Why Silicon Valley is Moving to the Cloud (Literally)
The rise of decentralized compute clusters and the death of the traditional tech hub.
Physical geography doesn't matter for tech anymore - but compute geography does. In 2026, "Silicon Valley" is no longer a zip code; it's a global infrastructure network.
Deglobalization and Tech Sovereignty
Countries are now building "National Compute Clouds." France, China, and India have all launched sovereign LLM initiatives to ensure they aren't dependent on US-based providers. The map of the tech world is being redrawn, not by where the developers live, but where the GPU clusters are powered.
The Remote Work Equilibrium
After the volatility of the mid-2020s, a new baseline has emerged: teams are global by default. High-bandwidth satellite internet has made even the remotest islands viable for a senior engineer. The competitive advantage for companies is no longer their office in Palo Alto, but their ability to manage asynchronous, cross-cultural talent.
The Rise of "Local Hubs"
While the center has collapsed, thousand of smaller "hubs" have appeared. Cities like Austin, Lisbon, and Bangalore are no longer "secondary"; they are world-class nodes in a decentralized network of innovation.
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