DCF Poll: AI Data Center Assumptions

As AI data center development accelerates into its execution phase, long-held assumptions around power, delivery timelines, and community acceptance are colliding with real-world constraints. Which one breaks first?
March 25, 2026

The AI infrastructure buildout has entered a new phase and it’s no longer defined by ambition or capital. Across the industry, the conversation is shifting from what can be planned to what can actually be delivered. 

Power is proving harder to secure than expected. Interconnection timelines are stretching well beyond construction cycles. Communities are asserting themselves as a gating force. And increasingly, announced capacity is diverging from what can realistically come online.

In short, the AI data center boom is encountering its first true friction with physical, political, and economic limits. That raises a critical question for 2026. Which foundational assumption underpinning this growth cycle is most likely to give way first? 

About the Author

Matt Vincent

Matt Vincent is Editor in Chief of Data Center Frontier, where he leads editorial strategy and coverage focused on the infrastructure powering cloud computing, artificial intelligence, and the digital economy. A veteran B2B technology journalist with more than two decades of experience, Vincent specializes in the intersection of data centers, power, cooling, and emerging AI-era infrastructure. Since assuming the EIC role in 2023, he has helped guide Data Center Frontier’s coverage of the industry’s transition into the gigawatt-scale AI era, with a focus on hyperscale development, behind-the-meter power strategies, liquid cooling architectures, and the evolving energy demands of high-density compute, while working closely with the Digital Infrastructure Group at Endeavor Business Media to expand the brand’s analytical and multimedia footprint. Vincent also hosts The Data Center Frontier Show podcast, where he interviews industry leaders across hyperscale, colocation, utilities, and the data center supply chain to examine the technologies and business models reshaping digital infrastructure. Since its inception he serves as Head of Content for the Data Center Frontier Trends Summit. Before becoming Editor in Chief, he served in multiple senior editorial roles across Endeavor Business Media’s digital infrastructure portfolio, with coverage spanning data centers and hyperscale infrastructure, structured cabling and networking, telecom and datacom, IP physical security, and wireless and Pro AV markets. He began his career in 2005 within PennWell’s Advanced Technology Division and later held senior editorial positions supporting brands such as Cabling Installation & Maintenance, Lightwave Online, Broadband Technology Report, and Smart Buildings Technology. Vincent is a frequent moderator, interviewer, and keynote speaker at industry events including the HPC Forum, where he delivers forward-looking analysis on how AI and high-performance computing are reshaping digital infrastructure. He graduated with honors from Indiana University Bloomington with a B.A. in English Literature and Creative Writing and lives in southern New Hampshire with his family, remaining an active musician in his spare time.

You can connect with Matt via LinkedIn or email.

You can connect with Matt via LinkedIn or email.

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