Tech Narrative Weekly #3 (Dec 2025, Week 2): The Language of Governance That Hides Unease

2026-02-24T17:04:26+08:00December 14th, 2025|Categories: Tech Narrative Weekly|Tags: , , , , , , , |

Key Events of the Week: What Happened In the second week of December, the tone of the U.S. tech industry began to shift. In the news, we saw debates between the federal government and the state of California over the scope of AI executive orders. In earnings calls, Adobe, Broadcom, and Oracle all emphasized words like “governance” and “discipline.” In the markets, investors focused on “efficiency” and “cash flow,” leading to a pullback in major

The Language of Governance: What Adobe, Broadcom, and Oracle Reveal About the Next Phase of AI

2025-12-14T16:47:36+08:00December 12th, 2025|Categories: Global Business Dynamics, Strategic Tech and Market Signals|Tags: , , , , , , , , |

Executive Summary This week’s earnings calls from Adobe, Broadcom, and Oracle each revealed a different facet of the AI industry’s transition: trust, pressure, and time. At the application layer, Adobe is rebuilding the value system of generative AI around trust. Through Content Credentials and emerging AI search standards, it is creating a verifiable and licensable framework for content governance, turning trust from an abstract ideal into an economic asset. At the hardware layer, as cloud

From TPU Sales to Governance Redistribution: Broadcom’s Role in AI Is Quietly Changing

2025-12-04T12:21:03+08:00December 4th, 2025|Categories: Global Business Dynamics, Strategic Tech and Market Signals|Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , |

Executive Summary Broadcom has long been one of Google’s key partners in building the TPU architecture. As Google plans to make its TPU technology available to external customers, this partnership is entering a new phase. Broadcom’s role is shifting from that of a co-designer to that of a modular integrator, serving as a stable and indispensable technical pillar within Google’s institutional framework. This position provides stability, but it also limits Broadcom’s ability to influence the

The Collective Belief Experiment Behind the OpenAI Boom

2025-11-06T16:52:57+08:00November 6th, 2025|Categories: Global Business Dynamics, Strategic Tech and Market Signals|Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , |

Executive Summary Each collaboration OpenAI undertakes is more than a business transaction. It has become a focal point for global capital and industrial belief. Although the company has yet to establish a stable business model, it has already reshaped the rhythm of the global technology supply chain. This article argues that OpenAI is transforming industrial reality through reflexivity. Corporations and investors believe it can define the future, and that very belief is actively shaping the

Why OpenAI Is Choosing Complexity: The Governance Bet Behind Its Multi-Architecture Strategy

2025-10-14T16:04:26+08:00October 14th, 2025|Categories: Featured Notes, Global Business Dynamics, Strategic Tech and Market Signals|Tags: , , , , , , , , |

Executive Summary OpenAI is conducting an unprecedented experiment in governance. Within just two weeks, it announced partnerships with AMD to build a second GPU architecture and with Broadcom to develop custom ASICs, moving from diversifying dependencies to redesigning the very foundations of its computing power. It has deliberately turned complexity into a governance strategy. By maintaining three architectures, including CUDA, ROCm, and ASICs, OpenAI accepts higher integration costs in exchange for the ability to create

What Jensen Huang’s “Even Free Chips Can’t Beat NVIDIA” Really Means

2025-09-30T16:52:26+08:00September 30th, 2025|Categories: Featured Notes, Global Business Dynamics, Strategic Tech and Market Signals|Tags: , , , , , , , , , , |

Executive Summary Jensen Huang’s “even free chips” remark is not simply about price. It is a deliberate attempt to reset the rules of competition. By shifting the focus from chip cost to power-constrained economics, total cost of ownership, and revenue per watt, NVIDIA positions itself as the designer of AI factories rather than a commodity supplier. In this framing, ASICs are relegated to the role of secondary components, their best prospects limited to niches or

Reshaping the AI Chess Game: Why NVIDIA Is Betting on Intel and Teaming Up with OpenAI

2025-09-23T16:03:19+08:00September 23rd, 2025|Categories: Featured Notes, Global Business Dynamics, Strategic Tech and Market Signals|Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |

Executive Summary NVIDIA recently announced two major moves: investing in Intel to co-develop custom x86 CPUs with NVLink, and partnering with OpenAI to build AI infrastructure at the scale of a million GPUs. These actions may seem independent, but they reveal the same trend: the bottleneck in AI is shifting from the number of GPUs to the efficiency of CPU–GPU integration. In this transition, NVIDIA is reinforcing cross-platform standards through NVLink, Intel is focusing on

Broadcom Narrative Platform in AI Market

2025-09-21T11:12:08+08:00June 23rd, 2025|Categories: Featured Notes, Global Business Dynamics, Strategic Tech and Market Signals|Tags: , , , |

Executive Summary: Can Industry Analysis Survive a Narrative Break? Broadcom’s Belief Experiment and the Reflexive Market In a market where capital moves faster and narratives grow stronger, traditional industry analysis faces a profound shift. This article uses Broadcom’s acquisition of VMware as a case study to explore how a hardware company reshapes itself into a platform story. It also examines how that story, when told in the familiar language of capital markets, begins to influence

Exploring Weak Signals: Broadcom ASICs

2025-08-27T17:02:18+08:00March 14th, 2025|Categories: Global Business Dynamics, Strategic Tech and Market Signals|Tags: , , , , , , , , , |

Executive Summary In the rapidly evolving AI hardware space, discussions often center around the competition between different chip architectures, particularly GPUs and ASICs. While NVIDIA’s GPU has traditionally dominated AI training, ASICs have generally been seen as more suitable for the AI inference stage. However, Broadcom’s recent commentary during its earnings call on AI training-specific ASICs has caught our attention, potentially signaling a subtle shift in the industry’s understanding of AI workloads and the role

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