12 sheep or 1,000 pounds of cheese for a single tulip bulb. You can’t feed your family tulips during a cold Dutch winter. Compare where we are with AI today with the dawn of Internet integration in 1995... You might remember when people used to say, “Why would I need a computer in my house?” This is where we’re at today with AI, because folks just don’t get it yet... The first smartphones were nothing like the miniature computers we carry around in our pockets today. A 2005 Nokia phone didn’t use the Internet at all. Instead, it used a telephone communications band with a tiny digital backchannel. But kids in Finland started to use this backchannel for texting – specifically, texting 1,000 times a day with their friends to build a de facto social network. That networking effect set the stage for the boom in wireless Internet, starting with the iPhone. The moment the first website went live on August 6, 1991, it became almost inevitable that we’d end up here. AI can be as exciting as it is scary... Data Is King What is the next technology growth story that will drive demand for data storage? Generative-AI models are designed to respond to you like a human would. In some cases, they can generate audio or video files with a human voice. What generative-AI models are good at is pattern recognition. They make sense of large data sets. And the more data you feed the models, the “smarter” they get. Generative-AI systems like ChatGPT are computing systems with interconnected nodes that work much like neurons in the human brain, with each node having its own computational processes. They accept data, process it, and usually push the output to a new node with new parameters within the network.
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