Today I saw Sun Yuchen say that if you can chat with AI, don't chat with humans, delete all contacts of people born before the 90s, and don't use old apps like WeChat. Although this is an extreme expression of Sun's traffic, it also conveys a clear message (AI is already the core carrier of the future, generational iteration is the inevitable result of the technological revolution, and time is the most scarce resource). Currently, AI large models, intelligent agents, robots, AI + biology, gene editing, quantum communication and computing, brain-computer interfaces, and so forth, does that windfall belong to ordinary people? For example, the older generation during the wave of reform and opening up saw the country's GDP increase a hundredfold, yet only a few became rich. Today, we are also standing under the AI wave, with continuous iteration of large models, how many ordinary people are seizing opportunities right in front of us? It turns out that the train of the times has never prepared tickets for everyone. An ultimate life is just an NPC.
Regarding the crypto market: the technical viewpoint remains unchanged (from the previous post), coin bureau data shows that major Ethereum whales have collectively turned into a floating loss state for the first time, including wallets holding over 100,000 Ethereum. As for Bitcoin dollar-cost averaging, it should be fine, and as for how much it can rise by 2026, I guess it won't be less than 330,000 US dollars (Figure 3).