Publised on Jun 24, 2026
𝗪𝗲 𝗵𝗮𝘃𝗲 𝗯𝗲𝗲𝗻 𝗵𝗲𝗿𝗲 𝗯𝗲𝗳𝗼𝗿𝗲.

Felix Schaller

From the 1950s to the 1980s, computing meant one thing: a mainframe in a basement, terminals on desks, and access controlled by whoever owned the machine.
IBM. Universities. Banks. Insurance companies. Computing was powerful but inaccessible to almost everyone.
Then a group of hobbyists in garage workshops and Homebrew Computer Clubs decided that computing should belong to the individual.
They built their own boards. They hacked Atari hardware. They formed a Bohemian revolution of individualists who believed that computing was not a corporate privilege but a personal one. The personal computer was born.
The guys from Apple Inc. did not invent the computer. They decentralised it.
Are we now repeating that pattern?
Cloud AI has rebuilt the mainframe era — just with better UX. Intelligence lives
on someone else's server, accessible through someone else's API, switched off
by someone else's government on three days' notice.
Data sovereignty. IP sovereignty. Compute sovereignty. All concentrated in a handful of hyperscalers.
The Fable 5 shutdown was not an anomaly. It was a reminder of the architecture.
The question is now what it was then?
Should intelligence belong to whoever owns the largest server or to whoever generates it? The Homebrew Computer Club answer was obvious. So is ours.
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