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by 7777777phil
115 days ago
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API prices dropped 97% in two years so the model layer is already a commodity. The question is which context layer actually sticks. The OpenClaw example in the article (400K lines to 4K) is a nice proof point for what happens when context replaces code. I've been arguing for some time now that it's the "organizational world model," the accumulated process knowledge unique to each company that's genuinely hard to replicate. I did a full "report" about the six-layer decomposition here: https://philippdubach.com/posts/dont-go-monolithic-the-agent... |
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If LLMs are going to make intelligence a commodity in some sense, where does the value end up accruing will be the question. Picks/shovels companies and all the end user case products being delivered? Mainframes value didn't primarily accrue to DEC. PCs value didn't really accrue to IBM. Internets value didn't accrue to Netscape. Mobiles value didn't only accrue to Apple.
One reminder that new efficiency / greatly lowered costs sometimes doesn't replace work (or at least not 1-1) but simply makes things that were never economical possible. Example you hear about AI agents that will basically behave like a personal assistant. 99% of the rich world cannot afford a human personal assistant today, but I guess if it was a service as part of their Apple Intelligence / Google something / Office365 subscription they'd use it.
We seem to be continually creating new types of jobs. Only a few generations ago, 75% of people worked on farms. Farm jobs still exist you just don't need so many people.
The type of work my father and grandfather did still exist. My father's job didn't really exist in his father's time. The work I do did not exist as options during their careers. The next generation will be doing some other type of work for some other type of company that hasn't been imagined yet.