A question I’d like to put out there. Maybe AI needs the massive data centers now, but they could definitely get more efficient over time. There might be another Moore’s Law in there. And the work is going very fast, and maybe they’re leaving other optimizations for later. Take a look at how computers themselves have gotten more efficient since when I started in the 1970s. It was a miracle that I could buy a computer to put in my living room in 1979. A couple of years before that I had a 100 pound terminal that I could lug cross-town to show my grandfather. We may end up with a lot of unused data centers and energy generation capacity. But that’s how great evolutionary steps work. You go where you’re called to go. We are a big Ouija board. This stuff is really important, we’re going to remove layers and layers to tech, get to the answer sooner, and more easily, and empower people with much less tech education that we have to do the good parts of what we do, the fun stuff. There’s art in the lower-level stuff too, but in tech we like to bury that stuff and forget its even there. That’s how we get to build more complex machines that do more. By pushing the repetitive complex stuff into the pipes. If this were parallel to the development that led to smart phones, we’re at the point where we have the glass palaces with huge cooling systems, and maybe Fortran has been invented, but it might still be machine code. #