The chat box was never the right interface for AI
Summary
The author argues that the chat box interface for AI is outdated and inconvenient, advocating for proactive, context-aware AI tools. The post highlights OpenClaw as evidence of demand for better interfaces and promotes clarko.ai.
Similar Articles
OpenClaw has outgrown chat, hear me out
The author discusses the limitations of managing AI agent workflows via chat interfaces like Telegram with OpenClaw, advocating for dedicated dashboards and standardized UIs. They highlight emerging tools like Paperclip and Multica that aim to solve agent management issues.
The more I use AI for research, the less I want a linear chat thread
The author argues that linear chat interfaces are inefficient for complex research, advocating instead for canvas-based AI tools like Flowith that support persistent, non-linear workflows.
Early AI chat interfaces remind me of command line thinking. I wonder when the GUI equivalent shows up.
A reflection on how early AI chat interfaces resemble command-line interaction patterns, and a speculation about when a GUI-like paradigm shift will emerge for AI interactions, where the AI can directly observe and act on the user's context.
What if AI systems weren't chatbots?
This paper critiques the dominance of chatbot interfaces in AI, arguing they have structural downsides and societal harms, and proposes alternative pluralistic system designs.
The era of the "AI Chatbox" is officially dying. 2026 is all about background infrastructure.
The article argues that AI is shifting from chat-based interfaces to autonomous background agents that operate without human hand-holding, marking a transition from prompting an assistant to managing a digital assembly line.