
I mean I hate ai as much as the next guy but I just don’t think this metaphor makes sense. Canals only work when physical logistics / massive construction projects can come together to enable trade where it is cheaper/faster than other methods, which it often isn’t. Data centers are going to be needed wether ai is a bubble or not. Humanity generates so much data and need to store it every day we continue existing
If AI completely halts, do you think the operators of data centers will continue to maintain them at a deficit until we reach a point where they’re once again profitable? They’ll close as many as possible because the higher retained earnings will look better to investors. This is entirely propped up by AI’s requirements.
Well two points abt that. 1. It’s a huuuge assumption to say that ai is a bubble that will entirely pop. I think there’s essentially a 0% chance that we just “completely halt” ai and a very low chance that development slows significantly. Some silly use cases will fall by the wayside sure but I think they’ll be replaced by more and more profitable use cases as those things reveal themselves.
And 2. Data centers aren’t only profitable when used to power ai, they’re profitable doing all sorts of other things. As humanity grows, in population and technological complexity, we’re just going to need more computing power like we’re going to need bigger and more robust energy grids. So many industries are chomping at the bit to get computing time to run all sorts of models. We’re still in the age of waiting days to weeks for things like climate change prediction models to run and deliver
As for #2, data centers are extremely important overall, I’d absolutely agree. However, with an AI bubble bursting, it’d be unprofitable to continue operating a large amount of these data centers for likely a decade or more. With an AI bubble bursting, the demand to store data would plummet, the supply of data to centers would plummet, and the technology still isn’t quite at a place to make up for the deficit in data
Demand won’t plummet at all, that’s my whole point. Demand for computational power and data storage is increasing rapidly and won’t stop increasing simply because ai falls by the wayside, if that even happens. There are countless non ai digital goods and services that rely on data centers and would pay lots to have access to them, not to mention demand from governments and researchers.