
The same is true, doubly so, with the recent “problems” at chip stocks like Nvidia, Micron and Qualcomm. Prices for commodity chips are falling. The “chip shortage” is easing. In the near term it means lower profits for big chip companies. Sell, sell, sell.
But it also means falling prices and more supply for companies that use chips. It means car prices could start declining. It means the Machine Internet can get a fresh start.

The Machine Internet lets SpaceX rockets land back on their pads. It’s why there aren’t more plane crashes. It’s how your Amazon package landed on your doorstep the same day you ordered it. It means we can reduce traffic jams by tying lights together. It means hospitals can operate as holistic systems instead of just a bunch of machines. There are literally millions of applications, from the lifesaving to the mundane, and we’ve just scratched the surface of them.

The Machine Internet can save energy, not just time. It can speed the time it takes new drugs to hit the market and improve their production. It doesn’t stifle creativity, it enables it, and makes it more valuable.
Sell the clouds and the chips and the software applications if you like. Some of those companies will fail. But those which succeed will do so beyond your wildest dreams. All thanks to today’s bad news.







