Sunday, May 31, 2026

 The world’s most valuable companies have quietly abandoned the asset‑light (outsource factories) doctrine that defined the 2010s because the technological frontier has shifted so much that modular, outsourced components no longer keep up. What looked efficient a decade ago now looks like a liability, and the firms pulling ahead in 2026 are the ones rebuilding their stacks from the ground up—silicon, energy, manufacturing, payments, and even nuclear power.

The reversal begins with the simple observation that capital expenditures among the largest tech companies have surged to levels not seen since the early internet era. Markets are rewarding firms that pour money into physical infrastructure and punishing those that remain asset‑light. This is not a sector‑specific anomaly; the same pattern appears in Europe, where capital‑intensive companies have seen their valuations re-rate upward while capital‑light firms have fallen behind. The old gospel—outsource everything, own nothing—has stopped working.

The automotive industry is the clearest demonstration. Tesla’s early advantage came from integrating battery chemistry, software, and power electronics into a single architecture. BYD went even further, controlling every layer from cathode materials to silicon carbide chips to entire industrial parks. The result is that by 2025 BYD outsold Tesla by more than 600,000 all‑electric vehicles, and by 2026 the global leaderboard had shifted decisively toward Asian manufacturers who built the stack rather than rented it. The companies that relied on standard batteries, standard software, and outsourced manufacturing simply could not deliver the range, safety, or compute that modern EV buyers demanded. The modular pieces no longer fit the frontier.

Finance, which historically looked nothing like automotive, is undergoing the same structural break. Stablecoins reached $33 trillion in annual transaction volume, CIPS began rivaling SWIFT, and AI agents started making purchases, issuing credentials, and interacting with payment networks autonomously. The four‑party card model—long “good enough”—no longer meets the performance requirements of programmable, agentic commerce. Mastercard responded by acquiring a stablecoin infrastructure firm for up to $1.8 billion and launching agent‑based payment rails. DBS deployed more than 2,000 AI models in production and generated roughly S$1 billion in economic value. Both institutions realized that trust, identity, AI, and settlement must be integrated into a single architecture if they want to own the rails of the next economy rather than rent them.

This is exactly the pattern Clayton Christensen described: industries oscillate between integration and modularity depending on whether modular components can keep up with customer demand. When modular parts overshoot what customers need, industries fragment. But when the frontier shifts and modular parts fall behind, reintegration becomes the only path to performance. EVs and programmable finance hit that inflection point at the same time. The result is a synchronized global pivot back toward owning the stack.

The most dramatic shift, however, is happening in AI infrastructure. Intelligence has become modular—Apple can simply license a Gemini variant from Google and plug it into Siri—but power is not modular. Data centers are projected to consume up to 17 percent of U.S. electricity by 2030. When the wind dies and the sun sets, a gigawatt‑scale AI cluster still needs the power of a steel mill. That cannot be solved with clever abstractions. It requires physical integration: nuclear contracts, grid‑scale storage, cooling water, and long‑term energy control. That is why Microsoft signed a 20‑year agreement to restart Three Mile Island Unit 1, why Amazon contracted for more than 5 gigawatts of pebble‑bed reactors, why Google partnered with Kairos Power, and why Meta locked up as much as 6.6 gigawatts for its Prometheus campus.

Across all three sectors—autos, finance, and AI—the same logic holds. When the technological frontier moves faster than the modular ecosystem can adapt, companies that rely on vendors lose control of their destiny. The firms that win are the ones that reintegrate the layers that matter most: batteries, chips, settlement rails, power plants, and the physical infrastructure that underpins intelligence. The asset‑light model was optimized for a world where performance was stable and the frontier predictable. In 2026, the frontier is shifting too quickly, and the companies that continue to rent critical layers are discovering that they are renting their future.


Saturday, May 30, 2026

 Simulated annealing is a unifying design principle that cuts across modern AI, neurosymbolic systems, and core software engineering infrastructure. There is a well-known episode in which a decadesold algorithm outperformed a highly publicized reinforcementlearning system for chip floor planning. That comparison is used to illustrate a deeper truth: many of the hardest optimization problems in computing are defined by rugged, discontinuous landscapes where greedy improvement fails. In such environments, the ability to accept worse intermediate states is not a flaw but a requirement for finding globally strong solutions. Simulated annealing operationalizes this idea by proposing random perturbations, accepting improvements deterministically, and accepting degradations probabilistically according to a temperature schedule that cools over time. Early exploration and late commitment form the core of its power. 

This principle resurfaces inside modern neural network design and training. Neural architecture search, once dominated by reinforcement learning, has increasingly adopted annealingbased methods such as SANAS and FOXNAS, which perturb architectures directly and accept worse candidates early in the search. These approaches achieve competitive or superior results at a fraction of the computational cost. Even in largescale transformer training, cosine annealing learningrate schedules embody the same idea: begin with large exploratory steps and gradually reduce them to settle into a stable optimum. The principle extends into inference. Work such as “Let it Calm” demonstrates that annealing the sampling temperature within a single generated response—hot for early exploratory tokens, cold for later stabilizing tokens—improves reasoning quality across model sizes. Simulated annealing also appears in fairness research, where surrogatebased annealing searches identify which attention heads to prune to reduce social bias without degrading overall model performance. 

The same applies to neurosymbolic AI, where the search spaces are discrete, combinatorial, and full of local optima. Systems like LaSR combine large language models with symbolic regression engines built on annealingdriven search. The neural component proposes highlevel abstractions, while the annealing engine maintains diversity and prevents premature convergence. This hybrid approach has produced compact equations that outperform deep learning baselines and even discovered new scaling laws for language models. Similar patterns appear in knowledgegraph embedding systems such as PYKE and inductive logic programming, where annealingbased clause search consistently escapes shallow optima that trap greedy refinement. 

Even in software engineering, simulated annealing quietly powers many productioncritical tools. Compiler autotuners like CompTuner use annealing to navigate vast optimizationflag spaces, outperforming default highoptimization settings and rival systems across major compiler toolchains. In security, directed fuzzers such as AFLGo use exponential cooling schedules to focus mutation effort on code regions near suspected vulnerabilities. This approach rediscovered the Heartbleed vulnerability in minutes, while competing tools failed even with far more compute. Annealing also appears in cloud workload scheduling, chip layout, network routing, logistics, and timetabling—domains where the search spaces are too rugged for deterministic or purely greedy methods. 

This principle can be generalized. Many of the most successful algorithms in machine learning and optimization implicitly rely on controlled randomness that is gradually reduced. Stochastic gradient descent benefits from minibatch noise that helps escape sharp minima. Dropout injects randomness that improves generalization. Mixtureofexperts architectures route information probabilistically before settling into stable patterns. Diffusion models learn to reverse a noising process whose schedule mirrors annealing in reverse. Parallel tempering and replicaexchange methods run multiple systems at different temperatures and swap states to avoid stagnation. Across these techniques, the core insight is the same: exploration requires noise, and convergence requires reducing that noise according to a schedule. 

Finally, its quantum annealing—its most exotic descendant—follows the same conceptual pattern, though classical annealing remains competitive in most benchmarks. The enduring lesson is that many realworld optimization problems require a principled mechanism for escaping local optima. Simulated annealing’s willingness to accept worse moves early, and its disciplined reduction of randomness over time, remains one of the most effective ways to navigate complex search spaces. For practitioners building AI systems, compilers, security tools, or optimization pipelines, the key question is not which model or algorithm to use, but what the analog of temperature is in their system and how its schedule should decay. That schedule often determines whether a system settles into mediocrity or discovers genuinely superior solutions. 

# The following program lays out a graph with little or no crossing lines using annealing_optimize method. 

# This is adapted from a sample in "Programming Collective Intelligence" by OReilly Media 

 

from PIL import Image, ImageDraw 

import math 

import random 

 

vertex = ['A','B','C','D','E'] 

links=[('A', 'B'), 

('B', 'C'), 

('C', 'D'), 

('D', 'E'), 

('E', 'A'), 

('C', 'E'), 

('A', 'D'), 

('E', 'B')] 

domain=[(10,370)]*(len(vertex)*2) 

 

def random_optimize(domain,costf): 

    best=999999999 

    bestr=None 

    for i in range(1000): 

        # Create a random solution 

        r=[random.randint(domain[i][0],domain[i][1]) for i in range(len(domain))] 

        # Get the cost 

        cost=costf(r) 

        # Compare it to the best one so far 

        if cost<best: 

            best=cost 

            bestr=r 

    return r 

 

def annealing_optimize(domain,costf,T=10000.0,cool=0.95,step=1): 

    # Initialize the values randomly 

    vec=[float(random.randint(domain[i][0],domain[i][1])) 

         for i in range(len(domain))] 

 

    while T>0.1: 

        # Choose one of the indices 

        i=random.randint(0,len(domain)-1) 

        # Choose a direction to change it 

        dir=random.randint(-step,step) 

        # Create a new list with one of the values changed 

        vecb=vec[:] 

        vecb[i]+=dir 

        if vecb[i]<domain[i][0]: vecb[i]=domain[i][0] 

        elif vecb[i]>domain[i][1]: vecb[i]=domain[i][1] 

 

        # Calculate the current cost and the new cost 

        ea=costf(vec) 

        eb=costf(vecb) 

        p=pow(math.e,(-eb-ea)/T) 

        # Is it better, or does it make the probability 

        # cutoff? 

        if (eb<ea or random.random( )<p): 

            vec=vecb 

 

        # Decrease the temperature 

        T=T*cool 

    return vec