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beepbopbooppyesterday at 11:31 PM1 replyview on HN

> Will there be the same overutilisation occurring if users have to financially support the infrastructure, either through subscriptions or intrusive advertising? > I doubt it.

Yea, I think this is wrong. The analogy is more like the App Store, in that there is very little to do currently other than a better Google Search with the product. The bet is that over time (short time) there are much more financially valuable use cases with a more mature ecosystem and tech.


Replies

echelonyesterday at 11:45 PM

That's it.

We're in the "dial up era" of AI.

Unlike the smartphone adoption era where everything happened rather rapidly, we're in this weird place where labs have invented a bunch of model categories, but they aren't applicable to a wide variety of problems yet.

The dial up -> broadband curve took almost a decade to reach penetration and to create the SaaS market. It's kind of a fluke that Google and Amazon came out of the dial up era - that's probably what investors were hoping for by writing such large checks.

They found chat as one type of product. Image gen as another. But there's really not much "native AI" stuff going about. Everyone is bolting AI onto products and calling it a done day (or being tasked with clueless leadership to do it with even worse results).

This is not AI. This is early cycle WebVan-type exploration. The idea to use AI in a given domain or vertical might be right, but the tools just don't exist yet.

We don't need AI models with crude APIs. We need AI models we can pull off the shelf, fine tune, and adapt to novel UI/UX.

Adobe is showing everyone how they're thinking about AI in photoshop - their latest conference showed off AI-native UX. And it was really slick. Dozens of image tools (relighting, compositing, angle adjustment) that all felt fast, magical, and approachable as a beginner. Nobody else is doing that. They're just shoving a chat interface in your hands and asking you to deal with it.

We're too early. AI for every domain isn't here yet.

We're not even in the dialup era, honestly.

I'd expect the best categories of AI to invest in with actually sound financials will be tool vendors (OpenRouter, FAL, etc.) and AI-native PLG-type companies.

Enterprise is not ready. Enterprise does not know what the hell to do with these APIs.