• Business & Economy
  • Companies
  • Agriculture
  • Technology
  • Africa
Wednesday, August 20, 2025
The Brief | Namibia's Leading Business & Financial News
  • Home
  • Companies
    • Finance
    • Agriculture
    • Technology
    • Trade
    • Tourism
  • Business & Economy
  • Mining & Energy
  • Opinions
    • Analysis
    • Columnists
  • Property
  • E-Editions
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Companies
    • Finance
    • Agriculture
    • Technology
    • Trade
    • Tourism
  • Business & Economy
  • Mining & Energy
  • Opinions
    • Analysis
    • Columnists
  • Property
  • E-Editions
No Result
View All Result
The Brief | Namibia's Leading Business & Financial News
No Result
View All Result
Home Opinions

The AI war

by editor
March 10, 2025
in Opinions
3
A A

By Stantin Siebritz

Remember when AI supremacy seemed confined to a battle among American tech giants like Google, Microsoft, and OpenAI?

What started as a “civil war” among these Silicon Valley powerhouses has rapidly evolved into a global showdown, especially between the United States and China.

The battle lines are clearly drawn, and with each new AI release, the stakes only get higher.

The AI War explained

Initially, the AI war was a competition for dominance among American companies, each striving to build more powerful, intuitive, and creative AI tools. However, this rivalry escalated dramatically with China’s powerful entry into the AI arena through innovations like DeepSeek-R1 and Alibaba’s impressive Qwen models.

In response, we’ve witnessed American AI companies uniting strategically, launching coordinated updates to demonstrate transparency, such as openly displaying AI reasoning processes; a direct response to China’s advancements.

Just recently, Elon Musk’s xAI unveiled Grok-3, an AI that not only emphasizes reasoning transparency but also introduces advanced real-time interaction, showcasing just how intense the rivalry has become.

The underlying issue nobody is talking about

Beneath the surface-level competition of AI models lies an even more crucial battle: compute power. Scripture reminds us that a king who is about to go to war will have to first sit down and consider whether he is able to win a war with ten thousand men against an invading army with twenty thousand?

Has China accurately assessed its compute resources? With the U.S. imposing a strict ban on exporting advanced GPUs to China, there’s speculation that Chinese AI firms might have underestimated the resource demands necessary for sustained competition.

But China’s reliance on alternative hardware solutions like Huawei’s Ascend 910Bs suggests they might possess a hidden arsenal of computing power, still largely unknown to the broader global community.

Furthermore, Qualcomm Snapdragon chips have recently overtaken Intel in mobile computing efficiency. Although these are CPU-focused, such technological leaps indicate potential cross-application in GPU and AI acceleration, hinting at China’s alternative pathways in semiconductor innovation.

The Implication of a War on Multiple Fronts: AI Models, Compute, and Video Generation

The AI war now includes multiple battlefronts, not just language and reasoning models, but also groundbreaking video AI generation. Recent advancements by China’s Tencent with Hunyuan AI, alongside OpenAI’s pioneering video-generation technology, Sora, mark a transformative phase in AI capabilities.

These developments signify that the competition is no longer restricted to static content but encompasses dynamic, multimodal AI applications.

As AI capabilities diversify, the real winner emerges clearly, not the United States or China alone, but the broader global AI community, particularly communities across Africa and emerging markets like Namibia.

Heightened competition compels innovation, drives down costs, and accelerates the availability of cutting-edge technology. AI startups, students, and research institutions globally now have more affordable access to technologies previously limited to elite circles.

Conclusion

The AI War, intensified by the recent launches of Grok-3, Qwen, and cutting-edge video generation technologies from Tencent’s Hunyuan and OpenAI’s Sora, presents an exciting yet complex landscape. Rather than fearing this fierce rivalry, we should recognize the immense opportunities it creates.

More competition leads to more innovation, better affordability, and increased accessibility…benefits that resonate deeply within Africa’s technology ecosystems.

In this battle, the ultimate victory might belong to the global community of innovators and dreamers, poised to leverage these technologies for transformative local impact. As Doc Brown famously said in Back to the Future, “Roads? Where we’re going, we don’t need roads.” Indeed, in this rapidly evolving AI era, we’re building new pathways every day.

*Stantin Siebritz is Managing Director of New Creation Solutions, and a Namibian Artificial Intelligence Specialist

author avatar
editor
See Full Bio
Tags: AIglobal showdowngoogleMicrosoftOpenAIStantin Siebritz
Share100Tweet63Share18
Previous Post

Affordable 7-Seaters for Namibian families

Next Post

Unsung drivers of economic development in Namibia

MUST READ

Love, hustles, and household budgets
Opinions

Love, hustles, and household budgets

August 19, 2025
Rethinking black tax through the lens of ubuntu
Opinions

Education reform in Namibia – Are we still teaching for yesterday’s economy?

August 19, 2025
Namibia’s green finance revolution: A blueprint for Africa’s energy future
Opinions

Namibia’s green finance revolution: A blueprint for Africa’s energy future

August 18, 2025
Reimagining HR: From legacy systems to purpose-driven people strategies
Opinions

Reimagining HR: From legacy systems to purpose-driven people strategies

August 18, 2025
Digital future stalled by old-school thinking
Columnists

Stop the bleeding: Namaf’s tariffs are driving patients into debt while funds grow fat

August 17, 2025
Why the way we buy matters
Opinions

Why the way we buy matters

August 15, 2025
Next Post
Unsung drivers of economic development in Namibia

Unsung drivers of economic development in Namibia

Related News

Namibia approves culling of 86,000 seals

Namibia approves culling of 86,000 seals

June 11, 2023
NCCI calls on tourism sector to rethink markets amid travel bans

NCCI calls on tourism sector to rethink markets amid travel bans

November 30, 2021
NAM incurs drop in operating profit

NAM incurs drop in operating profit

May 24, 2022

Browse by Category

  • Africa
  • Agriculture
  • Analysis
  • Business & Economy
  • Columnists
  • Companies
  • Finance
  • Finance
  • Fisheries
  • Green Hydrogen
  • Health
  • Investing
  • Latest
  • Market
  • Mining & Energy
  • Namibia
  • namibia
  • News
  • Opinions
  • Property
  • Retail
  • Technology
  • Tourism
  • Trade

CATEGORIES

  • Business & Economy
  • Companies
    • Agriculture
    • Finance
    • Fisheries
    • Health
    • Property
    • Retail
    • Technology
    • Tourism
    • Trade
  • Finance
  • Green Hydrogen
  • Investing
  • Latest
  • Market
  • Mining & Energy
  • namibia
  • News
    • Africa
    • Namibia
  • Opinions
    • Analysis
    • Columnists

CONTACT US

Cell: +264814612969

Email: newsdesk@thebrief.com.na

  • Home
  • Companies
  • Business & Economy
  • Mining & Energy
  • Opinions
  • Property
  • E-Editions

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Companies
    • Finance
    • Agriculture
    • Technology
    • Trade
    • Tourism
  • Business & Economy
  • Mining & Energy
  • Opinions
    • Analysis
    • Columnists
  • Property
  • E-Editions