PJFP.com

Pursuit of Joy, Fulfillment, and Purpose

Tag: Nvidia GPU

  • Jensen Huang at Stanford CS153 Frontier Systems on Co-Design, Agentic Computing, Vera Rubin, Open Models, and the Million-X Decade That Reshaped AI Infrastructure

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tsQB0n0YV3k

    NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang returned to Stanford for the CS153 Frontier Systems class (the room nicknamed itself “AI Coachella”) to lay out, in raw form, how he thinks about the computer being reinvented for the first time in over sixty years. Across roughly seventy minutes of student questions he walks through the codesign philosophy that gave NVIDIA a million-x decade, the architectural through-line from Hopper to Grace Blackwell to Vera Rubin to Feynman, the case for open source foundation models, the realities of tokens per watt and MFU, energy demand running a thousand times higher, the China and export-control debate, and his own biggest strategic mistakes. Watch the full conversation on YouTube.

    TLDW

    Huang argues every layer of computing has changed: the programming model, the system architecture, the deployment pattern, the economics. Co-design across CPUs, GPUs, networking, storage, switches and compilers gave NVIDIA roughly a million-x speed-up over ten years versus the ten-x Moore’s Law era, and that headroom is what let researchers say “just train on the whole internet.” Hopper was built for pre-training, Grace Blackwell NVLink72 for inference and reasoning (50x over Hopper in two years), Vera Rubin is built for agents that load long memory, call tools and need a low-latency single-threaded CPU bolted directly to the GPU, and Feynman extends that to swarms of agents that spawn sub-agents. Open weights matter because safety, sovereignty (230-plus languages no one else will fund) and domain models for biology, autonomy, robotics and climate need a foundation that NVIDIA is willing to seed. Compute is not really the scarce resource (Huang says place the order and the chips ship), the broken thing is institutional budgeting that can’t put a billion dollars into a shared university supercomputer. Energy demand is heading a thousand times higher and this is finally the moment market forces alone will fund sustainable generation. On geopolitics he rejects the GPUs-as-atomic-bombs framing and warns America will end up like its telecom industry if it cedes two thirds of the world. On career he advises seeking suffering on purpose. On strategy he says observe, reason from first principles, build a mental model, work backwards, minimize opportunity cost, maximize optionality.

    Key Takeaways

    • The computing model has been substantially unchanged since the IBM System 360, sixty-plus years ago. Huang’s first computer architecture book was the System 360 manual. AI is the first true reinvention.
    • Old computing was pre-recorded retrieval. New computing is generated, contextually aware and continuous. Cloud was on-demand. Agentic systems run continuously.
    • Codesign is NVIDIA’s central thesis. Inherited from the Hennessy and Patterson RISC era at Stanford, extended across CPUs, GPUs, networking, switches, storage, compilers and frameworks all optimized together.
    • The result of full-stack codesign: roughly 1,000,000x faster compute over ten years, versus a generous 10x to 100x for Moore’s Law in the same period. Dennard scaling effectively ended a decade ago.
    • That million-x speed-up is what unlocked “train on all of the internet” as a realistic AI strategy.
    • After GPT, Huang says it was obvious thinking was next. Reasoning is just generating tokens consumed internally, then using tools is generating tokens consumed externally. Agentic systems followed predictably.
    • Education needs AI baked into the curriculum, not just taught as a subject. Pre-recorded textbooks cannot keep pace with knowledge being generated in real time.
    • Huang says he cannot learn anymore without AI. He has the AI read the paper, then read every related paper, then become a dedicated researcher he can interrogate.
    • Mead and Conway and the first-principles methodology of semiconductor design are still worth learning even though most of the scaling tricks have been exhausted.
    • NVIDIA itself is one of the largest consumers of Anthropic and OpenAI tokens in the world. One hundred percent of NVIDIA engineers are now agentically supported. Huang recommends Claude and similar tools by name and says open-source downloads will not match the integrated product harness.
    • NVIDIA still invests heavily in open foundation models because language and intelligence represent the codification of human knowledge. Five pillars: Nemotron (language), BioNeMo (biology), Alphamayo (autonomous vehicles), Groot (humanoid robotics) and a climate science model (mesoscale multiphysics).
    • Sovereign language models matter. Roughly 230 world languages will never be a top priority for a commercial frontier lab. Nemotron is near-frontier and fully fine-tunable so any country can adapt it.
    • Safety and security require open weights. You cannot defend against or audit a black box. Transparent systems let researchers interrogate models and let defenders deploy swarms.
    • The future of cyber defense is not bigger-model-versus-bigger-model. It is trillions of cheap fast small models like Nemotron Nano surrounding the threat.
    • Domain models fuse language priors with world models. Alphamayo learned to drive safely on a few million miles instead of billions because it can reason like a human about the road.
    • MFU (Model Flops Utilization) is a misleading metric. Huang says he wants low MFU, because that means he over-provisioned every resource and never gets pinned by Amdahl’s law during a spike.
    • The xAI Memphis cluster running at 11 percent MFU is not necessarily a failure mode. In disaggregated prefill plus decode inference you can deliver very high tokens per watt with very low MFU.
    • The right metric is performance, ultimately tokens per watt as a proxy for intelligence per watt, and even that needs adjustment because not all tokens are equal. Coding tokens are worth more than other tokens.
    • Hopper was designed for pre-training. NVIDIA chose to build multi-billion-dollar systems when the largest existing scientific supercomputer cost $350 million, with no proven customer base. It worked.
    • Grace Blackwell NVLink72 was designed for inference, especially the high-memory-bandwidth decode phase. It is the world’s first rack-scale computer and delivered a 50x speed-up over Hopper in two years, against an expected 2x from Moore’s Law.
    • Vera Rubin is designed for agents. Long-term memory wired into storage and into the GPU fabric, working memory, heavy tool use, and Vera, a CPU optimized for low-latency multi-core single-threaded code so a multi-billion-dollar GPU system does not stall waiting on a slow tool call.
    • Feynman is being shaped for swarms of agents with sub-agents and sub-sub-agents, a recursive software topology that demands a new compute pattern.
    • Tokens per watt improved 50x in one generation. Compounding energy efficiency is the lever NVIDIA controls directly.
    • Total compute energy demand is heading roughly a thousand times higher than today, possibly two orders of magnitude beyond that. Huang says he would not be surprised if the estimate is low.
    • For the first time in history, market forces alone are enough to fund solar, nuclear and grid upgrades. Government subsidies are no longer required to make sustainable energy investment rational.
    • Copper interconnect is becoming a bottleneck. Photonics is moving from optional to structural inside racks and across them.
    • Comparing NVIDIA GPUs to atomic bombs, Huang says, is a stupid analogy. A billion people use NVIDIA GPUs. He advocates them to his family. He does not advocate atomic bombs to anyone.
    • If the United States cedes two thirds of the global market to competitors on policy grounds, the American technology industry will end up like American telecommunications, which was policied out of existence.
    • Huang directly rejects AI doom-by-singularity narratives. It is not true that we have no idea how these systems work. It is not true that the technology becomes infinitely powerful in a nanosecond. He calls the rhetoric irresponsible and harmful to the field students are about to enter.
    • On Stanford specifically: if the university president places an order, NVIDIA will deliver the chips. The bottleneck is that no university department has a billion-dollar compute budget because budgeting is fragmented across grants. Stanford’s $40 billion endowment is more than enough to fix that.
    • “It’s Stanford’s fault” is meant as empowerment. If something is your fault, you can solve it.
    • Career advice: do not optimize purely for passion. Most people do not yet know what they love. Pick the job in front of you and do it as well as possible. Even as CEO, Huang says, 90 percent of the work is hard and he suffers through it.
    • Suffering on purpose builds the muscle of resilience. When the company, the team or the family needs you to be tough, that muscle has to already exist.
    • NVIDIA’s first generation of products was technically wrong in nearly every dimension: curved surfaces instead of triangles, no Z-buffer, forward instead of inverse texture mapping, no floating point. The strategic recovery, not the technology, taught Huang the lessons that have lasted decades.
    • The biggest clean strategic mistake Huang names is the move into mobile chips (Tegra). It grew to a billion dollars then went to zero when Qualcomm’s modem dominance shut NVIDIA out of the 3G to 4G transition. The recovery into automotive and robotics (the Thor chip is the great great great grandson of that mobile lineage) was real, but Huang refuses to rationalize the original choice.
    • Forecasting framework: observe, reason from first principles, ask “so what” and “what next” until you have a mental model of the future, place your company inside that model, then work backwards while minimizing opportunity cost and maximizing optionality.
    • Best part of the CEO job: living at the intersection of vision, strategy and execution surrounded by people capable enough to make ambitious visions real. Worst part: the responsibility for everyone who joined the spaceship, especially in the near-death moments NVIDIA had four or five times early on.
    • Underrated insider note: Huang’s first apple pie with cheese, first hot fudge sandwich and first milkshake all happened at Denny’s. The Superbird, the fried chicken and a custom Superbird-style ham and cheese with tomato and mustard are his order.

    Detailed Summary

    Computing reinvented from the ground up

    Huang frames the moment as the first true rewrite of the computer in sixty-plus years. From the IBM System 360 forward, the mental model of writing code, running code, taking a computer to market and reasoning about applications stayed roughly constant. AI changes the programming model itself. Software is no longer a compiled binary running deterministically on a CPU. It is a neural network running on a GPU producing generated, contextual, real-time output. That cascades into how companies are organized, what tools developers use, what the network and storage stack look like, and what an application is even allowed to do. Robo-taxis, he notes, are an application no one would have attempted before deep learning unlocked perception.

    Codesign and the million-x decade

    Codesign is the philosophical center of the talk. Huang traces it to the RISC work of John Hennessy at Stanford, where simpler instruction sets won by being co-designed with the compiler rather than maximally optimized in isolation. NVIDIA extends the principle across every layer simultaneously: GPU architecture, CPU architecture, NVLink and NVSwitch fabrics, photonic interconnects, networking silicon, storage paths, CUDA libraries, frameworks and ultimately the model design. The numbers Huang gives are arresting. Moore’s Law in its prime delivered roughly 100x per decade. By the time Dennard scaling broke, real-world gains had compressed to roughly 10x. NVIDIA’s codesigned stack delivered between 100,000x and 1,000,000x over the same ten-year window. That non-linear speed-up is, in Huang’s telling, the precondition for modern AI: it is what allowed researchers to stop curating training sets and just feed the entire internet to the model.

    Education has to fuse first principles with AI tools

    Asked how curriculum should evolve, Huang argues AI must be integrated into the learning process, not just taught about. He recalls Hennessy writing his textbook by hand a chapter a week while Huang was a student, and says pre-recorded textbooks cannot keep up with the rate at which AI generates new knowledge. He describes his own learning workflow: hand the paper to an AI, then have it read the entire surrounding literature, then treat the AI as a dedicated researcher who can be interrogated. At the same time he defends the classics. Mead and Conway are still the foundation. Most modern semiconductor scaling tricks have been exhausted, but knowing where the field came from sharpens judgment when designing what comes next.

    Open source and the five domain pillars

    Huang gives one of the most detailed public accounts of why NVIDIA invests so heavily in open foundation models even while being a top customer of closed labs. He recommends Claude and OpenAI by name for production coding work, and says 100 percent of NVIDIA engineers are now agentically supported. The open-weights case rests on three legs. First, language is the codification of intelligence, and there are at least 230 languages that no commercial lab will ever prioritize. Nemotron is built near frontier and released so any country or community can fine-tune it. Second, the same representation-learning approach has to be replicated in domains where the data is not internet text, so NVIDIA seeded BioNeMo for biology, Alphamayo for autonomy, Groot for humanoid robotics and a climate model for mesoscale multiphysics. The economics of those fields would never produce a foundation model on their own. Third, safety and security require transparency. A black box cannot be defended or audited, and the future of cyber defense is not bigger-model-versus-bigger-model but swarms of cheap fast small models like Nemotron Nano surrounding the threat.

    MFU is the wrong metric, tokens per watt is closer

    A student raises the leaked memo that the xAI Memphis cluster is running at 11 percent Model Flops Utilization. Huang flips the framing. He says he would rather be at low MFU all the time, because that means he over-provisioned flops, memory bandwidth, memory capacity and network capacity. Bottlenecks shift constantly, so over-provisioning across every dimension is what lets the system absorb a spike without getting pinned by Amdahl’s law. In disaggregated inference, where prefill and decode are physically separated and decode is bandwidth-bound rather than flop-bound, NVLink72 can deliver extremely high tokens per watt while reporting very low MFU. Huang argues the right framing is performance, and ultimately tokens per watt as a rough proxy for intelligence per watt, adjusted for the fact that not all tokens are equal. A coding token is worth more than a generic token.

    Hopper, Grace Blackwell NVLink72, Vera Rubin, Feynman

    Huang gives the clearest public framing of NVIDIA’s roadmap as a sequence of architectural answers to evolving compute patterns. Hopper was built for pre-training, at a moment when NVIDIA chose to build multi-billion-dollar machines while the largest scientific supercomputer in the world cost $350 million and the marketplace for such systems was, on paper, zero. Grace Blackwell NVLink72 was the answer to inference and reasoning: a rack-scale computer that ganged 72 GPUs together because decode needs aggregate memory bandwidth far beyond a single chip. The generation-over-generation speed-up was 50x in two years, twenty-five times what Moore’s Law would have delivered. Vera Rubin is being built explicitly for agents. Agents load long-term memory from storage that has to be wired directly into the GPU fabric, they use working memory, they call tools that run on a CPU, and they wait. So the CPU has to be Vera, optimized for low-latency single-threaded code, because the multi-billion-dollar GPU system cannot afford to idle waiting on a slow tool call. Feynman extends the pattern to swarms of agents with sub-agents and sub-sub-agents, a recursive software topology that will demand its own compute pattern.

    Energy demand and the grid

    Huang’s energy projection is one of the most aggressive numbers in the talk. NVIDIA can compound tokens per watt by 50x per generation through codesign, but the total compute demand is heading roughly a thousand times higher, and Huang says he would not be surprised if the real figure is one or two orders of magnitude beyond that. The reason is structural: future computing is generative and continuous, not pre-recorded and on-demand. The good news, he argues, is that this is the best moment in the history of humanity to invest in sustainable generation. Market forces alone are now sufficient to fund solar, nuclear and grid upgrades. Government subsidies are no longer required to make the math work.

    Adversarial countries, export controls and the telecom warning

    This is the segment where Huang is visibly fired up. He attacks the GPUs-as-atomic-bombs framing on its face. NVIDIA GPUs power medical imaging, video games and soy sauce delivery. A billion people use them. He advocates them to his family. The analogy collapses at the first comparison. He attacks the second framing, that American companies should not compete abroad because they will lose anyway, as a self-fulfilling defeat. Competition makes the company better. The third framing, that depriving the rest of the world of general-purpose computing benefits the United States, also fails on first principles: it benefits one or two American companies at the cost of an entire industry. The cautionary parallel is telecommunications. The United States once had a leading position in telecom fundamental technology and policied itself out of it. Huang’s worry, voiced explicitly to a room of CS students, is that they will graduate into a shell of a computer industry if the same path is repeated.

    AI doom and rational optimism

    In the same arc Huang rejects the science-fiction framing of AI as a singularity that arrives suddenly on a Wednesday at 7pm and ends civilization. He calls those claims irresponsible, says they are not true, and points out that the people advancing them are believed by audiences who then make policy on that basis. It is not true that no one understands how these systems work. It is not true that intelligence becomes infinitely powerful instantaneously. It is not true that there is no defense. His framing, which the host echoes as “rational optimism,” is that the goal is to create a future where people care about computers because the technology students are learning is worth mastering.

    Stanford’s compute problem is Stanford’s fault

    A student presses on the scarcity of compute for independent researchers, startups and universities inside the United States. Huang’s answer is sharp: there is no shortage. Place the order and the chips will arrive. The actual broken thing is institutional. University grants are fragmented across departments. No researcher can raise enough on a single grant to fund a billion-dollar shared cluster, and no one shares. He compares it to showing up at the grocery store demanding a billion dollars of tomatoes today. The solution is planning, aggregation and a campus-scale supercomputer, the way Stanford once built the linear accelerator. The endowment is $40 billion. Pulling a billion off it, contracting cloud capacity and giving every student and researcher AI supercomputer access is, in Huang’s view, obviously doable. When he says “it is Stanford’s fault” the host laughs, but Huang clarifies: if it is your fault you have the power to fix it.

    Career, suffering and resilience

    Asked how a CS student should spend the next few years, Huang pushes back on the standard “follow your passion” advice. Most people do not know what they love yet, because no one knows what they do not know. The bar of demanding joy from every working day is too high. Whatever the job is, do it as well as you can. Even as CEO of NVIDIA he says he genuinely loves about 10 percent of his work. The other 90 percent is hard and he suffers through it. He recommends suffering on purpose, because resilience is a muscle that only builds under load, and when the company, the team or the family needs that muscle, it has to already exist. Earlier in his life that meant cleaning toilets and busing tables at Denny’s. He does it today running a multi-trillion-dollar company.

    The biggest mistakes

    Huang separates technical mistakes from strategic mistakes. NVIDIA’s first generation of products was technically wrong in almost every way: curved surfaces instead of triangles, no Z-buffer, forward instead of inverse texture mapping, no floating point inside. The company wasted two and a half years. But the strategic genius of the recovery, the reading of the market, the conservation of resources and the reapplication of talent, is what taught him strategy. The clean strategic mistake he names is mobile. NVIDIA’s Tegra line grew to a billion dollars of revenue and then collapsed to zero when Qualcomm’s modem dominance locked NVIDIA out of the 3G to 4G transition. Huang explicitly refuses the comforting rationalization that the Tegra effort fed the Thor automotive chip (“Thor is the great great great grandson”). The original decision, he says, was a waste of time. The lesson is to think one or two clicks further about whether a market is structurally winnable before committing the company.

    Forecasting under fog of war

    The final substantive exchange is on forecasting. Huang’s method has four steps. Observe what is actually happening (AlexNet crushing two decades of computer vision research in one shot, GPT producing reasoning by token generation). Reason from first principles about why it works. Ask “so what” and “what next” recursively until a mental model of the future emerges. Place the company inside that future and work backwards. Crucially, expect to be partly wrong. Some outcomes will absolutely happen, some will likely happen, some might happen, and the strategy has to be robust across that distribution. The real cost of any strategic choice is the opportunity cost of the alternatives you did not take, so the discipline is to minimize that cost and maximize optionality while letting the journey itself pay for the journey.

    Thoughts

    The most useful thing in this conversation is the explicit architectural mapping of compute patterns to chip generations. Hopper for pre-training. Grace Blackwell NVLink72 for inference, because decode is bandwidth-bound and a single chip cannot supply it. Vera Rubin for agents, because tool calls stall multi-billion-dollar GPU systems and so the CPU has to be optimized for low-latency single-threaded code. Feynman for swarms. That sequence is not marketing. It is a falsifiable thesis about where the bottleneck moves next, and every other infrastructure company should be measuring themselves against it. If Huang is right that swarms of sub-agents are the next dominant pattern, then the design pressure shifts from raw flops to fabric topology, memory hierarchy and storage-to-GPU latency. That has implications for everyone downstream, including the hyperscalers building competing accelerators.

    The MFU section is the most intellectually generous moment in the talk. The instinct in the AI ops community has been to chase MFU as if it were a virtue. Huang argues, persuasively, that low MFU is consistent with high tokens per watt in a disaggregated inference setup, and that bottlenecks rotate fast enough that over-provisioning every resource is the rational design. That reframing matters because it changes what “scarce” means. Compute is not scarce in the way the discourse treats it. What is scarce is a coherent system designed end-to-end. The xAI 11 percent number, in that frame, is not embarrassing. It is the natural reading of a workload that is mostly decode.

    The Stanford segment is the part most likely to be quoted out of context. “It’s Stanford’s fault” is a deliberately provocative line, but the underlying claim is correct and load-bearing. Compute is not gated by NVIDIA refusing to ship chips. It is gated by the fact that fragmented grant funding cannot aggregate into the billion-dollar order that NVIDIA can fulfill. The implication is that universities and national labs need a structural change in how they pool capital for compute, and that the current model of every researcher buying a handful of cards is genuinely obsolete. Huang’s nudge about pulling a billion off the endowment is concrete enough to be acted on, and other major research universities should read this segment as a direct prompt.

    The geopolitical segment is the highest-stakes one. The telecommunications comparison is correct as a historical pattern, and Huang is one of the very few executives in a position to deliver that warning credibly. The unresolved tension is that the argument applies symmetrically. If American AI dominance is built by selling globally, that includes selling into adversarial states, and the policy question is where the line falls. Huang does not answer that question. He attacks the framing that lets the question be answered badly. That is a meaningful contribution to the discourse even if it does not resolve the underlying tradeoff.

    The career advice section is the part the social-media clips will mishandle. “Seek suffering” reads as macho when extracted. In context it is a specific operational claim about how resilience compounds, and it is paired with the Tegra story where Huang himself paid the price of not thinking one more click ahead. That kind of self-implication is rare in CEO talks, and it is the reason the talk is worth listening to in full rather than only reading the recap.

    Watch the full Stanford CS153 Frontier Systems conversation with Jensen Huang here.

  • Krishna Rao on Anthropic Going From 9 Billion to 30 Billion ARR in One Quarter and the Compute Strategy Powering Claude

    Krishna Rao, Chief Financial Officer of Anthropic, sat down with Patrick O’Shaughnessy on Invest Like the Best for one of the most detailed public looks yet at the operating engine behind Claude. He covers how Anthropic compounded from $9 billion of run rate revenue at the start of the year to north of $30 billion by the end of Q1, why he spends 30 to 40 percent of his time on compute, the playbook for buying gigawatts of AI infrastructure across Trainium, TPU, and GPU platforms, how Anthropic prices its models, why returns to frontier intelligence keep climbing, and what the Mythos release tells us about the cyber capabilities of the next generation of Claude.

    TLDW

    Anthropic is running the most compute fungible frontier lab in the world, with active deployments across AWS Trainium, Google TPU, and Nvidia GPU, and an internal orchestration layer that lets a chip serve inference in the morning and run reinforcement learning the same evening. Krishna Rao explains the cone of uncertainty that governs gigawatt scale compute procurement, the floor Anthropic refuses to drop below on model development compute, the Jevons paradox unlock from cutting Opus pricing, the 500 percent annualized net dollar retention from enterprise customers, the layer cake of long term deals with Google, Broadcom, Amazon, and the recent xAI Colossus tie up in Memphis, the phased release of the Mythos model in response to spiking cyber capabilities, the internal use of Claude Code to produce statutory financial statements and run a Monthly Financial Review skill, and why the team believes scaling laws are alive and well. The interview also covers fundraising history through Series D and Series E, the $75 billion already raised plus another $50 billion coming, talent density beating talent mass during the Meta poaching wave, and Rao’s belief that biotech and drug discovery represent the most exciting frontier for AI.

    Key Takeaways

    • Anthropic entered the year with about $9 billion of run rate revenue and ended the first quarter with north of $30 billion of run rate revenue, a more than 3x leap driven by model intelligence gains and the products built around them.
    • Compute is described as the lifeblood of the company, the canvas everything else is built on, and the most consequential class of decisions Rao makes. Buy too much and you go bankrupt. Buy too little and you cannot serve customers or stay at the frontier.
    • Rao spends 30 to 40 percent of his time on compute, even today, and the leadership team meets repeatedly on both procurement and ongoing compute allocation.
    • Anthropic is the only frontier language lab actively using all three major chip platforms in production: AWS Trainium, Google TPU, and Nvidia GPU. It is also the only major model available on all three clouds.
    • Flexibility is the central design principle. Anthropic builds flexibility into the deals themselves, into the orchestration layer that maps workloads to chips, and into compilers built from the chip level up.
    • The cone of uncertainty frames procurement. Small differences in weekly or monthly growth compound into wildly different two year outcomes, so the team plans across a range of scenarios rather than a single point estimate, and ranges toward the upper end while protecting downside.
    • Compute allocation across the company sits in three buckets: model development and research, internal employee acceleration, and external customer serving. A non negotiable floor protects model development even when customer demand is tight.
    • Anthropic estimates that if it cut off internal employee use of its own models, the freed compute could serve billions of dollars of additional revenue. It chooses not to, because internal use compounds into better future models.
    • Intelligence is multi dimensional, not a single IQ score. Anthropic measures real world capability through customer feedback, long horizon task performance, tool use, computer use, and speed at agentic tasks, not just leaderboard benchmarks that have largely saturated.
    • Each Opus generation, 4 to 4.5 to 4.6 to 4.7, delivers both capability improvements and an efficiency multiplier on token processing. New models often serve customers at a fraction of the prior cost while doing more.
    • Reinforcement learning is described as inference inside a sandbox with a reward function, so model efficiency gains directly improve internal RL throughput. The flywheel is tightly coupled.
    • Over 90 percent of code at Anthropic is now written by Claude Code, and a large share of Claude Code itself is written by Claude Code.
    • Anthropic shipped roughly 30 distinct product and feature releases in January and the pace has accelerated since.
    • Scaling laws, in Anthropic’s internal data, are alive and well. The team holds itself to a skeptical scientific standard and still does not see them slowing down.
    • Anthropic recently signed a 5 gigawatt deal with Google and Broadcom for TPUs starting in 2027, plus an Amazon Trainium agreement for up to 5 gigawatts, totaling more than $100 billion in commitments. A significant portion lands this year and next year.
    • A new partnership for capacity at the xAI Colossus facility in Memphis was announced just before the interview, aimed at expanding consumer and prosumer capacity.
    • Pricing has been remarkably stable across Haiku, Sonnet, and Opus. The biggest deliberate change was lowering Opus pricing, which produced a textbook Jevons paradox: consumption rose far faster than the price drop, and the new Opus 4.6 and 4.7 slot in at the same price point.
    • Mythos is the first model Anthropic chose to release in a phased way because of a sharp spike in cyber capability. In an open source codebase where a prior model found 22 security vulnerabilities, Mythos found roughly 250.
    • The Mythos release framework focuses on defensive use first, expands access over time, and is presented as a template for future capability spikes.
    • Anthropic now sells to 9 of the Fortune 10 and reports net dollar retention above 500 percent on an annualized basis. These are not pilots. Rao describes signing two double digit million dollar commitments during a 20 minute Uber ride to the studio.
    • The platform strategy is mostly horizontal. Anthropic will go vertical with offerings like Claude for Financial Services, Claude for Life Sciences, and Claude Security where it can demonstrate the model’s capabilities, but expects most application value to accrue to customers building on top.
    • Investors raised over $75 billion in equity since Rao joined, with another $50 billion in commitments tied to the Amazon and Google deals. Capital intensity is real, but the raises fund the upper end of the cone of uncertainty more than they fund current losses.
    • The Series E close coincided with the day the DeepSeek news broke, forcing investors to reassess their AI thesis in real time. Anthropic closed the round anyway.
    • Inside finance, Claude now produces statutory financial statements for every Anthropic legal entity, with a human checker. A library of more than 70 finance specific skills underpins workflows.
    • A custom Monthly Financial Review skill produces a 90 to 95 percent ready monthly close report, so leadership discussion shifts from reconciling numbers to debating implications.
    • An internal real time analytics platform called Anthrop Stats compresses weekly insight cycles from hours to about 30 minutes.
    • The biggest token user inside Anthropic’s finance team is the head of tax, focused on tax policy engines and workflow automation. The most senior people, not the youngest, are leading internal adoption.
    • Talent density beats talent mass. When Meta and others ran aggressive offer waves, Anthropic lost two people while peer labs lost dozens.
    • All seven Anthropic co founders remain at the company, as does most of the first 20 to 30 employees, which Rao credits to a collaborative, transparent, debate friendly culture and a real culture interview that can veto otherwise top tier candidates.
    • Dario Amodei holds an open all hands every two weeks, writes a short prepared document, and takes unscripted questions from anyone at the company.
    • AI safety investments in interpretability and alignment have a commercial side effect. Looking inside the model helps Anthropic build better models, and enterprises selling sensitive workloads want to trust the lab they hand customer data to.
    • Anthropic explicitly identifies as America first in its approach to model development, and engages closely with the US administration on capability releases such as Mythos.
    • The longer term product vision is the virtual collaborator: an agent with organizational context, access to the company’s tools, persistent memory, and the ability to work on ideas, not just tasks, over long horizons.
    • CoWork, Anthropic’s extension of the Claude Code paradigm into general knowledge work, is being adopted faster than Claude Code itself when indexed to the same point in its launch curve.
    • Anthropic’s product teams ship daily, with a fleet of agents working across the company on specific tasks. Everyone effectively becomes a manager of agents.
    • The dominant downside risks to Anthropic’s high end forecast are slower customer diffusion of model capability into real workflows, scaling laws flattening unexpectedly, and Anthropic losing its position at the frontier.
    • Rao is most excited about biotech and healthcare outcomes, especially the prospect that AI could push drug discovery and lab throughput up 10x or 100x, turning currently incurable diagnoses into treatable ones within a patient’s lifetime.

    Detailed Summary

    Compute as Lifeblood and the Cone of Uncertainty

    Rao opens with the claim that compute is the most important resource at Anthropic, and the most consequential decision class in the company. You cannot buy a gigawatt of compute next week. You have to anticipate demand a year or two in advance, and the cost of being wrong in either direction is high. Buy too much and the unit economics collapse. Buy too little and you cannot serve customers or stay at the frontier, which are described as the same failure mode. To navigate this, the team uses a cone of uncertainty rather than point estimates. Small differences in weekly growth compound into vastly different two year outcomes, and Anthropic tries to position itself toward the upper end of that cone while preserving optionality. Rao notes he has had to consciously break a lifetime of linear thinking and force himself into exponential models.

    Three Chip Platforms, One Orchestration Layer

    Anthropic uses Amazon’s Trainium, Google’s TPUs, and Nvidia’s GPUs fungibly. That was not free. Adopting TPUs at scale started around the third TPU generation, when outside observers thought it was a strange choice. Anthropic invested years into compilers and orchestration so workloads can flow across chips by generation and by job type. The team works deeply with Annapurna Labs at AWS to influence Trainium roadmaps because Anthropic stresses these chips harder than almost anyone. The result is what Rao believes is the most efficient utilization of compute across any frontier lab, with a dollar of compute going further inside Anthropic than anywhere else.

    Three Buckets and the Model Development Floor

    Compute gets allocated across model development, internal acceleration of employees, and customer serving. The conversations are collaborative rather than zero sum, but there is a hard floor on model development that the company refuses to cross even if it makes customer demand harder to serve in the short term. The thesis is simple. The returns to frontier intelligence are extremely high, especially in enterprise, so cutting model investment to chase near term revenue is a bad trade. Internal employee use is also explicitly protected. Rao notes that diverting that internal usage to external customers would unlock billions of additional revenue today, but the compounding benefit of accelerating researchers and engineers outweighs that.

    Intelligence Is Multi Dimensional

    Rao pushes back hard on the IQ framing of model progress. Benchmarks saturate quickly, and the real signal comes from how customers actually use the models. Anthropic looks at long horizon task completion, tool use, computer use, and time to result on agentic tasks. Two equally capable agents who differ only in speed produce dramatically different value, because the faster one compounds into more attempts and more outcomes. Frontier model leaps are also fuel efficient. The sedan to sports car analogy breaks down because each Opus generation, 4 to 4.5 to 4.6 to 4.7, delivers a step up in capability and a multiplier on per token efficiency.

    From 9 Billion to 30 Billion ARR in One Quarter

    The headline number for the quarter is a leap from about $9 billion of run rate revenue to over $30 billion, accomplished without onboarding a corresponding step up in compute, because new compute lands on ramps locked in 12 months prior. Rao attributes the leap to model capability gains, products that surface that intelligence in usable form factors, and an enterprise customer base that pulls more workloads onto Claude as each generation unlocks new use cases. Coding started the wave with Sonnet 3.5 and 3.6, and the same pattern is now playing out elsewhere in the economy.

    Recursive Self Improvement and Talent Density

    Over 90 percent of Anthropic’s code is now written by Claude Code, including most of Claude Code itself. Rao describes this as a structural reason to keep allocating internal compute to employees even when external demand is hungry. Recursive self improvement is not happening through models that need no humans. It is happening through researchers who set direction and use frontier models to compress months of work into days. Talent density beats talent mass. When Meta and other labs went after Anthropic researchers with very large packages, Anthropic lost two people while peer labs lost dozens.

    Procurement Strategy and the Layer Cake

    Compute lands as a layer cake. Last month Anthropic signed a 5 gigawatt TPU deal with Google and Broadcom starting in 2027, alongside an Amazon Trainium agreement for up to 5 gigawatts. The total is north of $100 billion in commitments. A new tie up with xAI’s Colossus facility in Memphis was announced just before the interview, intended for nearer term capacity to support consumer and prosumer growth. Anthropic evaluates near term and long term compute deals against the same set of variables: price, duration, location, chip type, and how efficiently the team can run it. The relationships are deeper than procurement. The hyperscalers are also distribution channels for the model.

    Platform First, Selective Vertical Bets

    Rao describes Anthropic as a platform first business, with most expected value accruing to customers building on the platform. The team will only go vertical when it can either demonstrate capabilities that are skating to where the puck is going, like Claude Code did before the models could fully support it, or when it wants to set a template for an industry vertical, as with Claude for Financial Services, Claude for Life Sciences, and Claude Security. He acknowledges that surprise capability jumps make customers anxious about the platform competing with them, and frames Anthropic’s mitigation as deeper partnerships, early access programs, and an emphasis on accelerating customer building rather than disintermediating it.

    Pricing, Jevons Paradox, and Return on Compute

    Pricing across Haiku, Sonnet, and Opus has been stable. The notable exception is Opus, which Anthropic deliberately repriced lower when launching Opus 4.5 because Opus class problems were being squeezed into Sonnet workloads. Efficiency gains made it possible to serve Opus profitably at the new level. The consumption response was a classic Jevons paradox, with usage rising far more than the price reduction would have predicted, and Opus 4.6 then slotted in at the same price with a capability bump. Margins are not framed as a per token markup. Compute is fungible across model development, internal acceleration, and customer serving, so Anthropic measures return on the entire compute envelope rather than software style variable cost per call.

    Fundraising, DeepSeek, and Capital Intensity

    Rao joined while Anthropic was closing its Series D, mid frontier model launch and during the FTX share liquidation. Investors initially questioned whether Anthropic needed a frontier model, whether AI safety and a real business could coexist, and why the sales team was so small. The Series E closed the same day the DeepSeek news broke, with markets violently re pricing AI in real time. Since Rao joined, Anthropic has raised over $75 billion, with another $50 billion tied to the Amazon and Google compute deals. The reason for the size of the raises is the cone of uncertainty, not current losses. Returns on compute today are described as robust.

    Mythos, Cyber Capability, and Phased Releases

    The Mythos release marks the first time Anthropic shipped a model under a deliberately phased rollout because of a specific capability spike. Cyber is the dimension that spiked. Where a prior model found 22 vulnerabilities in an open source codebase, Mythos found roughly 250. The defensive applications, automatically patching massive codebases, are genuinely valuable, but the offensive risk is real enough that Anthropic chose to release to a smaller group first and expand access over time. Rao positions this as a template for future capability spikes, not a permanent restriction. He also describes the relationship with the US administration as cooperative, including the Department of War interaction, with Anthropic supporting a regulatory framework that does not strangle innovation but takes responsibility seriously.

    Claude Inside Finance

    Anthropic’s finance team is one of the strongest internal case studies. Statutory financial statements for every legal entity are produced by Claude, with a human reviewer. A skill library of more than 70 finance specific skills underpins a Monthly Financial Review skill that drafts the monthly close at 90 to 95 percent ready, so leadership meetings shift from explaining the numbers to discussing what to do about them. An internal analytics platform called Anthrop Stats compresses weekly insight cycles from hours to 30 minutes. The biggest internal token user in finance is the head of tax, building policy engines, which Rao highlights as evidence that adoption is driven by the most senior people, not just younger engineers.

    Culture, Co Founders, and the Race to the Top

    Seven co founders should not, on paper, work as a leadership group. Rao argues it works because the culture was set early around collaboration, intellectual honesty, transparency, and humility. The culture interview is a real veto, not a checkbox. Dario Amodei runs an all hands every two weeks with a short written piece followed by unscripted questions, and decisions, once made, get clean alignment rather than residual politics. Anthropic frames its approach as a race to the top, where being a model for how to build the technology responsibly is itself a recruiting and retention advantage.

    The Virtual Collaborator and the Frontier Ahead

    The product vision Rao describes is the virtual collaborator. Not just a smarter chatbot, but an agent with organizational context, access to the company’s tools, memory, and the ability to work on ideas over long horizons. Coding was the first domain to feel this, but CoWork, Anthropic’s extension of the Claude Code pattern into general knowledge work, is being adopted faster than Claude Code was at the same age. Product development inside Anthropic already looks different. Teams ship daily, with fleets of agents working across the company, and individual humans increasingly act as managers of those fleets.

    Downside Risks and What Excites Him Most

    The three risks Rao names if asked to do a premortem on a softer year are slower customer diffusion of model capability into real workflows, scaling laws unexpectedly flattening, and Anthropic losing its frontier position to competitors. None of these are observed today, but he is unwilling to claim them with certainty. On the upside, he is most excited about biotech and healthcare. Lab throughput rising 10x or 100x, paired with AI assisted clinical workflows, could turn currently incurable diagnoses into treatable ones within a patient’s lifetime. That is the outcome he wants the technology to chase.

    Thoughts

    The most consequential structural point in this interview is the framing of compute as a single fungible resource pool measured by return on the entire envelope, not as a variable cost per inference call. That accounting shift, if you accept it, breaks most of the bear cases about AI lab unit economics. The bear argument almost always assumes that a token served to a customer is the only thing the chip did that day. Rao’s version is that the same fleet trains models in the morning, runs reinforcement learning at lunch, serves customers in the afternoon, and accelerates internal engineers in the evening. If even half of that is real, the right comparison is total compute spend versus total enterprise value created by the platform, and on that ratio Anthropic looks structurally strong rather than weak.

    The Jevons paradox on Opus pricing is the most actionable insight for anyone running an AI product. Most teams default to either chasing premium pricing on the newest model or undercutting to chase volume. Anthropic did something more disciplined: it left Sonnet and Haiku alone, dropped Opus when efficiency gains made it serveable, and watched aggregate usage rise faster than the price cut. The lesson is that frontier model pricing is not really a price problem. It is a capability access problem, and elasticity around the right tier is much higher than the standard SaaS playbook implies.

    The Mythos cyber jump deserves more attention than it has gotten. Going from 22 to 250 vulnerabilities found in the same codebase is the kind of capability discontinuity that genuinely changes the regulatory calculus. Anthropic is signaling that it can identify these discontinuities ahead of release and choose a deployment shape that respects them. Whether peer labs adopt similar discipline is the open question. Anthropic’s race to the top framing assumes they will be forced to. The competitive market may say otherwise.

    The hiring data point is the most underrated investor signal. Two departures while peer labs lost dozens, during the most aggressive talent war in tech history, is not a culture poster. It is a structural advantage that compounds every time another lab tries to buy its way to the frontier. Money can be matched. Conviction in the mission, transparent leadership, and a culture interview that can veto otherwise stellar candidates cannot. If you believe scaling laws hold, talent retention at this density is one of the few moats that actually scales with capital.

    Finally, the most interesting personal admission is that Krishna Rao, a finance leader trained at Blackstone and Cedar, is openly telling investors that linear thinking is the failure mode he had to break out of. The companies that pattern match this moment to prior technology waves are mispricing it, in both directions. The cone of uncertainty Anthropic uses internally is the right metaphor for everyone else too. If you are forecasting AI as if it is cloud in 2010, you are almost certainly wrong, and the magnitude of the error is much larger than it would be in any prior era.

    Watch the full conversation with Krishna Rao on Invest Like the Best here.