2026.20: Shifting Alliances in a Changing World

(Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images)

Welcome back to This Week in Stratechery!

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On that note, here were a few of our favorites this week.

  1. A New Kind of Computing. AI compute has been divided into two categories: training, and inference. However, in The Inference Shift (and on this week’s Sharp Tech), I make the case that there are two kinds of inference: the one we know today is “answer inference”, where humans are in the loop, and speed matters; the inference that will matter most in the future, at least in terms of market size, will be “agentic inference”, where humans aren’t involved at all. That will lead to very different trade-offs in architectures, and is good news for both China and space (but maybe not Nvidia). Ben Thompson
  1. All About Elon. A week on from the news that Anthropic has secured compute from xAI, Tuesday’s Daily Update examined the deal from both sides. On one hand, Anthropic’s side of the deal is a reminder that markets actually work quite well, much to the relief of Claude users all over the world. On the other, the logic of the deal for xAI raises an interesting question about whether Musk will listen to what the market has told him, as well as the future of space data centers and who exactly SpaceX will be serving. Finally, if you can’t get enough Elon, on Sharp Text this week I wrote about his ongoing lawsuit with OpenAI, and why I find the case both boring and insulting, even as it’s clear that win or lose, Musk has already succeeded.  Andrew Sharp

  2. 360 Degrees of US-China Relations. With a U.S. President visiting Beijing for the first time in nine years, this week’s episode of Sharp China asked 10 Questions about the US-China summit and what might be achieved. Trump has already left Beijing as you read this, and as predicted on the podcast, the deliverables from his visit were underwhelming (at least so far). Nevertheless, Wednesday’s conversation doubles as a great window into the state of the relationship generally, including why “upper hand” analysis tends to be overblown, why both sides are incentivized to play for time and stability, and the ways in which China’s posture has changed since the 90s and 2000s. Also: Jensen Huang standing on a runway in Alaska, and fun memories of a US-China fistfight in the Great Hall, back in 2017.  AS

Stratechery Articles and Updates

Sharp Text by Andrew Sharp

Dithering with Ben Thompson and Daring Fireball’s John Gruber

Asianometry with Jon Yu

Sharp China with Andrew Sharp and Sinocism’s Bill Bishop

Greatest of All Talk with Andrew Sharp and Ben Golliver

Sharp Tech with Andrew Sharp and Ben Thompson

This week’s Stratechery video is on Amazon’s Durability.