Is there a good estimate of the split? My impression from AI startups whose operations I know something about is that a majority of their VC raise is currently going back into paying for hardware directly or indirectly, even though they aren’t hardware startups per se, but I don’t have any solid numbers.
I think your analysis is spot on, based on my expertise of "reading too much hacker news since every day since March 2023". This Bain report[1] barely mentions "Independent Software Vendors" and when they do it's clearly an afterthought, and the only software focused takes I can find are[2] extremely speculative, e.g.
I'm hoping someone more knowledgeable about capital markets can fill us in here, I'd be curious to see some hard numbers still! Maybe this is what a Bloomberg terminal does...?Regardless, I think this makes a lot of sense; there's no clear scientific consensus on the path forward for these models other than "keep going?", so building out preparatory infrastructure is seen as the clear, safe move. As the common refrain goes: "in a gold rush, sell shovels!"
As a big believer in the upcoming cognitive era of software and society, I would only add a short bit onto the end of that saying: "...until the hydraulic mining cannons[3] come online."
[1] https://www.bain.com/insights/ais-trillion-dollar-opportunit...
[2] https://www.privatebankerinternational.com/comment/is-ai-sof...
[3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydraulic_mining
>As the common refrain goes: "in a gold rush, sell shovels!"
What happens when everyone constructs a shovel factory, the shovels become dirt cheap, but there are no buyers?