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AI's Coming Reality Check: When The Physics Finally Hits The Hype
International Man ^ | 05/31/2026 | Chris MacIntosh

Posted on 05/31/2026 9:23:43 PM PDT by SeekAndFind

In five years, we’ll all likely be chuckling and shaking our heads over AI. Because today, the tech feels free and limitless, doesn’t it?

People are generating endless content: images, videos, memes, code snippets, social posts. Companies are bolting AI onto products by default, the way every Fortune 500 company suddenly discovered they were “sustainable” five years ago.

There’s much deliberation on AI right now, and it splits into two main camps of thesis:

What interests us is something more boring. Physics. Because here’s the thing: AI isn’t free.

Every token represents electricity. Something your average developer, product manager, user, or investor gives precisely zero thought to.

Electricity means power plants, transmission lines, grid infrastructure — yes. It also means hot sheds; capital-intensive data centres and all the equipment, cooling systems, and real estate that go with them. Real things. Physical things.

We are surrounded by hype without consideration for the physics.

Right now, there’s a disconnect between the physical cost of this technology and the price users pay for it.

That gap is being covered by Wall Street, venture capital, pension funds, hyperscaler balance sheets, and strategic spending on “growth” (a word which here means “losses we’ve chosen to rebrand”).

The question is: what happens when that gap closes?

Scenario 1: The Industry Matures

No outright collapse, but financial discipline arrives. A novel concept in Silicon Valley. Low-value usage disappears first. “AI slop” dies because the people generating junk stop when it costs them actual money. Turns out nobody’s willing to pay real dollars to have a chatbot write their LinkedIn thought leadership posts. Tragic.

Serious users — those deriving profit or genuine productivity gains — remain. Growth slows but doesn’t stop. GPU upgrade cycles stretch from two years to three or five or seven. Valuations compress. The froth comes off but the infrastructure remains important.

The boardroom shifts from “infinite logarithmic growth” to “focus only on what’s profitable.” Less bubble burst, more long, slow leak of disappointment. A bit like ESG.

Scenario 2: Energy as the Arbiter

Now overlay structurally higher energy prices. You know, the thing everyone was told wouldn’t matter because we’d all be running on solar and unicorn farts by now. If power becomes materially more expensive while capital markets tighten simultaneously, the economics get a lot harder.

Inference costs rise. Training LLMs gets hella more expensive. Shareholders start feeling like they’re holding the next NFT apes. Spending slows sharply. Many AI firms disappear. Hyperscalers pull back, maybe with taxpayer assistance (they are, after all, strategically important to those in power — funny how that works).

GPU cycles extend further. Seven-plus years between major upgrades becomes normal outside the top tier. Markets correct hard. Confidence takes a long time to rebuild.

This is not the end of AI, but a reset. Users will fondly remember the “good old days” when it was free. When one could generate a movie scene and post on X about how they just ended a billion-dollar production company’s business model. Peak delusion makes for great content.

Scenario 3: AI Actually Delivers

There is also the upside case, though we admit it’s included here much like a “minority” conspicuously placed on a corporate board — a box-ticking exercise.

In this scenario, AI meaningfully increases productivity across enterprises. It reduces costs durably. It embeds itself in everything from coding to logistics to research. The sentient toaster.

Higher energy prices don’t kill demand because efficiency gains outweigh them. Hardware cycles remain short. Today’s valuations look justified in hindsight and Jensen Huang’s leather jacket gets its own wing at the Smithsonian.

For anyone familiar with us, you’ll know we think this is the most unlikely scenario. And yet it’s by far the consensus view. Which, if you’ve been paying attention to consensus views over the past decade (“inflation is transitory,” “ESG is the future,” “commercial real estate is fine”) should tell you something.

The gap between expectations and likely reality remains wide open. For Insider members, you’re familiar with the portfolio positioning and Nasdaq hedge.

What Really Matters

The key variable isn’t whether AI is impressive or useful (it is). The key variable is whether AI becomes a true profit engine or remains a subsidised cost centre dressed up in a hoodie and a TED talk.

If profitable and productivity-enhancing, current valuations are justified and the gravy train keeps chugging. If it remains mostly hype layered over weak economics, spending contracts, hardware cycles extend, and we could have an absolute humdinger of an economic “event.”

A ten-year stagnation would require something extreme: demand dropping significantly, hyperscalers becoming hyposcalers, capital markets wanting nothing to do with AI, and energy remaining expensive — all at once. Stranger things have happened. Just ask anyone who bought Peloton at $170.

Almost 50 years of history show this eventually reverts to the mean… and the pendulum swings the other way.

* * *


TOPICS: Computers/Internet; Science; Society
KEYWORDS: ai; limitations; physics

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To: ridesthemiles
CREATE WATER????? IN AREAS ALREADY ARID & CALLED “DESERTS”-—NOT SO MUCH. THE MORE ARID -—THE MORE A TARGET OF DATA CENTERS.

The presumption here is that the water is for cooling. One can transmit that heat to the atmosphere or to the earth. The former takes refrigeration (electricity) or evaporation (water loss). Putting the heat into the earth takes drilling one well for the heat sinking and another for the draw. No net water use. Obviously one can combine the two to chill the water yet further than geothermal temperature.

Of course, I don't know how much heat sinking we're talking about here but if it were me, I'd be looking for real estate in Antarctica.

21 posted on 06/01/2026 6:56:46 AM PDT by Carry_Okie (The tree of liberty needs a rope.)
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To: SeekAndFind

AI is exactly the dot com bubble repeating. I’ve been in this movie before.

Pets.com flopped, markets went down something like 50% etc.

Did that mean the internet was a pipe dream?

No.

It meant that the market got overheated on an idea and companies that had no profitable operating model … yet.

So we’ll have our AI bust, AND AI is with us forever as a valuable new branch of human endeavor.

I just took a year’s worth of cash to the sidelines to help mitigate that inevitable, but unknowable as to timing, crash.


22 posted on 06/01/2026 7:15:03 AM PDT by Uncle Miltie (Here I am; send me!)
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To: SeekAndFind

This is a generally excellent and far sighted article. Thanks for posting.


23 posted on 06/01/2026 7:16:37 AM PDT by Uncle Miltie (Here I am; send me!)
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To: ridesthemiles
Most corporate servers and laptops have a 3 to 5 year service life. By that point fans and batteries are approaching failure. Chip sets are too many generations old for the operating systems vendors to track and maintain. New hardware is purchased, software assets are migrated from old to new. The old hardware is sold to recyclers. The capital investment is retired from the rate base and salvage money is returned to the capital pool. Recycled parts are sold to small business and hobbyists. Frames and pc boards are torn down to recover valuable materials.
24 posted on 06/01/2026 7:42:37 AM PDT by Myrddin
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To: monkeyshine
I bought a gaming PC with a 16GB NVIDIA card and beefed it up to 64GB of RAM. I can run qwen3-coder-next:80b on Ollama it, which is almost as good as Claude for coding:

https://x.com/i/grok/share/4e908a1a705f4fe5969de0a934b7db52

I use local AI with Continue on VS Code, and it works great.

I am working my way through learning the PyTorch stack.

25 posted on 06/01/2026 8:25:17 AM PDT by E. Pluribus Unum (If it ain't fun, you ain't doin' it right.)
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To: monkeyshine
I can also run ComfyUI, which is a pretty decent opwn source AI video generator. Still working on figuring it out.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=23VkGD-4uwk&t=325s

PS - My system cost less than $1500.

26 posted on 06/01/2026 8:36:17 AM PDT by E. Pluribus Unum (If it ain't fun, you ain't doin' it right.)
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