Or, and hear me out here, you go to the existing site or app which sells concert tickets, press the purchase button, and then you have your tickets.
Like what are we even doing here...
Why would I do that if the gateway to the internet becomes these LLM interfaces? How is it not easier to ask or type 'buy me tickets for Les Mis'? In the ideal world it will just figure it out, or I frustratingly have to interact with a slightly different website to purchase tickets for each separate event I want to see.
One of the benefits that I see is as much as I love tech and writing software, I really really do not want to interface with a vast majority of the internet that has been designed to show the maximum amount of ads in the given ad space.
The internet sucks now, anything that gets me away from having ads shoved in my face constantly and surrounded by uncertainty that you could always be talking to a bot.
It's more like:
- You have to work; you can't stay online all day waiting for the tickets to go on sale
- You have your agent watch for when the tickets go on sale
- Because the agent has its own wallet, it spends the 6 hours waiting for the tickets to go on sale and buys them for you
- Your agent informs you via SMS, iMessage, email, Telegram or whatever messaging platform of your choice
Yes agentic wallets are a thing now [1].
[1]: https://x.com/CoinbaseDev/status/2023893470725947769?s=20
seriously. I don't even wanna compile code when binaries are available in a repository. the thought of everybody preferring vibe-coding something on their own over using something that's battle-tested and available to the collective is just crazy to me.
Personally the experience getting tickets at the moment is horrible.
Endless queues, scalpers grabbing tickets within a second. Having to wait days/weeks periodically checking to see if a ticket is available.
The only platform I’m aware of that does guarantee a ticket can be purchased if available is Dice once you join a wait list. You get given a reasonable time to purchase it in too.
So I can see why people would prefer to defer this to an agent and not care about the implementation, I personally would. In the past I’ve been able to script notifications for it for myself and can see more people benefiting from it.
My point is: such apps wouldn’t need to exist if agents can provide in the future the same functionality for a fraction of the cost. Sure if ticketmaster is here to stay forever and keep their app up to date, we can keep using it. But what about new products? Would companies decide to build a single fixed app that all the users have to use, instead of, well, not building it? Sure the functionality would still need to be provided by the company (e.g., like offered in the form of an api), so they keep getting profit.
It’s like we usually say: companies should focus on their core value. And typically the ui/ux is not the core value of companies.
You can already instruct AI to navigate the existing website for you and buy the tickets... OpenClaw is one such recent tool.
I know people have done truly amazing things with AI lately, but I feel this in my bones. Almost every demo I see is like, uh, I don't need these extremely simple things in my life automated. I can just go to Delta and buy a plane ticket. I actually want to write my own email to my mom or wife. Of course a demo is just a demo, but also come on