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AI Business Investing Technology

The Scarcity Portfolio: Navigating Sovereign Debt, Wafer Bottlenecks, and Orbital Compute

Today I was watching the interview of Gavin Baker by Patrick Oโ€™Shaughnessy on his Invest Like the Best podcast. Like prior conversations this was another fascinating excursion into the mind of a sophisticated and very successful tech venture investor.

During the conversation, Patrick asked Gavin what agents he was using that were especially helpful and he mentioned one which summarizes YouTube podcasts and videos for him. Like most of us Baker just doesnโ€™t have the time to watch or listen to them himself so good summaries are really helpful.

Turns out Iโ€™ve been working on a Google Gemini Gem that does this for me. When Baker mentioned his I fired up the new Gemini 3.5 Flash model and asked it to summarize the Baker interview.

Later in the conversation Baker used the term โ€œbattlefield AIโ€ which caused me to go back to Gemini again to learn more about that. The results were so interesting that I asked Gemini to create a syllabus for a semester class on these subjects. After that I asked it to convert our whole conversation into a Markdown file so I could share it. Youโ€™ll find it below.

I found this whole experience pretty stunning. I came away very impressed with Gemini 3.5 Flash both for the quality of the responses but also the sheer speed. Wow!

Anyway I hope you enjoy the following!


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AI Business

The Gravity of Compute

We are currently witnessing the single largest deployment of capital in human history. The “Hyperscalers”โ€”the titans of our digital ageโ€”are pouring hundreds of billions of dollars into the ground, turning cash into concrete, copper, and silicon.

The prevailing narrative is one of unceasing, exponential growth: bigger models require bigger clusters, which require more power plants, which require more land. It relies on the assumption that the demand for centralized intelligence is insatiable and that the current architecture is the only way to feed it.

But history suggests that technology rarely moves in a straight line; it swings like a pendulum. Two forces are emerging from the periphery that could impact the ROI of this massive infrastructure build-out. One is hiding in your pocket, and the other is waiting in the sky.

A recent conversation with Gavin Baker outlines a potential “bear case” for datacenter compute demand: the rise of Edge AI.

We often assume we need the “God models”โ€”the omniscient, trillion-parameter giants hosted in the cloudโ€”for every interaction. But do we?

Baker suggests that within three years, our phones will possess the DRAM and battery density to run pruned versions of advanced models (like a Gemini 5 or Grok 4) locally. He paints a picture of a device capable of delivering 30 to 60 tokens per second at an “IQ of 115.”

“If that happens, if like 30 to 60 tokens atโ€ฆ a 115 IQ is good enough. I think that’s a bear case.” โ€” Gavin Baker

Consider the implications of that specific number. An IQ of 115 isn’t omniscient, but it is competent. It is capable, nuanced, and helpful.

If Appleโ€™s strategy succeedsโ€”making the phone the primary distributor of privacy-safe, free, local intelligenceโ€”the vast majority of our daily queries will never leave the device. We will only reach for the cloudโ€™s “God models” when we are truly stumped, much like we might consult a specialist only after our general practitioner has reached their limit. If 80% of inference happens on the edge for free, the economic model of the trillion-dollar data center begins to look fragile.

Then there is the second threat, one that attacks the terrestrial constraints of the data center itself: the Orbital Data Center. Elon Musk and SpaceX – along with Google’s Project Suncatcher – envision a future where the heavy lifting isn’t done on land, but in orbit. Space offers two things that are scarce and expensive on Earth: unlimited solar energy and an infinite heat sink for radiative cooling. If Starship can reliably loft “server racks” into orbit, the terrestrial moat of land and power grid accessโ€”currently the Hyperscalers’ greatest defensive assetโ€”evaporates.

We are left with a fascinating juxtaposition. On one hand, we have the “Edge,” pulling intelligence down from the clouds and putting it into our hands, making it personal, private, and free. On the other, we have “Orbit,” threatening to lift the remaining heavy compute off the planet entirely to bypass the energy bottleneck.

There are hundreds of billions of dollars betting on a future of heavy, centralized gravity. But if the edge gets smart enough, and the orbit gets cheap enough, the gravity may have shifted.