Tag
The CEO of a major AI company (valued at $20B) states that the model is no longer the product, signaling a strategic shift in the AI industry.
A 2012 interview clip resurfaces in which Jeff Bezos defends the Kindle's single-purpose design against the iPad, arguing that his audience values focused reading over multimedia features.
This article questions the imminent arrival of perfect AI agents by pointing out Google's continued investment in physical office buildings worldwide, suggesting a disconnect between AI hype and corporate strategy.
An observation that many AI startups may be unaware of their financial losses, highlighting a potential issue in the startup ecosystem.
A reflection on why human connection and trust remain irreplaceable competitive advantages in an AI-driven world.
This article examines why Google, Apple, and Microsoft failed to launch a ChatGPT-like product first despite their vast resources and AI talent, and explores how OpenAI kept the breakthrough secret until release.
A commentary on the subsidized pricing of AI APIs, warning that current costs are below actual expenses and may rise significantly, posing risks to businesses built on these assumptions.
A reflective piece on how AI agents, if not infused with a company's unique operational reasoning, may cause businesses to converge toward generic behavior, eroding differentiation regardless of distinct products or logos.
A web designer shares how he automated lead generation, website analysis, and redesign drafts using AI tools like Apollo, Swokei, and Claude Code, shifting his role to focus solely on meetings and closing deals.
Mark Cuban highlights that companies struggle with AI implementation, not access. Data from tracking 70+ AI tool categories shows success rates vary dramatically by category, from 60% for development tools to 20% for marketing.
The article argues that the primary challenge of AI in 2026 is not technical development but communicating probabilistic outputs to traditional stakeholders accustomed to deterministic guarantees, requiring skills in explanation and persuasion.
A Twitter thread argues that AI commoditizes yesterday's competence, creating sameness and increasing demand for human differentiation through narrative framing and organizational worldview.
An interview with Martin Weiss provides advice for SaaS companies entering the German, Austrian, and Swiss markets, emphasizing a risk-first approach and the influence of IT departments.
An analysis of how Google, OpenAI, and Anthropic are adjusting their AI model pricing strategies as cash constraints and high capex spending drive price increases, ending the era of subsidized AI.
This article argues that selling AI tools alone leads to a race to the bottom, and instead recommends selling outcomes by using AI to deliver existing services more efficiently, highlighting a shift from builders to operators.
swyx reflects on Sam Altman's idea of building businesses that improve as AI models improve, linking it to the emerging concept of Agent Labs, and notes a clear correlation with revenue spikes in Q4 2025.
Amazon launches Amazon Supply Chain Services, opening its multimodal freight, automated warehousing, and last-mile delivery network to all businesses. The move follows Amazon's pattern of turning internal cost centers into external services, as it did with Marketplace and AWS.
Joe Lonsdale shares Peter Thiel's 'one thing' rule emphasizing the power of focus in business, arguing that concentrating on a single strategy yields convex returns.
This opinion piece argues that Sam Altman's ego and misguided vision caused OpenAI's decline, contrasting it with Anthropic's more pragmatic enterprise-focused strategy that prioritizes infrastructure and developer tools over walled gardens.
The article discusses how non-AI service companies (VA/BPO firms, web agencies, local consultancies) are becoming effective distribution channels for AI products, offering lower customer acquisition costs and higher retention compared to direct sales.