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A Tale of Two Signals
This week gave us a tale of two signals. On one side, NVIDIA kicked the doors off the hinges. On the other, Apple tightened the locks. That's the story. And if you're paying attention, it tells you exactly where this is headed. Because these are not random events. They are not isolated product moves. They are two completely different reactions to the same underlying shift. NVIDIA is behaving like a company that understands the future gets won by accelerating capability. Apple

Rich Washburn
2 days ago4 min read


Exponential Synthetic Labor
The Moment We Stop Working — And Start Orchestrating I’ve been writing about AI from every angle for years. Security, Infrastructure, Functionality, Cool demos, Stupid demos, Real risks, Real breakthroughs. This isn’t one of those pieces. This is an end cap. This is the line between chapters. Because what just happened isn’t another AI milestone. It’s the moment labor became programmable. And most people don’t realize it yet. The Quiet Shift For the last few years, AI has bee

Rich Washburn
Feb 163 min read


Physical Runtimes: Intent-Driven Computing and the End of Apps
Let’s stop dancing around it. The App Store is dead. Not “dying.” Not “evolving.” Dead. It’s not because people don’t want software anymore. It’s because software no longer needs to be packaged, browsed, downloaded, or owned in the way we’ve pretended makes sense for the last fifteen years. What comes next isn’t apps. It’s runtimes + agents + tokens . And once you see it, you can’t unsee it. The App Store Was a Distribution Hack — Not a Law of Nature The App Store solved a v

Rich Washburn
Jan 314 min read
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