Blog
Latest thoughts and updates on Jolting Technologies.
Jolting Technologies Hypothesis Confirmed in Real-Time
The Jolting Technologies Hypothesis confirmed in real-time. Published my paper on AI’s superexponential growth just a few days ago. Now METR reports AI task completion doubling time dropped from 7 months → 4 months. This is EXACTLY what “jolting” means.
Posted on July 15, 2025
The Jolting Mindset: Why Exponential Thinking No Longer Explains Our Reality
The Jolting Technologies Hypothesis is a complete framework for interpreting an increasingly complex and rapidly changing world.
Posted on July 14, 2025
Intel Is Jolting
At a recent conference on the future of electronics manufacturing, the Chief Architect of Intel, Raja Koduri, presented a compelling picture for delivering a 1000 times increase in the power of AI systems by 2025.
Posted on November 01, 2020
Elon Musk Is Jolting
What does it mean that Elon Musk is jolting?
Posted on November 01, 2020
NVIDIA Proves That AI Is Jolting
Jolting Technologies are those characterized by an increasing rate of acceleration.
Posted on October 01, 2020
Jolting Technologies
There is a paradigm shift moving from accelerating technological change to jolting technological change.
Posted on September 29, 2020
Jolting Adaptability
The lack of adequate response by so many governments to the pandemic, even when plenty of positive and negative examples were already available from other countries that have been impacted before them, is a sign that maybe the mental models that are applied to the decision making are inadequate.
Posted on April 01, 2020
Jolting AI
Between 2012 and 2018 the power of the infrastructure available for applications in artificial intelligence increased over three hundred thousand times. If it followed Moore’s law, it would have been much less, around 7 times or so.
Posted on February 01, 2020
Quantum Computing
Quantum computers have been under development for decades.
Posted on October 02, 2019
Technology Adoption
The rate of technology adoption changes based on individual preferences and social norms.
Posted on October 01, 2019