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Thank God For Data Centers

Not Boring by Packy McCormick

May 27, 2026

5/27/2026

Long-Run AI Data Center Overbuilding Could Create Positive Industrial Benefits and Embedded Options Even If Demand Falls

Thank God For Data Centers · Not Boring by Packy McCormick

Business, Finance & Industries · May 27, 2026

Even if an AI boom later fades, overbuilding AI data centers can produce lasting industrial benefits—scaled supply chains, de-risked enabling technologies, and learning-curve cost reductions—that create option value for adjacent sectors beyond direct AI returns.


5/27/2026

AI Data Center Spending Reaches Macro Scale With Significant GDP Share Reshaping Demand for Hard Assets

Thank God For Data Centers · Not Boring by Packy McCormick

Business, Finance & Industries · May 27, 2026

AI data-center spending is large enough to matter at the macroeconomic and industrial-policy level—Western buyers will spend roughly $750B this year and over $1T next, concentrating demand across compute, facilities, and power and shifting advantage to suppliers of hard assets like power, cooling, and grid infrastructure.


5/27/2026

Data Center Buyers Can Drive Early Scaling, Cut Costs, And Enable Broad Adoption

Thank God For Data Centers · Not Boring by Packy McCormick

Science, Technology & Innovation · May 27, 2026

Military and Apollo program procurement funded early large-scale production of integrated circuits—letting Fairchild cut prices from about $120 down to roughly $2 and reach cost parity with discrete components by 1965—demonstrating how non-economic buyers can create a technology’s commercial future and suggesting data-center customers could play the same catalytic role for expensive AI hardware by buying capability-advantaged inputs at volume.


5/27/2026

AI Data Centers Accelerate Hard Tech Adoption by Paying Premium to De-Risk and Scale Emerging Technologies

Thank God For Data Centers · Not Boring by Packy McCormick

Science, Technology & Innovation · May 27, 2026

AI data centers are acting as urgent, premium buyers that can fast-track immature hard‑tech (e.g., advanced nuclear, enhanced geothermal, HVDC, modular construction, silicon photonics, batteries) by paying up for fast delivery, providing early revenue/scale, and de‑risking technologies that otherwise wouldn’t compete with incumbents.