Cresta's CEO argues that while the internet's evolution from 1995-2001 was somewhat foreseeable, the advancements in AI since 2019 would have been unimaginable even to the experts who wrote the foundational papers. This highlights the unprecedented nature of the current technological shift.

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AI is a foundational layer, not a niche. Asking if a company is an 'AI startup' will soon be as meaningless as asking if it has a website. The adoption timeline is radically compressed: what took the internet 15 years for ubiquity will take AI only four, with non-adopters facing extinction.

The AI era is not an unprecedented bubble but the next phase in a recurring pattern where each new computing cycle (mainframe, PC, internet) is roughly 10 times larger than the last. This historical context suggests the current massive investment is proportional and we are still in the early innings.

Unlike the dot-com bubble driven by fleeting startups, the AI boom is a sustainable "megatrend." It's led by established giants like Microsoft and Google, developing on a compressed 5-7 year timeline (vs. 15 years for the internet), and operating at a scale 1000x larger, suggesting longevity over a sudden collapse.

Previous technology shifts like mobile or client-server were often pushed by technologists onto a hesitant market. In contrast, the current AI trend is being pulled by customers who are actively demanding AI features in their products, creating unprecedented pressure on companies to integrate them quickly.

Drawing parallels to the Industrial Revolution, Demis Hassabis warns that AI's societal transformation will be significantly more compressed and impactful. He predicts it will be '10 times bigger' and happen '10 times faster,' unfolding over a single decade rather than a century, demanding rapid adaptation from global institutions.

With past shifts like the internet or mobile, we understood the physical constraints (e.g., modem speeds, battery life). With generative AI, we lack a theoretical understanding of its scaling potential, making it impossible to forecast its ultimate capabilities beyond "vibes-based" guesses from experts.

Demis Hassabis, CEO of Google DeepMind, warns that the societal transition to AGI will be immensely disruptive, happening at a scale and speed ten times greater than the Industrial Revolution. This suggests that historical parallels are inadequate for planning and preparation.

Cerebras CEO Andrew Feldman argues that massive speed improvements in AI are not just about reducing latency. Like how fast internet turned Netflix from a DVD mailer into a studio, ultra-fast AI will enable fundamentally new applications and business models that are impossible today.

The current AI market resembles the early, productive phase of the dot-com era, not its speculative peak. Key indicators like reasonable big tech valuations and low leverage suggest a foundational technology shift is underway, contrasting with the market frenzy of the late 90s.

Veteran VC Navin Chaddha argues that AI's impact is an order of magnitude greater than previous tech waves. This is because AI's conversational interfaces democratize creation for billions, while its ability to reason and act provides a second 10x force multiplier, resulting in a 100x total opportunity.