Corporate AI wars? It's not just who's got the flashiest tech. What really matters: who can keep the money flowing and build advantages that actually last. Some companies are already hitting walls—forced to rethink their entire game plan. The gap between winners and losers is widening fast, and it's more about financial muscle than code.
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NullWhisperer
· 12-09 16:20
tbh the "tech war" framing is kinda missing the point here... actually it's just capital efficiency at scale. the ones burning through runway like it's nothing? yeah they're gonna hit the wall hard. interesting edge case tho—some of the "losers" might actually have better code, just weaker balance sheets. that's the real vulnerability vector nobody talks about.
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SleepyValidator
· 12-09 08:55
To put it simply, it's a money-burning game—no matter how good your technology is, it won't matter if you don't have money.
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MevTears
· 12-09 08:46
Simply put, having money allows one to do whatever they want; technology becomes secondary.
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ApeWithNoFear
· 12-09 08:45
To put it bluntly, it's just a money-burning game—the one with more money wins.
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NotFinancialAdvice
· 12-09 08:43
To put it bluntly, it's just a money-burning game. No matter how impressive the technology is, it's useless without cash flow.
The real moat is fundraising ability, not some algorithm.
Speaking of those companies forced to adjust their strategies, things are really tough for them now.
Capital decides everything, it's an old story.
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LazyDevMiner
· 12-09 08:32
To put it simply, it's just a money-burning game; being skilled is useless.
Corporate AI wars? It's not just who's got the flashiest tech. What really matters: who can keep the money flowing and build advantages that actually last. Some companies are already hitting walls—forced to rethink their entire game plan. The gap between winners and losers is widening fast, and it's more about financial muscle than code.