

Some form of “AI” will always be around. It has been around nearly as long as we’ve had computers. We’ve even had AI chatbots since 1966.
But, the dot com bubble is a bad comparison. If you look at a graph of Internet users over time you can barely even see the dot com crash. The Internet was a massively useful phenomenon and more and more people kept using it. The dot com crash was basically an overestimation of how quickly people were going to adopt it combined with a massive drop in the value of Internet-based ads.
What’s much more likely with AI is another AI Winter where a few things stick around, but mostly AI goes back on the back burner for a few more decades.










They don’t support sending messages over a serial / USB / network connection to say “battery is almost dead, shut down cleanly while you can” right? As far as I can tell, that’s the one key feature that a UPS has that a portable battery doesn’t.
I took a look the other day and was amazed at how little UPSes have improved in the last few decades vs. everything else battery-related.
At this point, I’d expect a consumer-grade UPS to have something like a Raspberry PI attached, and run a web server. I’d expect it to not just have a serial port for signaling, but to be able to run custom BASH scripts to send messages out to any attached device warning it about being on battery and keeping it up to date on the battery status.