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Well it raises an interesting conundrum. Suppose there's a microcontroller that's $5.00 and another that's $0.50. The latter is a clone of the former. Are you better off worrying only about your short term needs, or should you take the long view and direct your business towards the former despite it being more expensive?




Suppose both microcontrollers will be out of date in a week and replaced by far more capable microcontrollers.

The long view is to see the microcontroller as a commodity piece of hardware that is rapidly changing. Now is not the time to go all in on betamax and take 10 years leases on physical blockbuster stores when streaming is 2 weeks away.

Ai is possibly the most open technological advance I have experienced - there is no excuse, this time, for skilled operators to be stuck for decades with AWS or some other propriety blend of vendor lock-in.


This isn't betamax vs VHS. It's VHS vs a clone of VHS. The long view necessarily has to account for R&D, long term business partners, and lots of other externalities. The fact that both manufacturers will have a new model of VCR out next month, and yet another the month after that, really has nothing to do with the conundrum I gave voice to.

I'll also note that there's zero vendor lock-in in either scenario. It's a simple question about the tradeoffs of indirect parasitism within the market. I'm not even taking a side on it. I don't even know for certain that any given open weights Chinese model was trained against US frontier models. Some people on HN have made accusations but I haven't seen anything particularly credible to back it up.


If the clone is 1/10th of the price, and of equivalent quality, why would I use the original ? I would be undercut by my concurrents if i did that, it would be a very bad business decision.

Well the company of the former microcontroller has gone out of their way to make getting and developing on actual hardware as difficult and expensive as possible as possible, and could reasonably accused of doing “suspect financial shenanigans”, and the other company will happily sell me the microcontroller for a reasonable price. And sure, thy started off cloning the former, but their own stuff is getting really quite good these days.

So really, the argument pretty well makes itself in favour of the $0.5 micro controller.


That's a very tenuous analogy. Microcontrollers are circuits that are designed. LLMs are circuits that learned using vast amounts of data scraped from the internet, and pirated e-books[1][2][3].

[1]: https://finance.yahoo.com/news/nvidia-accused-trying-cut-dea...

[2]: https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2025/12/openai-desperate...

[3]: https://www.businessinsider.com/anthropic-cut-pirated-millio...


> Microcontrollers are circuits that are designed. LLMs are circuits that learned using vast amounts of data

So I suppose the AI companies employ all those data scientists and low level performance engineers to what, manage their website perhaps?

It's poor form to go around inserting your pet issue where it isn't relevant.


You're asking whether businesses will choose to pay a 1000% markup on commodities?



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