Shipping a bot or an agent feels productive, yet that feeling can hide a missing question about the user. People complain about small inefficiencies but still move on with their day. They rarely search for a new tool unless the friction keeps returning.
On the one hand, you are absolutely right. On the other hand, though, I do get the kind of manic joy in being able to build what feels like powerful solutions by yourself. I see this movement as early internet days where people are in love with the tools and want to spend time just playing around, building and launching stuff that might not really have a solid problem to solve. But out of this will emerge the new wave of how software / workflows are built and consumed.
Shipping a bot or an agent feels productive, yet that feeling can hide a missing question about the user. People complain about small inefficiencies but still move on with their day. They rarely search for a new tool unless the friction keeps returning.
On the one hand, you are absolutely right. On the other hand, though, I do get the kind of manic joy in being able to build what feels like powerful solutions by yourself. I see this movement as early internet days where people are in love with the tools and want to spend time just playing around, building and launching stuff that might not really have a solid problem to solve. But out of this will emerge the new wave of how software / workflows are built and consumed.
great insights!