The hardware manufacturing landscape is shifting. Competitors have already scaled their own chip production capabilities, establishing a solid foundation in semiconductor design. But there's a different path forward—maximizing efficiency through smarter engineering rather than pure capacity. The real advantage comes from unconventional solutions, radical design choices that prioritize performance-per-watt over conventional wisdom. It's about building systems that do more with less, leveraging unorthodox engineering principles that others hesitate to adopt. That's where breakthrough innovation happens—when you're willing to push boundaries that risk-averse engineers typically avoid.
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OnchainHolmes
· 17h ago
Performance-to-power ratio is the real key; who is still competing over capacity?
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ContractCollector
· 17h ago
Amazing, this is the right way to compete, much smarter than just piling up capacity.
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screenshot_gains
· 17h ago
The top players are all stacking capacity, but the ones who truly understand how to play are those daring engineers who are willing to gamble.
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UnluckyMiner
· 17h ago
Chip manufacturing is really not just about pure capacity. This guy is right; performance-to-power ratio is the key.
The hardware manufacturing landscape is shifting. Competitors have already scaled their own chip production capabilities, establishing a solid foundation in semiconductor design. But there's a different path forward—maximizing efficiency through smarter engineering rather than pure capacity. The real advantage comes from unconventional solutions, radical design choices that prioritize performance-per-watt over conventional wisdom. It's about building systems that do more with less, leveraging unorthodox engineering principles that others hesitate to adopt. That's where breakthrough innovation happens—when you're willing to push boundaries that risk-averse engineers typically avoid.