Barking Works on Sheep, Precision Works on Wolves
In capital markets, who makes the most noise—and what is that worth? More importantly: who executes with precision when it matters?
Jensen Huang has a simple way of describing real intelligence: it’s the ability to see around the corner.
Not in the mystical sense.
In the practical sense—preemptive judgment.
The kind that moves before the crowd sees the situation clearly, while the information is still incomplete, while the outcome is still forming.
Huang’s point lands as: the scarce edge becomes judgment, empathy, and anticipatory thinking—the ability to look at a situation and infer what’s coming next before it fully arrives.
From processing → to perception
From computation → to judgment
From prediction → to preemption
Smart is no longer “can you solve the problem.”
Smart is:


