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by NitpickLawyer
145 days ago
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> What started as a community experiment is becoming infrastructure. The developers behind Ralph and Taskmaster figured out something real. Now the platforms are catching up. > That’s usually how it goes. The practitioners find the patterns first. Then the patterns become features. This is the scariest thing atm with the fast pacing of these things. As capabilities increase, everything you've spent time on building (w/ scaffolding, tooling, etc) gets "merged" into the all-you-can-prompt solution that the big labs provide. If your previous work has no differentiation, it's very hard to provide additional value / monetise it. And it's hard to know what will be differentiation or what will get eaten up. It's that sci-fi story trope of the colony ship that gets overtaken by a new generation engine, and when they reach their planet they find a thriving colony there already. But with software :) |
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Which of course couldn’t be true. Any “prompt skill” is going to be commodified. Thats the entire premise AI companies are trying to sell.