Essay
Sustainability in computing is a hardware problem. Morten Ansteensen, COO of Lace Lithography, on why the future of technological progress depends on the energy economics of chip manufacturing.
The Uncertainty of Deep-Deep Tech
We are often asked what specifically our tools will be used to create. Our honest answer is that we do not yet know.
We view what Lace enables much like the opportunities the first printing press created. One simply did not know if an author would use his press to write beautiful poetry, revolutionary scientific papers, or mundane ledgers. The tool itself only provides the capability for information to scale.
Similarly, Lace is building a manufacturing capability that will allow for the creation of things that cannot be made today, in places where they cannot currently be produced. We are providing the "paper and ink" for the operators driving the next industrial revolution. The promise of our technology lies in the hands of the scientists and engineers who will use it to build what was previously impossible.
Shaping the Impact
If uncertainty is defined as probability multiplied by impact, we must remember that the same equation can be used to define positive change. The increase in manufacturing capability enabled by new lithography techniques will allow us to expand our solution space for the world's most difficult problems: societal infrastructure, carbon capture, and decentralized energy grids.
This is a significant responsibility. Success requires founders, operators, and investors who embrace uncertainty and at the same time insist that the future is not something that happens to us: it is something we enable ourselves to shape through the tools we choose to build with.
