|
|
|
|
|
by lmeyerov
383 days ago
|
|
> But why? In the world you're positing where these queries are sold at negative margins and don't provide any other tangible benefit (i.e. cannot be used for training), the provider would be even better off not serving those queries. Or, more likely, they'd raise prices such that this traffic has positive margins, and they receive just enough for optimal batching. ... But scale from these specific workloads is only valuable because these workloads are already profitable I'm disputing this two-fold: - Software tricks like batching and hardware like ASICs mean what is negative/neutral for a small or unoptimized provider is eventually positive for a large, optimized provider. You keep claiming they cannot do this with positive margin some reason, or only if already profitable, but those are unsubstantiated claims. Conversely, I'm giving classic engineering principles why they can keep driving down their COGS to flip to profitability as long as they have capital and scale. This isn't selling $1 for $0.90 because there is a long way to go before their COGS are primarily constrained by the price of electricity and sand. Instead of refuting this... You just keep positing that it's inherently negative margin. In a world where inference consumption just keeps going up, they can keep pushing the technology advantage and creating even a slight positive margin goes far. This is the classic engineering variant of buttoning margins before an IPO: if they haven't yet, it's probably because they are intentionally prioritizing market share growth for engineering focus vs cost cutting. - You are hyper fixated on tokens, and not that owning a large % of distribution lets them sell other things . Eg, instead of responding to my point 2 here, you are again talking about token margin. Apple doesn't have to make money on transistors when they have a 30% tax on most app spend in the US. |
|
I think deepseek instead just showed they haven't really bothered yet. They rather focus on growing, and capital is cheap enough for these firms that optimizing margins is relatively distracting. Obviously they do optimize, but probably not at the expense of velocity and growth.
And if they do seriously want to tackle margins, they should pull a groq/Google and go aggressively deep. Ex: fab something. Which... They do indeed fund raise on.