AI's Great Handover: Why Software Now Beats Chips in the Race for AI Dominance
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Key partnerships dominated headlines. On February 26, French startup Mistral AI announced a multiyear deal with Accenture to co-develop enterprise AI solutions, with Accenture adopting Mistral models internally; this follows Accenture's pacts with OpenAI and Anthropic[2][4]. AMD secured a massive 60 billion dollar, multi-year agreement with Meta on February 24 for 6 gigawatts of Instinct MI450 GPUs, plus equity options, challenging Nvidia's lead and echoing AMD's prior OpenAI deal[6][8].
Emerging competitors like AMD gain ground in hyperscale AI, while software leaders respond to challenges. Salesforce reported 50 percent quarter-over-quarter growth in agentic AI deals after a 40 percent stock drop, shifting to outcome-based pricing over per-seat models[3]. Palantir's U.S. commercial revenue surged 137 percent in late 2025 via its AIP platform[3].
No major regulatory changes or consumer behavior shifts surfaced, but enterprise AI spending is forecast to rise 14.7 percent in 2026[3]. Compared to prior weeks' infrastructure focus, this marks a pivot to applications, validating AI's shift from build to deploy phases[3][5]. Leaders like Meta and Accenture counter supply strains by diversifying vendors and tying promotions to AI use[13]. Overall, growth persists amid valuation pressures. (298 words)
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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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