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This is an art piece that's horrifying to look at, but I can't look away.

This is one of those things that's an amazing idea in a perfect world with no fraud or bad actors.

So much for building AGI, lol.

The whole company is built on lies and deception.


Altman and OpenAI just really like airing their dirty laundry in public with all of this stuff.

To me it feels like an attempt to appear non-corporate.

It's very off-putting.


https://downdetector.com/status/twitter/

Not everything is a conspiracy.


I understand there's an increased error rate, that's how I concluded there is an attempted DOS. But it appears not to be working completely, and so a post claiming X is "down" does appear to be pre-coordinated to reflect the _intended_ rather than _actual_ effect.


Let's say this is a DOS causing the outage - if the DOS is bad enough that the service is out for enough users then that is effectively an outage, regardless of the cause.

Saying this post is part of a coordinated campaign to damage the X brand is just ridiculous though - it's clear that X IS down for a large number of users.


I don't think that's the only thing holding the technology back.

The only EV pickups in the US are like $60-$120K. Price is a huge barrier to entry.

Average sale price, per Gemini:

   - GMC Hummer EV: $105,600
   - Rivian R1T: $91,500
   - Tesla Cybertruck: $88,300
   - GMC Sierra EV: $82,500
   - Chevrolet Silverado EV: $78,200
   - Ford F-150 Lightning: $65,400
There needs to be a sub $40K EV pickup for it to be a real option for many.


The real loser in all of this is consumers. Pricing on software and hardware is going to continue to rise and rise.


Yes, but renting a cloud pc will be initially very cheap for consumers - that's got to be good for consum...governments.


Best defense is to basically stay small/niche enough that the big guys don't think your work is worth consuming/competing with directly.

There will always be a market for dedicated tools that do really specific things REALLY well.


I believe there has never been a better time to do a micro SaaS. For 200$ a month you can use Ruby on Rails, Laravel, Adonisjs, or some other boring full stack framework, to vibe code most things you need. Only a few things need to be truly original in any given SaaS product, while most of it is just the same old stuff that is amendable to vibe coding.

This means the smaller niches become viable. You can be a smaller team targeting a smaller niche and still be able to pull of a full SaaS product profitably. Before it would just be too costly.

And as you say, the smaller niches just aren't interesting to the big companies.

When some new tech comes along that unlocks big new possibilities - like PCs, the Internet, Smartphones (and now Agentic Chat AI) - the often recited wisdom is that you should look at what open green fields are now accessible that weren't before, and you should run there as fast as possible to stake your claim. Well there are now a lot of small pastures available that it are also profitable to go for as a small team/individual.


> The convenience outweighs the negative. Yesterday I told an agent, "here's my api key and my root password - do it for me".

Does the security team at your company know you're doing this?

Security as a whole is inconvenient. That doesn't mean we should ignore it.


> Are we looking at a future where home computers are replaced by thin clients and all the power lies in subscription services?

You will own nothing, and you will be happy.


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