Why Applied Digital Dropped Blockchain from Its Original Name

Full Video Transcript Below

Sara Silverstein: Applied Digital instead of Applied Blockchain.

Wes Cummins: Yes

Sara Silverstein: So everything went from crypto to blockchain. And now is everything going to move to digital, or why did you change your name?

Wes Cummins: Yeah, so the name change really is just it’s kind of the signal that we’re broadening our scope. And so we’re building what I view as digital infrastructure for kind of the next generation of high compute, high performance compute blockchain crypto. Those are applications that go in there. But we’re looking at other applications that you’ll see is put into our data centers, and I’m confident we’ll put in our data centers by the end of the year. And those are things like, number one, probably machine learning, AI, protein sequencing, gene sequencing. All of these things are require intense computing computational power, but don’t necessarily need ultra low latency communications, which is what, you know, most traditional data centers are built for right now is video streaming, right? So you use video streaming for ultra low latency comms. Now we’re moving to what I think is kind of the next generation, which is high performance computing, which is for a lot of other applications that people want to use, natural language processing. You know, you want to talk to your phone, have it, understand what you’re talking about. You want to have an autonomous car that drives you. It takes a lot of data crunching to put everything in the model to create that. So you’re building a bunch of really powerful data centers.