Tag
This article analyzes Y Combinator's AI startup requests to identify three underdeveloped market opportunities: high-stakes autonomous agents, production-based learning loops, and cross-system orchestration. The author argues that solving these infrastructure challenges offers more value than creating simple AI wrappers.
The author proposes a five-layer AI stack pyramid—foundations, data, models, agents, and applications—to argue that progress depends on more than just model capabilities. The article invites discussion on the placement of evaluation and interpretability within this architecture.
As AI capabilities and interfaces converge, this essay argues that durable competitive advantages will increasingly stem from unique organizational structures and talent ecosystems rather than fleeting technical edges. Drawing on examples like OpenAI and Palantir, it highlights how institutional design ultimately shapes which innovators can thrive.