Part 3/14:
The phenomenon described as Javan's Paradox exemplifies two concurrent trends: the decreasing cost of AI and its increasing capabilities. As AI becomes cheaper and more powerful, we approach a "tipping point" where adoption accelerates rapidly, akin to the transition from dumb phones to smartphones around 2015, or the proliferation of cars after their affordability increased.
This dynamic creates a preference cascade — once AI becomes sufficiently accessible and utility rises concurrently, the uptake becomes unstoppable. The market signals that we are on the brink of a new AI revolution, one driven by open models that are more efficient and affordable.