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When I show people personal projects I’ve vibe-coded with Claude Code, they often seem impressed and envious. They come up with ideas for things that they would like to do, too. But they have full-time jobs outside of IT, and when I mention they might need to use the terminal to do what I’m doing now their eyes glaze over.

A couple of such people, after they learned about Claude Cowork, signed up for Anthropic subscriptions and are now using it in their jobs. But overall my impression is that there is still huge potential demand from regular people who use computers for agentic systems with less barrier to entry, and that many will be willing to pay for such systems when more mature and user-friendly ones arrive.

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Most of humanity hasn't figured out they need to adapt yet. It's a bit like email and the internet in the mid nineties. People had heard about it but hadn't really embraced it yet. Five years later most people with white collar jobs had email addresses. Fifteen years later, billions of internet capable smartphones were in circulation.

The AI revolution is following a similar adoption curve. Right now many of the tools are only really usable if you are a developer or at least not too shy making AI agents use developer tools on your behalf. That's not going to stay like that for very long. It's going to be a messy transition that will likely take much longer than some people seem to think. But eventually most people doing knowledge work will be leaning heavily on all sorts of AI agents to do their thing. And quite a few will have to learn new skills as most of the stuff they still do manually today just goes away as a thing that you do manually.

Like the mid nineties, these are amazing times for people with a slight head start over everybody else. Which is why there is such an investment frenzy around AI right now. Lots of possibilities where lots of money might be made. And lots of things that won't work out. And lots of people really not seeing the forest for the trees as well. And generally behaving like headless chickens. But the internet in the end proved to be not a fad and it didn't all go back to normal after the hype died and the .com bubble burst.

IMHO, the bubble around AI is not so much the technology but things like data center and energy pricing. The cost of data center production is long term a fraction of current cost (dominated by GPUs costing tens of thousands of dollars). Likewise cheap and plentiful energy to power them is going to eventually cost a lot less. Short term scarcity eats up a lot of billions right now. But you'd be mistaken to confuse that for long term structural cost. Cost is going to come down and that will drive adoption. And that's before you consider edge compute on commodity phones and laptops. There will be billions of devices running small AI agents. Add robotics to the mix and it's a whole new world.

In short, companies like OpenAI and Anthropic are valued so high because all of that is happening right now. Yes, it's a bit of a bubble. But stuff will definitely happen.

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On the other hand, the productivity gains from AI automation are so large that you are forced to use it to compete in the workplace, even if you strongly dislike the terminal, you will dislike homelessness more.
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I think there is a massive market in waiting for something that uses a way better UI/UX. I’d say chat is only great for developers/technical people.
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Give it a year or two, and apple or any other hardware will have unified memory OR AMD will have a good offering to run all that stuff locally. It won't be as good as Claude, but it'll do for 90% of the things. It will be expensive as first, just like the first mainframes, then give it another 5 years or so, and it'll be affordable.
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I'd argue this has already happened. The highest end mac pro is $10k and down from there. We might be returning to the appliance business model.

Its just a matter of Productizing the software to plug and play light office admin work.

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Think about all the "people" AI services can displace in due time. There's a fuckload of pencil pushers / knowledge workers with 100k student loans whose lifetime contribution can probably be measured in a few hundred dollars in tokens. And TBH normalizing AI crutch for kids is going to make large % of future cohorts even more replaceable. Skill atrophy among youth is declining hard, but AI is basically crippling future workforce quality to make their displacement even easier. There's even less reason to hire entry level in 4 years not just because models get better but human capita is going to be so much worse.
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> only way to increase growth would be to charge more per token

Or spend less per token (ie. increase profit margin without raising prices).

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The market hasn’t been built out yet. There’s that post from a couple days ago where someone frontloaded the entire UX of an operating system onto an LLM, so you just tell the hardware what you want to do and it does it. https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47557165

The growth is there but it’s going to be a marathon, not a sprint. I don’t know why everyone’s in such a goddamn hurry all the time

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