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The AI Race

Starting from the 1970s, Microsoft built an entire system from end to end-the chips,

the servers, the software and the hardware. With over 90% market share in the 1990s

and still over 70% today, Windows is the operating system for powering the world’s

PCs and our digital lives. Though Microsoft has faced severe antitrust scrutiny for

leveraging its Windows OS dominance to stifle competition, notably by

bundling Internet Explorer, leading to landmark cases in the US and EU, it is still the

market leader. However, though Microsoft owned the Operating Systems, it still

needed OEMs to ship them initially, though now the dependence is gone. Learning

from Microsoft, Apple built the entire experience end-to-end.

Today the AI Race, between Open AI, Google and Microsoft is similar- it is a fierce

competition for dominance, with Open AI leading frontier model innovation

(GPT-5), Microsoft excelling at enterprise integration (Co-pilot in M365), and

Google rapidly advancing with Gemini and Workspace; they’re vying for user

adoption, enterprise workflows, and defining the next AI-driven internet, but it’s also

shifting into regulatory battles (Open AI vs. Big Tech in EU) and complex cloud

dynamics, with Open AI even using Google/Oracle for cloud, complicating

Microsoft’s role as a partner and potential rival. OpenAI has the early mover

advantage; ChatGPT is a daily digital habit of many executives in crafting their

corporate communications. But OpenAI is only a part of the value chain- however, it

has tied up with AMD to buy AI GPUs and also tied up with Broadcom to co-develop

AI accelerators and systems. Basically, OpenAI is hedging against dependence on

NVIDIA and trying to develop a full value chain for AI- a tightly integrated system

where custom silicon, software models and a signature hardware device work in

alignment, though that hardware device is yet to come to market. That would make

OpenAI close to winning the AI race.

At present, the software battle between OpenAI and Google is fierce. While Chat GPT

still holds a big lead with more than 800 million weekly users, Google’s Gemini is

gaining fast: As per data, the Gemini app now has 650 million monthly active users,

up from 450 million in July. Preliminary November data reveal Gemini

generated 1.351 billion website visits—a 14.3% increase from October 2025.

Meanwhile, Chat GPT fell below the 6 billion benchmark it had touched in October

2025, recording 5.844 billion visits. OpenAI unleashed the first element of its

counterattack in mid-December, with the release of GPT 5.2, internally code-named

Garlic. The model puts OpenAI back on top of many closely watched benchmarks for

AI performance. Then, on December 16, OpenAI launched a new image generation

model designed to show it can match the buzz created by Google’s Nano Banana.

But even the company acknowledges that these are merely initial moves in what

needs to be a much broader effort to regain momentum. A major product

upgradation is on the cards to shore up the core ChatGPT product and the AI models that underpin it. What may have truly shaken them is the performance of Gemini 3,

the newest version of Google’s flagship AI model and the model powering Nano

Banana Pro. From the impressive answers it delivers to complex business questions

to its writing and coding capabilities, Gemini 3 has very quickly earned praise from

experts and the general public.

All said and done, the next 2 years are OpenAI’s proving ground- developing

infrastructure beyond NVIDIA, launching hardware beyond imagination and deepening

its developer ecosystem before competitors catch up. Then we would have an end-to

end AI device. And maybe not from OpenAI alone, but from other companies also.

Indian Chamber of Commerce

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