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That's a pretty dramatic shift. What's causing it seems to simply be competition.
Hardware costs have come down - a bit - and the new hardware is also more energy efficient - a bit.
Training costs for creating new models have soared, on the other hand - DeepSeek's bullshit notwithstanding - but investor money keeps pouring in to cover that.
Since these have often been ruled unenforceable, Google has tried a new tack: After an employee resigns, their employment continues for another year. They continue to be paid but they don't need to work, they are just not allowed to work for a competing company.
Turns out there are still motherboards around with a good number of PCIe slots. AMD's business-oriented B840 boards mostly have five slots, which is not bad considering that the maximum for a standard ATX system is seven.
They're mostly PCIe 3.0 x1 electrically (x16 physical slots) so not great if you want a 100Gb network card but fine for most other uses.