This seems like ... not the situation we are in. LLMs are great for coding now but their text generation capabilities aren't exactly capturing the masses or replacing their jobs yet. People are already tired of the deluge of fake content on the internet, it's not going to drive a second revolution in web ads.
The $20-200 LLM plans are all subsidized and aren't paying for themselves. Something has to give here.
Whats interesting to me as well as much as companies are pushing AI adoption, i have started to hear AI token spend limits enforced across a few companies, so its not entirely clear that b2b can make them profitable yet either.
If all the models reach good enough, then low cost provider would win. Gemini seems like a safer bet since Google controls more of the stack / has more efficiencies / cross selling / etc.
It’s not like “best” has won any other b2b arms race in the past.
Gemini is the best deal too. For $20: you get multiple quotas per day across the products (web, CLI, antigravity, AI Studio) 2tb of cloud storage, and you can family share the plan.
Further they have their own TPUs, datacenters, etc on which to run their models.
Plus existing data they've squirreled away over the preceding 30 years from books, web, etc.
Just seems like a lot of efficiencies if its going to come down to cost.
And in that reality one can’t just magically spend a bunch more on some fancy new thing, especially when said fancy new thing isn’t retuning value. So “token limits” and cost controls on B2B is entirely expected here.
I think this is the key element. Either they can't measure the value, or it's far far lower than anyone wants to believe, or both.
I think the problem is less that it makes some coding tasks XX% faster, but that the end to end of a SWEs roles tasks is only improved by some much smaller Y%.
If a CTO sets $10k/year spend limits on $500k SWEs.. they must not believe any of the hype.
Expert systems were amazing. They were not cost effective.
There might be another bitter lesson to be had here, and unless the accountants start talking we're not gonna know any time soon.
Fuller integration into the user's life will bring ever more ad opportunities (and it doesn't matter if the HN base hates that notion, it's going to happen regardless). That'll happen over the next decade gradually.
Shopping, home management, tasks (taxes, accounting, lifestyle, reminders, homework, work work, 800 other things), travel (obvious), advice & general conversation (already there), search (being consumed now), gaming (next 3-5 years to start), full at-work integration (gradual spread across all industries, with more narrow expertise), digital world building (10-15+ years out for mass user adoption). And on the list goes. It's pretty much anything the user can or does touch in life.
We already have the tech for that, why hasn't it happened? People are revolted by the AI results in Google. AI isn't going to make people use their computers more. It's not opening up a new consumer market. This is just making each search infinitely more expensive.
The latest "Thinking" version gets it reliably right but spent about 3 minutes coming up with the answer that 10 seconds of googling answers.
So I don't believe we are currently in a situation where LLMs are an effective replacement for search engines.
And what do you think this'll do for future LLM models that need to train on new content if web page traffic collapses?
I think Google has several ai products with search features?
Which one in your experience "seems correct"?
I'm fascinated because I've never found any LLM to be particularly error free at search.
Google could do it in 2000 because their search was legitimately so much better, and also because their ads were comparatively more relevant and unobtrusive than modern ads. In comparison, LLMs are relatively similar in performance unless you're picky enough that you're probably already paying and thus wouldn't be in the ad-supported tier.
That said, I wonder if ads are even lucrative enough to move the needle relative to how much training costs are increasing with each generation.
The first AI to insert blatant ads will be dumped for some other model overnight. Look at the Copilot "backlash" over their "product announcements".
And yet every attempt to extract even minimal ad revenue has been canned to date as something nobody wants with AI providers retreating in failure.
I don’t doubt that there’s “some” ad revenue to be had but there’s little evidence that ads are going to save the day here.
GoTo.com -> Google -> $$$
rules are simple, if you have Xbn or XXXm users on your system, you will make big bank in ads eventually
Basically all their revenue is ad revenue and not too bad
The masses will have no say in the matter. Just as they had no say in the matter with Google's ads getting ever more intrusive, or cable prices previously, or streaming prices going perpetually higher in the present, or YouTube ads, or anything else. Consumers will have no say in the matter, they'll take it and that's that.
With only three relevant competitors (maybe Mistral in Europe), there will be nowhere to flee the deployment of ads.
You can say the same about AWS and then prove the b2b case instead of ad case as well
Google's ad business remains far larger and more profitable than AWS. And the advertising segment is drastically larger than the segment AWS is in. Just Google + Meta = nearing $600 billion in ad sales. Amazon will soon have their own $100 billion in ad sales.
At some point someone needs to add value to the real economy, not just take an ad tax off the top.
Billions in projected revenue is nothing but hype/cope. Google and Meta got their edge because their product was offered for "free" to the masses.
If they want to out-ad those companies to the tune of billions, I'll go with the least annoying. OpenAI hasn't earned any loyalty.