AI 资讯
The AI Cost Crisis: How Startups Can Survive the Tokenpocalypse
"# The AI Cost Crisis: How Startups Can Survive the Tokenpocalypse\n\n## Introduction\n\nThe artificial intelligence boom has brought unprecedented innovation, but it has also ushered in a era of spiraling costs. Training state-of-the-art models now requires millions of dollars in compute resources, while simultaneously, the cryptocurrency token market shows signs of a potential collapse—a \"Tokenpocalypse.\" For AI startups, this dual crisis presents an existential threat: how to sustain innovation when both traditional funding avenues and speculative token economies are under pressure? This post explores practical strategies for AI startups to navigate this landscape, focusing on cost optimization, alternative funding, and strategic pivots that can turn crisis into opportunity.\n\n## Understanding the Cost Explosion\n\n### The Compute Crunch\n\nModern AI models, particularly large language models (LLMs) and multimodal systems, demand vast computational resources. Training a single cutting-edge model can consume exaflops of processing power, translating to cloud bills that easily exceed $10 million for a single training run. For startups without deep-pocketed backers, these costs are prohibitive.\n\n### The Token Market Volatility\n\nParallel to the AI boom, the cryptocurrency space experienced explosive growth through token launches—initial coin offerings (ICOs), decentralized finance (DeFi) tokens, and utility tokens for AI-driven projects. However, regulatory crackdowns, market saturation, and declining investor sentiment have led to a sharp downturn. Many tokens have lost significant value, and launching new tokens has become increasingly difficult, removing a once-viable funding path for AI startups.\n\n## Strategies for Survival\n\n### 1. Embrace Model Efficiency\n\nInstead of chasing ever-larger models, startups can focus on efficiency techniques that deliver comparable performance at a fraction of the cost:\n\n- Model Distillation : Train smaller \"student\
AI 资讯
Why this year’s World Cup ball may not fly as far
Much is new about this month’s upcoming FIFA World Cup tournament, which will be held in the US, Canada, and Mexico. It hosts more teams than ever before. It’s the first to occur in three different host countries. And, like predecessor cups for over half a century, it will employ a soccer ball with a…
科技前沿
Article: The Technology Adoption Curve, Twenty Years On
Today, June 8th, InfoQ celebrates 20 years. This is not a comprehensive history, but a deliberately selective look at the technologies and practices InfoQ identified early, where they sit on the adoption curve in 2026, and how that curve may evolve over the next five to ten years. By InfoQ
开发者
All the Ways Europe Is Ditching American Technology
A WIRED timeline shows how dozens of governments, companies, and other organizations across Europe are moving, or planning to shift, away from US Big Tech.
产品设计
NASA will wear high-tech Prada long johns to the Moon
We've seen Axiom Space and Prada's collaboration on the Axiom Extravehicular Mobility Unit (AxEMU) spacesuit. Now the company has revealed the Liquid Cooling and Ventilation Garment (LCVG) that astronauts will wear underneath it when Artemis IV returns humans to the Moon in 2028. The LCVG is the all-important base layer that will keep the crew […]
AI 资讯
We stopped paying $100+/mo for SEO tools. Here's the technical-audit setup we use instead
We run 10+ web products. For years our SEO tooling was a $100+/month subscription we mostly used for one job: technical audits. The keyword and backlink dashboards sat untouched while the bill renewed every month. At some point the math stopped making sense, so we rebuilt our stack around what we actually use. Here's the honest breakdown — what we kept free, what we replaced, and why. What a technical audit actually needs to check Before picking tools, it helps to know what you're auditing. The technical layer is finite and well-defined: Crawlability — robots.txt, broken internal links, redirect chains Indexability — noindex tags, canonical correctness, soft 404s, orphan pages Sitemaps — only canonical, indexable, 200-status URLs On-page — titles, meta descriptions, one H1, valid structured data International — hreflang reciprocity (if you're multilingual) Performance — Core Web Vitals (LCP, CLS, INP) That's it. None of it requires a keyword database or a backlink index — the two things you're really paying $100+/mo for in the big suites. The free tools that cover most of it Google Search Console is non-negotiable and free. The Pages report is the source of truth for what's indexed and why the rest isn't. PageSpeed Insights (free) gives you real Core Web Vitals. Screaming Frog's free tier crawls up to 500 URLs, which is plenty for small sites. For a long time that was our whole stack: GSC + PageSpeed + free Screaming Frog. If your site is under 500 pages, you may not need anything else. Where it broke down for us The free Screaming Frog cap (500 URLs) is the wall. Several of our sites are bigger, and re-auditing them meant either the paid Screaming Frog licence (annual) or going back to a monthly suite. Both felt wrong for something we run after every deploy. So we built our own crawler for the technical layer — and then, honestly, turned it into a product because other people we talked to had the same problem. It does the whole checklist above across the entire sit
产品设计
Microsoft’s Xbox 25th anniversary console comes in translucent green
Microsoft has created a special edition Xbox Series X to celebrate 25 years of the console. The Xbox 25th-anniversary console takes design cues from the original Xbox console, with both the console and controller featuring a translucent green design. "For the first time, we're bringing a translucent design to Xbox Series X, drawing inspiration from […]
AI 资讯
Minecraft Dungeons 2 gets a September release date
Minecraft Dungeons 2, a sequel to Microsoft's dungeon crawler spinoff Minecraft Dungeons, will be released on September 29th. The company originally revealed the game in a brief trailer in March, promising a fall 2026 release window. Here's how Microsoft described it at the time: Return to the world of Minecraft Dungeons in an all new […]
AI 资讯
Fable launches in late February after recent delay
Just a few days after pushing Fable out of 2026, Microsoft showed off more footage of Fable, the first new entry in the storied RPG franchise since 2010's Fable III, at its Xbox Games Showcase on Sunday. The company also announced a specific release date: February 23rd, 2027. Though if you get the Premium Edition, […]
AI 资讯
Halo: Campaign Evolved arrives July 28th
As part of its Xbox Games Showcase on Sunday, Microsoft revealed new details about Halo: Campaign Evolved, the upcoming remake of Halo: Combat Evolved's campaign mode. The remake will debut on Xbox Series S / X, PC, and PS5 on July 28th. Today's mission trailer includes a first look at Operation: Meteorite, a new three-mission […]
AI 资讯
Gears of War: E-Day isn’t coming to the PS5
Apparently, the "return of Xbox" means a retreat from other platforms. At its Xbox Games Showcase today, Microsoft revealed that Gears of War: E-Day - which was previously rumored for a PS5 launch in addition to Xbox and PC - will not be coming to PlayStation. It'll be an Xbox console exclusive and is launching […]
AI 资讯
The Verge Weekend Questionnaire
Have you ever wondered what the most indispensable app is for your favorite musician or how the world’s tech CEOs stay focused? Well, that’s the sort of thing we aim to uncover in our Verge Weekend Questionnaire. Think of it as a spiritual successor to Five Minutes on the Verge. Every Saturday, a different guest […]
AI 资讯
Govee’s all-weather smart lamp post is under $200 for the first time
If you have an outdoor space that needs some extra lighting, either for fun or security reasons (or a mix of the two), the Govee outdoor lamp post light is a good pick that’s 23 percent off its regular price right now. Typically retailing for $260, the Govee outdoor lamp post light is available for […]
AI 资讯
LearnX-Radar – Daily AI audio lessons from developer trends + Dutch coach
I built something I desperately needed: daily AI audio lessons from real developer trends (plus a Dutch coach for inburgering B1). The hardest part wasn't the AI. It was figuring out how to score genuine rising skills vs. one-day noise. I ended up building a cross-day momentum signal that rewards skills accelerating over 3+ days and dampers spikes. But I'm stuck on the next problem: how do you personalize this without storing user data? (I'm privacy-first, so no subscriber DB — Telegram holds the member list.) If you've solved this, I'd love your take. And if you're learning Dutch + coding, I'd appreciate you trying it and telling me what's useless. What I'm curious about: Is the momentum signal actually working — am I surfacing real trends or just noise? Would the Dutch coach be useful for expat developers in NL, or is it too niche? Technical details (for those who care): • 7 sources: GitHub Trending, HN (Who-is-Hiring + front page), Stack Overflow tag deltas, dev.to, Reddit, Lobste.rs • Map-reduce skill extraction with deterministic attribution (corpus scan, not LLM tally) • Grounded briefs: reads actual source text via Jina + Exa, cited sources • Delivered via Telegram (audio + PDF), Spotify podcast, email • Privacy: PII redacted at ingestion, no subscriber data stored Live: https://yusuprozimemet.github.io/LearnX-Radar/ GitHub: https://github.com/Yusuprozimemet/LearnX-Radar (P.S. This is still beta — I'm looking for feedback, not users. If you try it, tell me what's useless, not what's good.)
开发者
The Virtual OS Museum lets you relive over 600 operating systems right on your desktop
The Virtual OS Museum isn't a physical place, it's a collection of over 1,700 distinct installations of over 600 operating systems for over 250 platforms that you can download and run via emulation right on your computer. It's largely the work of one man, Andrew Warkentin, a developer and OS historian who has been slowly […]
AI 资讯
AI ‘content creators’ are getting harder to spot
This is The Stepback, a weekly newsletter breaking down one essential story from the tech world. For more on AI confusion, follow Robert Hart. The Stepback arrives in our subscribers' inboxes at 8AM ET. Opt in for The Stepback here. How it started At first, AI influencers were relatively easy to identify - and to […]
开发者
JMGO’s N3 Ultimate projector is the new portable 4K champ
Sorry Anker: JMGO now makes my favorite flagship portable projector. The N3 Ultimate is an excellent portable 4K projector that defeats moderate ambient light at severe placement angles and can rival more expensive home theater installations at night. After a few weeks of testing, I think the raw adaptability exhibited by the JMGO's N3 Ultimate […]
AI 资讯
Closing the execution gap: a series
Every AI coding tool can write Python — Cursor, Claude Code, Windsurf. None of them can run it safely in production. That gap between "AI wrote the code" and "the code ran safely" is exactly what I'm building jhansi.io to close. This series documents the journey. One layer of the problem at a time. The execution gap When AI generates code, four things still stand between you and prod: Dependencies — Install the right packages, with versions and licenses you trust Isolation — Run it hard-sandboxed. No host access, no outbound network, no surprises Secrets — Let AI use your API keys without ever letting it see or leak them Audit — Log every execution. Prompt, code, result, timestamp. Compliance-grade. Most teams stop at step 1. Banks and fintechs can't. FCA, SOC2, and the EU AI Act require audit trails for AI actions. You can't eval() your way through an audit. jhansi.io is the missing run() for AI-generated code. Open core, cloud sandbox, built to close each part of the gap — layer by layer. The series Part 1 — Persistent sandboxes Why "ephemeral" breaks debugging, state, and compliance. The case for giving every AI a home directory. → Read Part 1 Part 2 — Dependency management (coming soon) Detecting, installing, and locking deps across Python, Node, Go, and Java. With SBOMs and policy built in. Part 3 — Isolation (coming soon) What "hard isolation" actually means. Containers, Firecracker, zero trust networking, and the metadata service attacks you haven't thought of yet. Part 4 — Secrets (coming soon) Kernel-level proxies. AI can call Stripe without the key ever entering the sandbox. Part 5 — Audit (coming soon) Who ran what, when, with which prompt. Hash-chained logs that satisfy auditors, not just engineers. Building this in public. Follow the series on Dev.to , Linkedin , and X . Code is Apache 2.0 at github.com/jhansi-io .
AI 资讯
Meta made its own AI-generated clickbait news feed
Facebook has long been filled with feeds of clickbait articles. Now, Meta is making its own clickbait articles with AI. The standalone Meta AI app now has a "For You" section that populates a list of clickbait-style stories for you to read. But the topics, images, and text are all AI-generated - and as questionable […]
产品设计
The next YouTube phenomenon hitting the big screen
Hi, friends! Welcome to Installer No. 131, your guide to the best and Verge-iest stuff in the world. (If you're new here, welcome, happy last week of productivity before the World Cup starts, and also you can read all the old editions at the Installer homepage.) This week, I've been reading about the World Cup […]