▲ | cantor_S_drug a day ago | ||||||||||||||||
> Creative destruction is brutal math. The capital? Gone. Completely vaporized. But infrastructure isn’t stock certificates. Those fiber optic cables didn’t vanish when Pets.com did. The data centers kept humming after Webvan went dark. All that ‘wasted’ investment had already transformed into something physical. The pipes, servers, and networks that would become the foundation for Google, Facebook, Amazon Web Services, and the digital transformation that actually did change everything. The bubble’s victims unknowingly funded the future. They just paid a decade too early. The flow of money to spur innovation is exactly like "Cambrian Explosion". We should do this more often, with biotech and future fields to come. | |||||||||||||||||
▲ | flohofwoe a day ago | parent | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||
> Those fiber optic cables didn’t vanish when Pets.com did. OTOH all the VR headsets gathering dust now didn't turn out to be quite as useful as those fiber optic cables. And I'm not sure what will remain after the AI bubble pops except for a massive matrix multiplication overcapacity ;) I also wouldn't call all the money being funneled into a single technology a "Cambrian Explosion", it's the opposite of that, an organism being propped up that wouldn't survive on its own in a competitive environment. | |||||||||||||||||
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▲ | aredox a day ago | parent | prev [-] | ||||||||||||||||
We should just sacrifice more people's savings[0] to fund innovation. This is truly an efficient way of doing things. [0] "millions of ordinary investors watched their retirement accounts and college funds evaporate. The same middle-class Americans who had been told they were foolish not to participate in the ‘new economy’ now faced financial ruin. Teachers’ pension funds were halved. Family savings meant for homes and education vanished" And pray we don't enter a "lost decade" (which is closer to 30 years, now) like Japan. |