2026-03-10 23:50:29
In some languages, the '^' operator can be used for exponentiation, but in other popular development stacks, it operates as the exclusive OR (XOR) operator. Today, we'll discuss how this confusion can lead to errors, demonstrate their real-world examples in a popular library's queue implementation, and explain the consequences of these errors.
The ^ operator is responsible for bitwise exclusive OR (XOR) in many modern programming languages, including Go. However, in other languages, such as Lua, VB.NET, Julia, R, and others, it represents exponentiation. Plus, people often use ^ to define the power of a number in everyday life, and it makes sense because the symbol kind of shows where the exponent should be.
So, developers might use the exclusive OR ^ instead of the bitwise shift << to raise a number to the power of two. Although this error may seem far-fetched, we added a diagnostic rule to our Go analyzer inspired by a similar rule in CodeQL to detect instances of using the XOR instead of a bitwise shift.
For more on how to make your own analyzer for Go, check out our article "How to create your own Go static analyzer?"
We also came across a discussion on the official GCC website. It brings up the issue that this pattern is often erroneous, and that warnings should be issued where developers may accidentally use ^ instead of <<.
We test our PVS-Studio analyzer on both synthetic examples and real-world projects. For this purpose, we collect open-source projects with specific versions. However, this wasn't enough for this particular error, so we used our own utility, which downloads and analyzes over 1,000 Go projects from GitHub. However, we were surprised to encounter an error related to the use of ^ as an exponentiation operator in real large-scale projects.
Well, the fact that you're reading this article means we've got something to share with you.
As mentioned above, the error is that ^ is used instead of <<:
func main() {
fmt.Println(2 ^ 32)
}
It's easy to spot: there's 2 to the left of the exclusive OR operator because the developers wanted to get the power of two.
However, the correct way to calculate 2 to the power of 32 is as follows: 1 << 32.
Now, let's move on to discussing errors in real projects.
The Lancet project is a comprehensive and efficient Go language library with various auxiliary features and structures. However, we found it interesting because PVS-Studio analyzer detected the following error:
func (q *ArrayQueue[T]) Enqueue(item T) bool {
if q.tail < q.capacity {
q.data = append(q.data, item)
// q.tail++
q.data[q.tail] = item
} else {
//upgrade
if q.head > 0 {
....
} else {
if q.capacity < 65536 {
if q.capacity == 0 {
q.capacity = 1
}
q.capacity *= 2
} else {
q.capacity += 2 ^ 16 // <=
}
tmp := make([]T, q.capacity, q.capacity)
copy(tmp, q.data)
q.data = tmp
}
q.data[q.tail] = item
}
q.tail++
q.size++
return true
}
PVS-Studio warning: V8014 Suspicious use of the bitwise XOR operator '^'. The exponentiation operation may have been intended here.
The context clearly refers to the operation of adding an element to a queue. The idea is simple: if the queue capacity allows adding an element, we'll add it; if no, we either need to reorganize the space in the queue or increase the capacity.
We can see that if the capacity is less than 65536 (which is 2 to the power of 16), the queue capacity is doubled. And if the capacity is greater than 65536, it'll be increased by 2 to the power of 16. However, due to the use of XOR, 18 (2 ^ 16) will be added.
What's the outcome? This queue becomes inefficient. The capacity increases by only a small amount, leading to more frequent reallocations. So, the code will more often need to copy all elements from the old queue to the bigger new one.
Another clue that this is an error is the way 2 ^ 16 is written. It'd be much easier to just write 18 if that's what was intended.
Now, let's take a look at another example of this diagnostic rule in action. This time, we found an error in the Calico project.
func parsePorts(portsStr string) *bitset.BitSet {
setOfPorts := bitset.New(2 ^ 16 + 1) // <=
for _, p := range strings.Split(portsStr, ",") {
if strings.Contains(p, "-") {
// Range
parts := strings.Split(p, "-")
low, err := strconv.Atoi(parts[0])
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
high, err := strconv.Atoi(parts[1])
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
for port := low; port <= high; port++ {
setOfPorts.Set(uint(port))
}
} else {
// Single value
port, err := strconv.Atoi(p)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
setOfPorts.Set(uint(port))
}
}
return setOfPorts
}
PVS-Studio warning: V8014 Suspicious use of the bitwise XOR operator '^'. The exponentiation operation may have been intended here.
Here's the same issue—^ is used instead of <<. It's likely that developers meant to use 2 to the power of 16 instead of 18. So, what could this lead to? The BitSet length will be much smaller than expected due to initialization using bitset.New. The program will spend time extending the length and recopying in the Set method using extendSet:
func (b *BitSet) Set(i uint) *BitSet {
if i >= b.length { // if we need more bits, make 'em
b.extendSet(i)
}
b.set[i>>log2WordSize] |= 1 << wordsIndex(i)
return b
}
func (b *BitSet) extendSet(i uint) {
if i >= Cap() {
panic("You are exceeding the capacity")
}
nsize := wordsNeeded(i + 1)
if b.set == nil {
b.set = make([]uint64, nsize)
} else if cap(b.set) >= nsize {
b.set = b.set[:nsize] // fast resize
} else if len(b.set) < nsize {
newset := make([]uint64, nsize, 2*nsize) // increase capacity 2x
copy(newset, b.set)
b.set = newset
}
b.length = i + 1
}
This may seem insignificant, but the developers could've avoided all these operations if they had set the correct length for BitSet from the beginning.
Your project may also contain a similar error. Checking this is simple—just search for the ^ operator, especially since XOR isn't used very often.
If you'd like to detect and fix these issues right at the development stage, we suggest using static analysis tools.
For many years, the PVS-Studio team has been developing and supporting the analyzer for C, C++, C#, and Java. We're also releasing an early access version of the Go analyzer.
That's it. We discussed a flaw that may look like a simple typo but could also lead to serious consequences.
To maintain code security, we recommend regularly running static code analysis. It helps detect unsafe constructs, potentially dangerous logic blocks, and errors that could lead to application security issues.
Take care of yourself and your code!
\
2026-03-10 23:30:29
What does privacy look like? Not the word, not the policy, not the terms and conditions you scroll past. What does it actually look like when data stays hidden on a blockchain, and what does it look like when it does not?
\ That question has no good answer yet, because privacy by design is invisible. That is precisely the problem Midnight set out to solve on February 26, 2026, when it opened Midnight City Simulation to the public: a running, AI-populated virtual city where every transaction happening across five districts is processed on a live privacy-preserving blockchain. Not a demo. Not a whitepaper illustration. A stress test that runs continuously, around the clock, with no fixed endpoint.
https://x.com/MidnightNtwrk/status/2027036170790576542?s=20&embedable=true
\
Before the city, there is the chain. Midnight is a new, fourth generation blockchain founded by Charles Hoskinson, founder and CEO of Input Output, the engineering company behind Cardano. Midnight’s privacy-enhancing infrastructure is designed to give developers complete control over how data is shared on a public network. Developed by Shielded Technologies, an engineering spinout from Input Output, and advanced by the Midnight Foundation, Midnight is launching as an independent L1, and has ambitious plans to become the privacy engine for other networks, starting with Cardano.
\ Its technical architecture centers on zero-knowledge proofs, which are a way of verifying that something is true without revealing the underlying information.
\

\ A simple analogy: imagine proving to a bouncer that you are over 21 without handing over your ID, your name, your address, or anything else on the card. You simply prove the one fact that matters. Zero-knowledge proofs do the same thing on a blockchain, allowing a transaction to be verified as valid without broadcasting its contents to every node on the network.
\ The concept Midnight calls "rational privacy" builds on this. Transaction data is private by default. Specific information can be selectively disclosed to parties who have authorised access, whether that is a regulator, an auditor, or a counterpart in a contract. The network provides transaction privacy by default, but allows specific data to be shared with authorized parties when needed, positioning itself as infrastructure for decentralized applications that combine privacy with regulatory compliance.
\

Privacy-preserving infrastructure is notoriously hard to demonstrate. You cannot show someone the absence of data. You cannot point at a proof that stayed hidden. By design, the selective disclosure and programmable privacy features of Midnight are invisible, which is exactly why the simulation was built: to provide a window into how the protocol handles data when many actors use the network simultaneously.
https://x.com/MidnightNtwrk/status/2021775937055134055?s=20&embedable=true
\ This is a real marketing and trust problem for any privacy-first project. Regulated institutions considering Midnight for financial settlements or healthcare data need to see the system under load, not read assertions about it. Developers building on top of it need confidence that proof generation does not collapse when transaction volume spikes. Midnight City is an interactive stress test where AI-driven agents generate unpredictable, realistic transaction flows, empirically testing the network's ability to generate, process, and verify cryptographic proofs at scale under complex, production-like conditions.
\ The distinction from controlled benchmarks matters. Controlled benchmarks are optimised. Real networks are not.
\
Midnight City is a persistent, self-running virtual economy divided into five districts: Kalendo, Nexus, Prooflux, Prisultimate, and Bison Flats. Each district has its own lore, inhabitants, and economic activity. Every agent populating it has a distinct personality built on Jungian archetypes, a long-term memory, and autonomous decision-making powered by Google Gemini via the Gobi API.

The agents are not following scripts. They register jobs, create businesses, make purchases, hold conversations, and form relationships in ways that are unpredictable by design. That unpredictability is the point. Real-world transaction volumes are not linear or predictable either, and a network that only performs under ideal conditions is not ready for the real world.
\ Each shielded transaction generated inside the simulation is proven individually using a zero-knowledge proof directly on the L2, ensuring data integrity without exposing private details. Batches of those L2 blocks are then processed through Trusted Execution Environments (TEEs), secure enclaves inside chips that even the machine's own operator cannot tamper with.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AY1uWUNKbc4&embedable=true
\ The TEE re-executes the blocks, produces a cryptographic attestation, and passes it to a specialized oracle that updates the Midnight L1.The simulation exposes this through three viewing modes. Public mode shows what any external observer can see: transaction data that is committed on-chain without private details. Auditor mode reveals additional information to authorised parties, the same transaction viewed through a different permission level. God mode, unique to the simulation and not representative of any real-world network capability, shows full agent personality, motivations, and data. The same underlying transaction, three different perspectives based on access. That is selective disclosure made tangible.
\
Midnight City did not launch in isolation. IOG and Cardano founder Charles Hoskinson announced at Consensus Hong Kong that Midnight mainnet will launch in the final week of March 2026, following the simulation's public opening in late February. The simulation functions both as a live demonstration and as a final proof-of-capacity exercise before real-world deployment.
\ At Consensus Hong Kong, Hoskinson also highlighted critical infrastructure partnerships for Midnight’s upcoming mainnet launch, with Google and Telegram announced as founding federated node operators,
\
We have some great collaborations to help us run Midnight. Google is one of them. Telegram is another. We're really excited, there's more that will come.
\ Since Consensus Hong Kong, Midnight has expanded its federated node operator set, adding Blockdaemon, Shielded Technologies, MoneyGram, Pairpoint (by Vodafone), and eToro, with more names expected to be announced in the coming weeks. These operators will work together to secure the network before Midnight transitions to community-led block production later in 2026.
\ Midnight’s roadmap to decentralisation is broken into four stages. Hilo, completed, focused on the NIGHT token launch and liquidity. Kūkolu, the current phase, brings the federated mainnet in Q1 2026. Mōhalu, planned for mid-2026, expands validator participation and moves toward decentralisation. Hua, the final stage, targets full decentralisation and cross-chain interoperability. Whether this approach successfully enables blockchain adoption in privacy-sensitive contexts will depend on developer adoption, application development, and the network's ability to deliver on its technical and interoperability promises.
\
The use case Midnight is targeting is not niche. Regulated financial services, healthcare data, identity systems, and enterprise contracts all require some version of selective disclosure every day. The question is whether a decentralised system can deliver it in a way that is auditable, compliant, and scalable, all at the same time.
\ Most existing privacy tools on blockchains were built for a different purpose. Monero and Zcash were designed to protect individual financial privacy from surveillance, which is a legitimate goal, but they offer little in the way of selective disclosure. If everything is hidden, regulators and auditors have nothing to work with, and institutional adoption stalls. Unlike Monero's full anonymity or Tornado Cash's indiscriminate mixing, Midnight uses zero-knowledge proofs with selective disclosure, targeting institutional users and enterprises requiring both confidentiality and regulatory audit capability.
\ Midnight City is an attempt to make that case visually and technically, at the same time, to the same audience. The simulation's block explorer lets anyone track L2 transactions and TEE attestations in real time. That level of verifiable transparency about a privacy system is an unusual proposition, and it is worth examining carefully as mainnet approaches.
\
What Midnight is doing with the City Simulation is not just a marketing exercise, though it serves that purpose too. It is a live technical argument that privacy-preserving blockchains can operate at scale, under unpredictable load, while remaining transparent enough for the institutions that need to trust them. That argument will be tested again, under real conditions, when mainnet opens in late March.
\ The design of the simulation, with its AI agents, Jungian archetypes, and district lore, is also a signal about how the project intends to communicate its technology going forward. Making invisible infrastructure visible, in a way that non-technical audiences can engage with, is genuinely difficult. Midnight City is an early attempt at solving that problem, and it is worth watching whether that approach carries through to the network's broader adoption story.
\ Don’t forget to like and share the story!
\
2026-03-10 23:23:35
\ Last quarter, a cloud bill jumped. It took three days to explain why.
Not because anyone was slow or careless. The data existed. Engineering had the infrastructure logs. Finance had the billing export. Product had the usage analytics. The problem was that none of these systems talked to each other. Reconstructing a coherent explanation meant pulling from four different tools, aligning mismatched timestamps, and assembling context that should have already existed in one place. The root cause turned out to be a single customer segment running inference queries at ten times their normal rate. A straightforward answer, buried under three days of cross-functional archaeology.
That gap between a cost event occurring and a team acting on it is what I call decision latency. It is not a people problem. It is a structural one, built into how cost data, usage signals, and product behavior sit in separate systems with separate owners and separate interpretations. In an environment where cloud spend is tied to AI workloads, dynamic pricing, and event-driven consumption patterns, that structural gap has a direct dollar cost.
This is the problem I set out to address by building an agentic cloud spend intelligence system. Not a dashboard. Not another reporting layer. A reasoning system that unifies usage, cost, and product signals into a single workflow, interprets what is driving spend, and tells you what to do about it before the cost compounds.
Cloud spend has become one of the most financially material line items for AI-enabled organizations. According to Gartner, global public cloud end-user spending is expected to reach $723 billion in 2025. Yet Flexera's 2025 State of the Cloud Report found that organizations exceeded cloud budgets by 17% on average and estimated 27% of that spend as wasted.
The waste is not from ignorance. Most companies have dashboards. Most companies have tagging policies. Most companies run monthly FinOps reviews. The problem is architectural. Cost data lives in billing exports. Usage data lives in engineering telemetry. Product behavior data lives in analytics tools. Each dataset follows a different refresh cadence, gets interpreted differently by each team, and answers a different question.
Finance asks: is this within budget? Engineering asks: which service is responsible? Product asks: what feature triggered this? The answer to all three requires combining all three datasets. And when nobody has built that combined view, someone spends three days doing it manually every time something moves.
Traditional forecasting compounds this. Most cloud cost tools rely on time-series extrapolation, projecting future spend based on historical spend patterns. That works until behavior changes. A product launch. A shift in customer mix. A new inference-heavy feature rolling out to a broader audience. In those moments, a model trained on the past has nothing useful to say about the future. You need causal signals, not just historical ones.

The word agentic gets overloaded fast. Let me be specific about what I mean here.
A traditional analytics system describes what happened. It shows you a spike in compute costs on Tuesday. You then have to figure out why, decide what to do, and route that decision to the right person. The system hands off to you at the exact moment you need help most.
An agentic system takes that next step. It interprets the spike in context of what else was happening, identifies the contributing factors across usage, product, and cost data, generates an explanation in plain language, and produces a structured recommendation. It does not just surface information. It reasons over it.
The system I built does this by connecting three datasets into a unified view: product usage metrics capturing request volumes and agent interactions, cloud cost data broken down by service and region, and product interaction signals showing which features drove which behaviors. Once unified, a forecasting layer generates short-horizon projections using usage as a driver rather than cost history alone. The agentic reasoning layer then interprets those outputs and translates them into narrative explanations and structured action objects.
The structured output is worth dwelling on. Rather than producing a paragraph that ends up in a Slack message, the system generates a machine-readable JSON object. It contains the detected anomaly, contributing factors, relevant cloud provider and region, a recommended next step, and a confidence score. That object can be reviewed by a human, routed into a ticketing system, passed to a monitoring platform, or connected to a governance workflow. It is designed to plug in, not to be the final word.
Autonomous execution is not the goal here. The goal is to compress the time between a cost event and an informed human decision. The human stays in the loop. The system removes the reconstruction work that was eating three days.
Here is how it actually works in practice.
A user asks: "Why did cloud spend increase last week for Product Alpha?"
The system isolates the relevant time window and flags a deviation from that product's baseline spend. It then correlates usage signals for the same period, checking request volumes, API call patterns, and customer segment activity. In this case, API calls for one customer segment were running at roughly ten times their typical rate.
The reasoning layer links that behavioral signal to the observed cost change. It identifies which cloud provider and cost category, compute, storage, or network, contributed most. It generates a plain-language explanation connecting the business event to the financial outcome. Alongside that narrative, it produces the JSON action object.
The output includes something like: anomaly type detected, contributing factor is elevated API volume from Segment B, recommended action is to validate capacity configuration and review per-unit economics for that segment, confidence score 0.81.
That is not a magic trick. It is a structural improvement. Instead of reconstructing causality across four systems, one interface does it. Finance gets an explanation grounded in usage data, not just a billing anomaly, which means earlier escalation, faster budget decisions, and a cleaner path to avoiding spend overruns before they close into the quarter. Engineering gets a signal that connects infrastructure behavior to a specific business event rather than a generic cost spike. Product gets visibility into how feature adoption translates to cost-to-serve, which feeds back into roadmap and pricing decisions. Everyone starts from the same explanation. Nobody spends three days.
\

\
Standard cloud cost forecasting treats spend as the primary variable. More spend this month predicts more spend next month, adjusted for growth. That logic holds in stable environments. In AI-native products where inference volumes, user adoption curves, and feature rollouts shape the cost curve, it regularly fails.
The system I built uses usage as the primary driver. Product request volumes, user counts, API call frequencies, and interaction intensities feed the forecasting layer alongside historical cost data. When usage behavior shifts, the forecast reflects it, rather than waiting until the cost impact shows up in the billing export.
The practical difference: finance teams can run scenario planning that connects business decisions to cost projections. What happens to cloud spend if a new feature drives a 30% increase in inference requests? What is the cost implication of onboarding a high-volume enterprise customer? These are questions that time-series models cannot answer. Driver-based forecasting can.
The current prototype uses a simplified pipeline combining time-series methods with usage drivers. It does not attempt statistical perfection. It attempts operational relevance, projections that teams can reason about, explain to stakeholders, and actually use in planning cycles.

The current prototype operates on structured tables. The longer-term architecture I am working toward uses a graph model to represent the relationships between usage events, product interactions, and cloud cost behavior.
The intuition is straightforward. A customer interacts with a product feature. That interaction generates an API call. The API call triggers compute consumption. The compute consumption appears in cloud billing. Each of these is a directional relationship, not just a row in a table. Graph models encode that directionality natively, which makes causal queries like "which customer segment is driving disproportionate spend for this provider" answerable without hand-coded joins.
The next meaningful step is graph-based retrieval. When a cost spike occurs, the question is rarely just what changed but how far back the causal chain runs: which workload, which feature, which customer segment, across which provider. Multi-hop reasoning over a graph model makes that traversal native rather than reconstructed, turning a three-day investigation into a single query.
Early experiments with a provider-centric graph view, where a cloud provider sits as a hub node connected to spend records, customer nodes, and product usage, show how quickly concentration patterns become visible. Combined with retrieval-augmented generation, this structure gives the reasoning layer relationship-aware context rather than flat tabular summaries. Explanations become richer. Recommendations become more specific.

The architectural vision is not full automation. It is intelligent augmentation with transparent checkpoints. Low-risk actions, tag corrections, capacity cleanup flags, routine anomaly investigations, may eventually route through semi-automated workflows. Higher-stakes decisions remain with human reviewers. The governance structure should adapt to the risk profile of the action, not apply a blanket policy.
A few things surprised me.
Unifying the datasets mattered more than improving any individual model. The friction created by inconsistent keys, mismatched time intervals, and ambiguous product mappings across three data sources created more forecasting error than any model limitation. Fixing the data layer produced more signal than any parameter tuning.
LLM-driven reasoning performs better with constrained, structured inputs. Passing summarized signals with specific questions produced far more consistent outputs than passing raw tables and asking open-ended questions. The framing of the prompt matters as much as the quality of the underlying data.
Machine-readable outputs are not optional if you want this to scale. Human-only insights require human-only routing. The JSON action object structure means the system's recommendations can flow into existing tooling without modification. That portability is what makes the difference between a prototype and something that actually changes how a team operates.
Most FinOps teams already have access to their cloud billing data. Most finance teams already have dashboards. The bottleneck is interpretation speed and the cross-functional translation work that happens between a cost event and a decision.
Agentic AI does not solve cloud cost management. But it meaningfully compresses the cycle between detection, understanding, and action. It removes the reconstruction work that accumulates into days of lost time per incident. It gives finance, engineering, and product a shared starting point rather than three separate versions of the same event.
That compression is where the financial value lives. Not in a better algorithm. In a shorter gap between knowing something happened and knowing what to do about it.
If you are working through similar problems in cloud governance, FinOps, or AI cost management, I would like to hear what you are seeing in the field. The systems are early. The problems are real. The conversation is worth having.
1. Gartner, Worldwide Public Cloud End-User Spending Forecast, 2025: gartner.com
2. Flexera 2025 State of the Cloud Report: flexera.com
3. Harness FinOps in Focus Report, 2025: harness.io
4. FinOps Foundation, State of FinOps 2025: finops.org
5. BCG, Cloud Cover: Price, Sovereignty, and Waste, 2025: bcg.com
\
2026-03-10 23:12:28
It has been observed that at the level of industrial production, having money and liquidity is indeed often life-saving, but not always the decisive variable. “It’s the only thing you can’t buy. I mean, I can buy anything I want, basically, but I can’t buy time.” Warren Buffett told Forbes, and he was so right. Because the delivery of the final product can be affected by other, perhaps boring and predictable, parameters that prevent a product from being delivered. A good example is Cisco’s story in the not-so-distant 2022. What they were missing was not some “rare” high-end subsystem that couldn’t be substituted. There were ready boards, there were orders, and there was demand that had already been locked in. What wasn’t there, at the right moment, were the simple parts that close the unit, like power supplies, small components, elements that under normal conditions you don’t even treat as “strategic.” And suddenly those ‘non-strategic’ parts produced a backlog “well over $15 billion” and the difference between “we have a product” and “we can deliver it.” (investor.cisco.com)
The lucky ones who read my previous article (and didn’t leave it to “mature” in some tab) remember that I mapped the geopolitics of AI across three levels. The upstream concerns the material inputs that support the hardware chain. The industrial level concerns converting that capability into real units that are produced, tested, and shipped. The downstream concerns whether those units can become operational power at scale, with electricity, installation, operation, and compliance. Here we will try to describe on the second level, because that is where “capacity” becomes a conversion chain, queues, and access rules. To research that we should take a good look at what Capacity means, what the bottlenecks are, how the power of concentration and how export controls operate actually.
This framing is not an “academic luxury” of a theorist, I believe it is becoming increasingly clear that Layer II is rising to the top of the international agenda, not only in G7 rooms but also in spaces where Global South states are trying to negotiate position within the new technological division of labor. At the AI Impact Summit 2026 in New Delhi, the summit closed with the adoption of the New Delhi Declaration on AI Impact and with an explicit tone of “AI as economic and strategic power,” not only safety. (mea.gov.in) At the same time, the political signal was accompanied by industrial language: major commitments for AI infrastructure and data centers as a framework for alliances and acceleration. (reuters.com)
\
The word “capacity” here is, on the one hand, clear as a concept, but on the other it can become slippery if it is used as if it were a single number or a single scalar—X units per month, Y wafers per quarter, Z accelerators shipped. In Layer II it doesn’t behave like a number; it behaves like a pipeline with multiple clocks, not swiss made actually and rarely in sync. Allocation, wafer starts, packaging slots, HBM pairing, test time, burn-in, qualification, logistics, support, to name some of the clocks, each stage has its own cadence, its own constraints, its own failure modes, and those cadences rarely compress (or expand) together just because the market wants them to.
That’s why it’s so easy to misread what’s happening. A line can be “at capacity” and deliveries still don’t show up, because qualification slips, test racks become the bottleneck, or integration hits a calendar lock you can’t brute-force your way through. Strategically, the only capacity that matters is the one that survives end-to-end: units that pass, ship, and can be sustained—repeatably, as a system, not as a one-off surge.
That is exactly where the conversion chain comes in, starting from fabrication, continuing to advanced packaging that turns the wafer into a real accelerator, through the integration and qualification of memory (HBM), through test and burn-in that separates “paper output” from real output, and ending in delivery and support. Each stage functions like a gate. If one gate tightens and flow shrinks, the rest of the chain will not save you. Whatever procurement says, what counts at the end is “how many units passed, came out, and were delivered.” That is also why Layer II is geopolitical in the most mundane way as bottlenecks are not stable, they move. Today it might be packaging, tomorrow HBM, the day after test. And at the same time, access rules can make an otherwise realistic delivery “conditional.” To understand where power sits, you have to see where the queue sits.
At the industrial level it is natural to look for “the” bottleneck, the one lever that will decide everything. Historically, that is not irrational. In 1944, for example, the fuel constraint functioned as a single-piece bottleneck for the German war machine, when attacks on oil infrastructure led to a collapse in POL production and immediate operational consequences. (maxwell.af.mil)
In AI industrial layer, however, the pattern we capture is not a bottleneck that “sits” permanently somewhere and is more or less well defined. It is a bottleneck that moves. And if that sounds like an abstract schema, in practice it is the way the players themselves talk when they describe capacity planning, constraints, and pace: on one side, foundries talk about pressure from AI demand; on the other, vendors and their customers talk about queues and constraints in packaging and the back-end. (investor.tsmc.com)
So far, three constraints appear periodically.
Time-to-yield: the maturation time that even Mr. Warren Buffet cannot buy, because increasing production and yield has its own rhythm and follows cycles of weeks-to-quarters, as the industry itself describes it. (semiconductors.org) And when AI demand presses leading-edge processes, utilization rises and the margin for error shrinks. (investor.tsmc.com)
Packaging + HBM: where “more wafers” does not automatically mean “more compute,” because conversion into a final product gets stuck on conversion throughput and queues. One way to put it more bluntly is what Jensen Huang said: “packaging has remained a bottleneck due to capacity constraints.” (reuters.com) And next to packaging sits HBM, which often “locks” by calendar year: sold-out/near sold-out signals from memory suppliers show exactly that gate. (reuters.com)
Test & burn-in: the silent governor, because a unit is not real supply until it passes validation without creating a new queue. Test vendors themselves describe this as “test time” and “thermal control” in HPC/AI. (advantest.com) And when a company like Nvidia openly invests in cutting testing time dramatically, it is hard to read it as anything other than bottleneck behavior. (reuters.com).
\
Layer II is not a description of a production line in a mature market, but production inside a landscape of concentration, where a few nodes carry disproportionate weight and substitutions are slow. Consider that three companies hold the lion’s share of global design software; we are not really talking about a “free market with choices.” Here we are talking about EDA (Electronic Design Automation), meaning the software through which chips are designed, verified, and “locked” (sign-off) before tape-out and fabrication. And when workflows, licenses, and support are concentrated, you do not change ecosystems “because you found a better offer.” According to TrendForce, in 2024 the shares for Synopsys, Cadence, and Siemens EDA are roughly 31%, 30%, and 13% respectively. (trendforce.com)
The same logic applies to the critical steps of the conversion chain we described. As technology becomes more complex, the cost of switching suppliers rises and qualification time grows. This is geopolitical not because someone “flips a switch,” but because concentration makes every bottleneck stickier and translates into a very practical conclusion: when a node tightens, you don’t just “switch.” You wait, you adapt design, you join the queue, because you simply don’t have clean alternatives. Unless you are Tesla and, during the semiconductor crisis, you manage to do tweaks and substitutions and move faster than everyone else. (reuters.com) But how many have that scale and boldness?
When this concentration becomes an interstate issue, the response does not come only from the market but also from alliance structures. Pax Silica is presented by the U.S. State Department as a “flagship effort on AI and supply chain security,” meaning an attempt to turn dependencies into institutionally organized resilience. (state.gov) In geopolitical terms, we are witnessing an analogy of Halford Mackinder’s 'Heartland Theory.' It is not a 1:1 analogy but i believe it illustrates that just as the 'World-Island' was once the pivot of history, the 'Industrial Heartland' of EDA software and foundries has become the new pivot, who rules this industrial core doesn't just manage a market they are in command of the global compute-stack.
\
In Layer II, export controls rarely resemble the cinematic “switch” that cuts the power or taps the natural gas pipeline. More often they resemble friction in the calendar, precisely where productive capability must become deliverable product. I am not saying this as a supply-chain specialist. I am saying it as an IR scholar reading public decisions, corporate statements, and the way these translate into pace and predictability.

\ \ BIS’s move on January 13, 2026 is indicative precisely because it is “mundane”: a change in licensing posture for exports of certain advanced chips to China, with a case-by-case review framework under conditions. (bis.gov) A few days later, the same change appears as a regulatory fact in the Federal Register: Revision to License Review Policy for Advanced Computing Commodities (January 15, 2026), FR Doc. 2026-00789, Docket No. 260112-0028, 91 FR 1684, RIN 0694-AK43. (federalregister.gov)
Two mechanisms produce leverage without requiring an outright ban. Noone is suprised to see firms planning defensively when licensing becomes less predictable. And as any procurement manager knows, acquisition is not a one-off purchase. It includes sustainment—whether the system can be supported, repaired, and upgraded. Once spares and support move into a cautious, case-by-case posture, refresh cycles slow. In Layer II, that loss of tempo is often enough.
But what if export controls ultimately function like a “gym”? Instead of cutting capability, do they push the restricted actor to become more efficient and accelerate domestic alternatives? The China case makes it hard to ignore, it is just 10 months now since Jensen Huang called the U.S. restrictions a “failure,” at Reuters saying they lit a fire under China to intensify its push toward a more autonomous ecosystem. The risk is real over a long horizon, but it does not cancel the Layer II leverage. Adaptation does not eliminate the bottleneck; it changes how you live inside it. And for much of the game, power is decided by the pace and predictability of the pipeline, where queues and qualification gates operate in quarters. In the language of strategist John Boyd, Layer II is about tempo. By controlling the friction of the next move, you force the adversary to operate on an obsolete map of the battlefield, effectively winning by ensuring they can never quite catch up to the current loop of innovation. I know someone might say that quoting a general and using a word like adversary is maybe too much, but are we really operating not in an adversarial framework?
The same pattern is visible in equipment. ASML, on the updated U.S. restrictions of December 2024, speaks in a language that is not “commentary on geopolitics,” but effective dates and compliance deadlines. (asml.com) That is how rules become part of the industrial calendar, not merely a framework around it. Historically, this way of exercising power is not new. COCOM in the Cold War and the subsequent Wassenaar logic show how controls on technology diffusion work through lists, technical categories, and national bureaucracies, meaning through processes that produce time and uncertainty as political outcomes. (everycrsreport.com)
Alongside export controls, a quieter layer of rules is also being built through reporting and comparability. In February 2025, the OECD launched the Hiroshima AI Process (HAIP) Reporting Framework as a monitoring/reporting mechanism linked to the Hiroshima AI Code of Conduct. (oecd.org) This does not replace the hard leverage of licensing. It does, however, add visibility and institutional normality.
And here an open question remains, without opening a separate European section: can the Brussels Effect acquire geopolitical value in Layer II, not because it increases throughput, but because it makes rules become de facto global defaults? (academic.oup.com) If this translates into certification, insurability/financing, and contractual support terms around advanced compute, then “power” would also be rule-setter advantage. It will only be visible, however, if market access is central enough to impose harmonization, not merely cost.
Author’s commentary:
I didn’t explicitly say this in the article, but the heart of the series is about mapping AI as a national capability. I’m trying to map the layers in order to examine how government capacity, corporate execution, and human talent combine through a grand-strategy lens. To me, a single breakthrough or a “heroic” training run matters less than whether a country can keep upgrading its stack when the pipeline tightens. In practice that cashes out in allocations, licensing posture, service access, and refresh cycles. I’m trying to pin down those mechanisms so we don’t get pulled around by headlines and can see where the next bottleneck is likely to land.
Important notice: This piece is part of a broader effort to map the infrastructural and governance layers of AI geopolitics. A separate academic article with a narrower research question and formal conceptual framework is under development. Any comment is welcome on the layers foundation presented here. LLM assistance was limited to light copyediting (clarity/grammar) and image iteration. Research, argument structure, and source verification were done by the author.
\ References:
Cisco Systems, Inc. (2022, May 18). Cisco reports third quarter earnings (reference to product backlog “well over $15 billion”). (investor.cisco.com)
Ministry of External Affairs, Government of India. (2026, February 21). AI Impact Summit 2026 concludes with adoption of New Delhi Declaration on AI Impact. (mea.gov.in)
Ministry of External Affairs, Government of India. (2026, February 21). AI Impact Summit Declaration, New Delhi (February 18–19, 2026). (mea.gov.in)
Reuters. (2026, February 19). Tech majors commit billions of dollars to India at AI summit. (reuters.com)
Air University / Maxwell AFB. (2019, June 26). WWII Allied “Oil Plan” devastates German POL production. (maxwell.af.mil)
TSMC. (2024, Q2). 2Q24 Earnings Conference Transcript (PDF). (investor.tsmc.com)
Semiconductor Industry Association. (2021, February 26). Chipmakers are ramping up production… Here’s why that takes time. (semiconductors.org)
TSMC. (2024, Q3). 3Q24 Earnings Conference Transcript (PDF). (investor.tsmc.com)
Reuters. (2025, January 16). Nvidia CEO says its advanced packaging technology needs are changing. (reuters.com)
Reuters. (2024, May 2). Nvidia supplier SK Hynix says HBM chips almost sold out for 2025. (reuters.com)
Reuters. (2026, February 12). Samsung says it has shipped HBM4 chips to customers. (reuters.com)
Advantest. (2024, November 28). Characteristics and Needs of HPC/AI Device Test (IR Technical Briefing). (advantest.com)
SEMI. (2025, December 15). Global semiconductor equipment sales projected… (reference to test equipment +48.1% for 2025). (semi.org)
Reuters. (2025, November 19). Nvidia, Menlo Micro collaboration speeds up AI chip testing. (reuters.com)
TrendForce. (2025, June 2). China revenue at risk as U.S. curbs slam EDA giants… (EDA shares 2024: 31/30/13). (trendforce.com)
Reuters. (2022, January 4). Explainer: How Tesla weathered global supply chain issues that knocked rivals. (reuters.com)
U.S. Department of State. (n.d.). Pax Silica. (state.gov)
Mackinder, H. J. (1919). Democratic Ideals and Reality: A Study in the Politics of Reconstruction. Henry Holt and Company.
Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS). (2026, January 13). Department of Commerce revises license review policy for semiconductors exported to China. (bis.gov)
Federal Register. (2026, January 15). Revision to License Review Policy for Advanced Computing Commodities (FR Doc. 2026-00789; Docket No. 260112-0028; 91 FR 1684; RIN 0694-AK43). (federalregister.gov)
Boyd, J. R. (1995). The Essence of Winning and Losing. Patterns of Conflict (manuscripts).
ASML. (2024, December 2). ASML statement on updated US export restrictions. (asml.com)
Congressional Research Service. (2006, September 29). Military Technology and Conventional Weapons Export Controls: The Wassenaar Arrangement (RS20517). (everycrsreport.com)
Wassenaar Arrangement. (n.d.). Genesis of the Wassenaar Arrangement. (wassenaar.org)
OECD. (2025, February 7). Launch of the Hiroshima AI Process (HAIP) Reporting Framework. (oecd.org)
Bradford, A. (2019). The Brussels Effect: How the European Union Rules the World. Oxford University Press. (academic.oup.com)
Yole Group. (2025, July 29). Wafer Fab Equipment (WFE) market to hit $184 billion by 2030… (Press release). https://www.yolegroup.com/press-release/wafer-fab-equipment-wfe-market-to-hit-184-billion-by-2030-for-equipment-and-services-driven-by-specialized-segment-growth-and-global-manufacturing-shifts/
2026-03-10 22:27:58
As a cybersecurity student, I use multiple digital platforms, and each one needs careful attention to keep it secure.
My workflow often dances around three distinct silos: my code repositories, on Gitlab and often Gitea, my personal notes in Obsidian and Notion, and my task lists.
When I was working on a complex project, I kept switching between a terminal to check a Git issue, a markdown file to read the spec, and a kanban board to move a ticket. It was a bit distracting having to jump around like that.
I wanted a single interface, a War Room, where I could visualize all of this side-by-side on an infinite canvas.
So, I decided to build it. The project, Ideon, introduces an awesome tool that combines an infinite spatial canvas with real-time collaboration and Git integration, enhancing how developers visualize and manage their workflows.
This article explores the technical challenges of creating a “code-aware” collaborative whiteboard, particularly the integration of imperative canvas libraries with distributed state management.
The most interesting technical hurdle was integrating ReactFlow (an imperative library for node-based UIs) with Yjs (a CRDT library for distributed state).
ReactFlow maintains its own internal state for node positions, viewports, and interactions. Yjs, on the other hand, is designed to be the "source of truth" for distributed data. When you have two sources of truth, you inevitably run into conflict.
If a user drags a node, ReactFlow updates its local state immediately for performance (60fps). If I naively broadcast every single onNodeDrag event to Yjs, I would flood the WebSocket connection and kill the performance for every other connected client.
To solve this, I had to decouple the "visual" state from the "persisted" state.
I implemented a custom hook, useProjectCanvasRealtime, that acts as the bridge. Instead of syncing every pixel of movement, it relies on the concept of "awareness" for ephemeral data (like cursors) and throttled updates for persistent data (like node positions).
Here is a simplified look at how I handle user presence without spamming the network:
// useProjectCanvasRealtime.ts
export const useProjectCanvasRealtime = (
awareness: Awareness | null,
currentUser: UserPresence | null,
shareCursor: boolean = true,
) => {
const { screenToFlowPosition } = useReactFlow();
// Throttled pointer move handler
const onPointerMove = useCallback(
(event: React.PointerEvent) => {
if (!shareCursor) return;
// Crucial: Convert screen coordinates to Flow (canvas) coordinates
const cursor = screenToFlowPosition({
x: event.clientX,
y: event.clientY,
});
// Update local state, which Yjs propagates efficiently
updateMyPresence({ cursor });
},
[screenToFlowPosition, updateMyPresence, shareCursor],
);
// ...
};
\
The key insight here is screenToFlowPosition. In an infinite canvas, sharing raw (x, y) screen coordinates is useless because every user has a different viewport (zoom level, pan position). You must normalize coordinates to the "world" space before broadcasting them.
Since my target audience includes self-hosters (myself included), I knew that Ideon would often be deployed inside private networks (e.g., a home lab or a corporate VPN).
The feature I wanted most was "Git Blocks": widgets that you drop on the canvas to show live stats from a repository.
If I implemented this naively by having the frontend fetch data directly, I would hit CORS issues. If I had the backend fetch data based on a user-provided URL, I would open a massive security hole: Server-Side Request Forgery (SSRF).
An attacker could theoretically drop a Git Block with the URL http://169.254.169.254/latest/meta-data/ (AWS metadata) or http://localhost:5432 (internal database) and read the response. To prevent this, I built a dedicated proxy that enforces strict validation before making any request.
1. Private IP Blocking: The proxy resolves the hostname and checks if it resolves to a private IP range (10.0.0.0/8, 192.168.0.0/16, etc.), unless explicitly whitelisted.
2. Protocol Enforcement: Only HTTP and HTTPS are allowed, no file:// or gopher:// wrapper tricks.
3. Token Encryption: User tokens for Gitea/GitLab are stored encrypted in the database and only decrypted ephemerally within the proxy scope. They are never sent to the client.
Here is the logic for the proxy (simplified):
\
// api/git/stats/route.ts
// 1. Validate the URL format
const u = new URL(url.startsWith("http") ? url : `https://${url}`);
const host = u.host;
// 2. Retrieve and decrypt the token server-side
const userTokens = await db.selectFrom("userGitTokens")...
// ... decryption logic ...
// 3. Prevent SSRF
if (isPrivateIp(host) && !process.env.ALLOW_LOCAL_NETWORKS) {
return NextResponse.json({ error: "Access to local network denied" }, { status: 403 });
}
// 4. Fetch the data safely
const result = await getRepoStats(url, token);
This ensures that while the tool is "connected," it respects the boundaries of the network it runs on.
Another challenge was versioning. In a text document, Ctrl+Z is straightforward. In a collaborative spatial canvas, it’s a nightmare. If User A moves a node and User B deletes an edge, what does "Undo" mean?
I leveraged Yjs's built-in UndoManager, but I had to scope it carefully.
I realized that users don't want to undo other people's actions. They want to undo their own. Yjs supports this by tracking the origin of a transaction.
However, I wanted something more: Decision History. I wanted to be able to "snapshot" the entire board state at a specific point in time, like a Git commit for the canvas.
I implemented a DecisionHistory component that serializes the Yjs document state into a JSON snapshot when the user chooses to "commit" a version. This allows teams to see why the board looked a certain way two weeks ago, effectively bringing Git semantics to the whiteboard itself.
When building local-first or self-hosted apps, you can't assume the network is reliable. Using y-indexeddb alongside y-websocket was non-negotiable. It allows the app to work perfectly offline and sync up when the connection returns. It changes the UX from "loading spinners" to "instant interaction."
I first tried to build my own WebSocket protocol, but it turned into a disaster filled with race conditions and lost updates. Switching to Yjs and its ecosystem, including y-websocket and y-indexeddb, solved 90% of the synchronization headaches. This allowed me to focus more on product features, such as the Git integration.
Implementing SSRF protection changed how I architected the API. It forced me to route external data fetching through a controlled bottleneck rather than letting the frontend run wild.
What began as a personal endeavor to organize my digital chaos evolved into Ideon, a tool that not only streamlined my workflow but also taught me invaluable lessons about collaboration, synchronization, and security.
Building it taught me that the gap between "it works on localhost" and "it works for a team" is filled with interesting problems like CRDT conflict resolution, coordinate mapping, and network security.
If you’re building a collaborative tool, I recommend looking into Yjs. The learning curve is steep, but Yjs gives you the power to build robust, conflict-free applications.
For those interested, the repository is open source. I’m constantly pushing updates, so you can see exactly how the sausage is made, bugs and all.
Happy coding.
Repository: https://github.com/3xpyth0n/ideon
Documentation: https://www.theideon.com/docs
2026-03-10 22:13:54
Trust-focused UX is what keeps users calm when a platform asks them to log in, confirm an action, or wait for an update. The best trust signals are not slogans. They are interface behaviors that reduce uncertainty: clear status, verifiable records, predictable navigation, and error handling that prevents panic.
This piece breaks down the patterns that consistently make platforms feel dependable, especially in digital entertainment contexts where users often multitask, check quickly on mobile, and leave fast when something feels off.
Most “trust issues” begin as small moments of doubt. A button feels unresponsive. A page takes longer than usual. A status label is vague. The user does not know whether to wait, retry, or back out.
In high-stakes flows, doubt turns into defensive behavior. People refresh repeatedly, open a second tab to verify, or abandon the session entirely. That is not just impatience. It is a rational response to unclear system feedback.
A platform can be technically stable and still feel unreliable if it fails to answer the questions users care about:
Users do not trust interfaces. They trust evidence.
When a screen feels ambiguous, people look for “proof surfaces” that confirm reality. Common proof surfaces include a transaction history, an activity log, a timestamp, a reference ID, or a support path that looks legitimate and reachable.
This is where information architecture becomes a trust tool. If a user cannot locate history, help, or policy context quickly, they assume the platform is hiding something, even if it is not. The result is verification behavior: repeated retries, screenshots, support messages, and cross-checking external sources.
If you want a concrete example of how this thinking translates into editorial UX analysis, the DEV.to case study linked as BYBET walks through trust cues as a product behavior problem rather than a marketing problem. It is useful for seeing how small interface choices change user reactions.

Below are nine patterns that show up across platforms with strong product trust. None of these require a redesign. They require clarity, consistency, and “proof-first” thinking.
Loading states are where trust either holds or collapses. “Processing…” without meaning invites retry behavior, especially on mobile networks where delays are common.
A stronger pattern is explicit state transitions in user language. Instead of one vague spinner, the interface should communicate something like: request received, now processing, completed, or failed with a next step. Users do not need internal pipeline details. They need confirmation that their action exists and is being handled.
Many platforms jump straight from tap to “processing.” That gap is dangerous because the user cannot tell whether the system captured the action. This is when people double-tap, refresh, or resubmit.
A simple acknowledgment that the request is recorded can reduce duplicates and reduce support load. It also lowers cognitive load because the user no longer has to guess whether they should wait.
Product trust becomes durable when users can confirm outcomes after the fact. That is why transaction history and activity logs are not secondary pages. They are trust layers.
A good record view is readable and stable. It uses clear labels, timestamps, and consistent status terms. It allows a user to say, “This happened at this time, and here is the reference,” without taking a screenshot to create proof.
Even for platforms that are not finance products, this pattern matters any time a user performs an action they care about: changing account settings, submitting forms, confirming a purchase, or updating preferences.
When people do not know how long something might take, they refresh. When they refresh, they create more confusion.
A trust-friendly UX sets realistic processing expectations without overpromising. It does not need to guarantee a duration. It needs to provide a useful range and a clear place to check status. This is especially important for Philippine users who often rely on mobile data and experience variable latency.
A calm timing message is specific enough to guide behavior, but not so specific that it becomes a promise that can be broken.
Many users are not anxious about slowness. They are anxious about staleness.
Freshness cues help users understand whether a page is live, updating, or delayed. The simplest form is a subtle “last updated” signal or a visible status that changes as data refreshes. The key is that the interface should help the user distinguish “nothing changed” from “nothing updated.”
Users learn your product by pattern recognition. If the same concept is labeled differently in different areas, they assume the system is inconsistent.
A trust-focused platform uses stable terminology for statuses, actions, and records. If you call something “wallet” in one section and “balance” in another, users wonder whether those are different things. That doubt is avoidable.
Consistency is a design system promise: users learn the rules once, then rely on them everywhere.
Generic errors increase anxiety because they give no next move. Worse, some error states quietly encourage risky behavior, like repeatedly retrying without confirming whether an action is already in progress.
A better pattern is error recovery that explains what happened, suggests a safe next step, and points to proof surfaces like history or status pages. When the user knows how to verify, they stop guessing.
A practical rule is that every error should answer: what failed, what you can do now, and how to confirm the result.
Support is not only a customer service function. It is a trust signal.
The best platforms make help easy to find at the moment uncertainty appears. That does not mean plastering contact buttons everywhere. It means placing calm, relevant support entry points inside sensitive flows like login, confirmation, and account actions.
If support is hidden behind menus, users interpret the platform as less accountable. If support is visible and specific, users relax even if they do not use it.
Microcopy is where trust becomes human.
A short explanation of why the platform needs something can prevent suspicion. This matters for any step that feels intrusive or confusing: verification prompts, permission requests, status labels, or policy notices.
Good microcopy reduces friction by preventing misinterpretation. It replaces “system voice” with clear, respectful language that helps the user understand what is happening.
If you are analyzing a platform or writing an editorial breakdown, it helps to use a simple audit lens. Focus on whether the interface provides proof at the moments users are most likely to doubt.
Here is a lightweight checklist you can apply quickly:
This keeps analysis grounded in user outcomes rather than surface-level aesthetics.
Even good trust patterns can fail if implemented carelessly.
Too many statuses can overwhelm users and make the interface feel technical. Overly detailed warnings can increase anxiety instead of reducing it. Excessive confirmation steps can feel like friction if they do not clearly protect the user from risk.
The goal is not to add layers. The goal is to remove uncertainty. A trust-focused UX should feel calm, not busy.
Another common failure is inconsistency: a platform might do state clarity well in one flow but not in another. Users notice. Trust is cumulative, but it is also fragile. One confusing moment can undo many good ones.
Trust-focused UX is not a single feature. It is a system of design choices that helps users verify reality without extra effort. When state transitions are clear, records are accessible, timing expectations are honest, and recovery paths are safe, users stop acting like investigators.
For anyone writing platform analysis or UX breakdowns, this lens is practical because it ties design directly to behavior. You can watch how users respond when something is delayed, unclear, or unexpected. Then you can evaluate whether the product reduces uncertainty or amplifies it.
The most trustworthy platforms do not sound confident. They behave predictably.
\