Weekend Notebook #42 – Lights of Progress: from Smart Glasses to Smart Economies

Published on LinkedIn and AmitabhApte.com on 19th Oct, 2025


This week in AI – When AI Becomes Tangible

This week, AI stepped further out of the cloud and into the real world, shaping markets, moving currencies, and rewriting the geography of innovation.

EssilorLuxottica’s record-breaking quarter sent its shares up nearly 14% to an all-time high. The driver? Its AI-powered Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses. Once a novelty, they now represent a powerful convergence of hardware, intelligence, and design. The blend of form, function, and data is transforming wearables from accessories into interfaces, subtle, seamless, and socially acceptable. When design meets purpose, adoption accelerates.

Meanwhile, OpenAI’s new partnership with Broadcom marks a decisive move from software to silicon. By co-designing custom AI chips, OpenAI aims to reduce dependence on Nvidia and secure its own compute future. This is the next wave of integration, from algorithms to architecture, from models to metal, giving OpenAI control over both intelligence and infrastructure.

Finance, too, is recalibrating around AI’s physical footprint. Goldman Sachs is building a new lending unit to finance AI infrastructure, while BlackRock’s $20 billion acquisition of Aligned Data Centers ranks among the largest in the sector’s history. Infrastructure is now investable; data centres, cooling systems, and energy grids are becoming the new ports and pipelines of the digital age.

The wave is global, and India is fast becoming one of its most ambitious players. Google’s $15 billion investment in a new AI data centre in Visakhapatnam, , underscores India’s “swadeshi tech” ambition to localise AI infrastructure. To power this growth sustainably, the country is also exploring small modular nuclear reactors (SMRs) for round-the-clock clean energy, a bold shift from renewables that opens its nuclear sector to private and foreign investment.

Beyond India, the ripple effects are being felt across economies. Sterling and the Swedish krona are both strengthening as capital flows into new AI data hubs in London and Stockholm. Analysts call it the “compute capital effect”: when technology investment starts to influence currency strength and macro stability. Innovation, in other words, is becoming an economic moat.

And as AI enters new domains, society is adapting in parallel. Instagram’s upcoming parental controls for AI chatbots show how platforms are finally acknowledging their responsibility for young users’ wellbeing. In healthcare, AI is reducing administrative load and clinician burnout, yet only 28% of doctors feel ready to use it effectively. The technology is advancing faster than human capability to absorb it. That readiness gap is emerging as one of the defining leadership challenges of our time.


My Takeaway This Weekend

From eyewear to energy, from silicon to society, one theme connects it all: AI is crossing from the digital layer into the physical economy. It’s no longer something we log into; it’s something we live within.

“This is the industrialisation of intelligence, when data becomes infrastructure, and infrastructure becomes intelligent.”

For leaders, the task ahead is to design for that convergence, where compute, capital, and culture intersect. Because the next decade of AI won’t just be coded in labs; it will be built in factories, financed by markets, powered by clean energy, and worn on faces.


Beyond AI: My mindshare – the Light we share

This week, as millions around the world celebrate Diwali, the festival of lights, homes, offices, and streets glow with lamps, laughter, and the scent of homemade delicacies.
It’s a time to pause, reconnect with family and friends, and celebrate the warmth of togetherness.

For me, Diwali has always been about more than lighting diyas. It’s also a reminder to light the lamp within, the spark of compassion, curiosity, and kindness that brightens the lives of those around us. Each flame we light carries meaning: to share joy, to help someone find their spark, and to bring others along on our journey.

In a world that often feels fast and fragmented, Diwali invites us to slow down and rekindle what truly connects us, gratitude, generosity, and shared light.

“When we light a lamp for someone else, we illuminate our own path too.”