.
You should look into RAG. The course I’m taking on Scrimba.com has a section on it, but I haven’t gotten to it yet.
Thanks!
AI finally decodes cetacean language.
Google will kill a product or service you use and like.
Peacock streaming network going to shut down.
New content for streaming is going to fall off a cliff. Except maybe for Apple, no streamer seems willing to put money into new flashy shows the way they used to.
If a new breakout TV show hits this year, it is likely going to be more in the model of IASIP or Shoresy.
Either Uber or Lyft go bankrupt.
A lot of unicorns that aren’t currently profitable also go bankrupt as their funding dries up and there is no more available loans.
I’m hopeful that government austerity measures ease up before that happens too much. There have already been so many layoffs.
Layoffs may continue.
Profitable tech companies have to maintain their existing businesses, but development of new businesses is likely to stay low and unprofitable businesses are still scrambling to hit profitability before bankruptcy.
It does depend on interest rates to some extent. For the past decade, the prevailing wisdom of the software industry has been to pour money into unprofitable ventures with the hope of getting profitable later. In the past year, austerity measures like heightened interest rates have made it so VCs are more interested in money now instead of money later.
Pulling back from investments is definitely related to the increased interest rate, but there really isn’t any government austerity in the federal government at the moment.
I suppose that depends on which country you’re in… I’m in Canada and we’re going into an election year. Everything is getting slashed or frozen
Uber has posted profits for the last two quarters. Lyft hasn’t yet been profitable, but they have been reducing their losses quite a bit.
I don’t think either of them will fail this year. Some AI gold rushing unicorns out there certainly will. It’s hard to know which though; they’re still private companies.
Computer components will get a bit more expensive except motherboards for some reason.
dippin’ dots finally gonna have their year