Technology moves fast. The coverage of it often doesn't.
Too much of what gets published about AI, software, and the tech industry reads like it was written by someone watching from the window, summaries of press releases, reactions to earnings calls, takes that arrive fully formed from a product announcement. Convergence Wire exists because we think that's not good enough.
What We Cover
We write about the collision of artificial intelligence, software development, and the broader forces reshaping how technology gets built and used. That means language models and the infrastructure behind them, the economics of building AI products, what's actually happening inside engineering teams, and the gap between what the industry says it's doing and what it's actually doing.
We're not trying to cover everything. We're trying to cover the things that matter more than most people realize yet.
The "convergence" in our name isn't decorative. We're interested in the moments where disciplines, industries, and ideas run into each other, where a shift in how models are trained changes the calculus for an entire category of software, or where a pricing decision by a cloud provider reshapes what's possible for a startup. Context is the whole point.
How We Work
Our writers come from the work itself. Some have shipped production systems. Some have spent years close to research. Some have built companies or watched them fail. Where we rely on reporting rather than firsthand knowledge, we say so, and we do the work to get it right.
We don't optimize for volume. An article on Convergence Wire goes through multiple drafts, gets stress-tested for accuracy, and earns its word count. We'd rather publish three pieces a week that are genuinely worth reading than thirty that pad out the feed.
No paywalls. No sponsored content that pretends to be editorial. If we've taken money from someone, you'll know.
Who This Is For
We assume you can handle complexity. We don't over-explain things that don't need explaining, and we don't sand off the rough edges to make a story tidier than it is.
If you want to get in touch, or flag something we got wrong, the inbox is open. Write to us.