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Is the chaos in the market actually a rational response to a new innovation curve? This week, we explore The Great Compression—a phenomenon collapsing the distance between venture capital stages, career ladders, and the way we access reality.
We analyze why "$2 billion seed rounds" and the death of the billable hour aren't signs of a bubble, but symptoms of a "Winner Takes Most" AI curve. In this industrial-scale race, the system is squeezing resources into a "barbell distribution," forcing a choice between achieving massive scale or becoming obsolete.
By Keith Teare5
33 ratings
Is the chaos in the market actually a rational response to a new innovation curve? This week, we explore The Great Compression—a phenomenon collapsing the distance between venture capital stages, career ladders, and the way we access reality.
We analyze why "$2 billion seed rounds" and the death of the billable hour aren't signs of a bubble, but symptoms of a "Winner Takes Most" AI curve. In this industrial-scale race, the system is squeezing resources into a "barbell distribution," forcing a choice between achieving massive scale or becoming obsolete.