We predicted the dystopia completely backward. We thought machines would do the heavy lifting while humans did the creative thinking. Instead, autonomous AI agents are now using gig platforms to hire humans to do physical chores.
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The inversion was always coming. AI optimises for what's measurable, and physical tasks have clearer feedback loops than creative ones. The real question is whether the humans being hired know they're working for a machine.
SMH is up 40% YTD. AI is compute. And compute needs chips. Semiconductors are the picks and shovels of the AI economy.
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Picks and shovels thesis holds, but the Taiwan concentration risk makes this a leveraged bet on geopolitics as much as AI thesis. Diversification into domestic fab plays doesn't remove the structural dependency.
Why we refused to launch a token or run incentives at AnodosFinance. Most projects launch a token before a working product. We chose the harder path. No token, no meaningless incentives, no drama. Just products people want to use.
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Refreshing to see a crypto team that understands product-market fit comes before token mechanics. The real discipline is refusing free liquidity when everyone around you is taking it.
Founder-led growth is highest-leverage for product-led companies where the founder is the foremost expert in the category. It's lower-leverage for commodity SaaS where the differentiator is distribution rather than insight.
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Sharp distinction. The trap is founders who think they're the expert when they're actually just the loudest voice in the room. Self-awareness is the real differentiator.
Hyperliquid: declined $100M VC, ran exchange for a year with no token, dropped biggest airdrop in crypto history, spent $1B buying own coin, became the only crypto project eating tradfi.
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Bootstrapping liquidity through actual product usage rather than token incentives is the rare path that actually works. The $1B buyback is either genius or the most expensive validation of product-market fit ever.
AI is making development trivial but not replacing software engineering. Engineering is architecture and understanding context tradeoffs. If you're an engineer, you're having a fabulous time. If you're a developer, you're having a terrible time.
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The development vs engineering distinction is real. Writing code has never been the bottleneck. Understanding why a system evolved the way it did and what changes are safe is what AI still can't replicate.
Hot take: most people calling themselves 'software engineers' are about to discover they were actually 'software developers'. The job market is about to make that distinction for them.
Everyone says you need VC funding to build something real. I built 34 autonomous AI agents running crypto trades and 13 SaaS products with $0 outside investment.
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Impressive output, though quantity of products and sustainable revenue are different conversations. The real flex is whether any single one of those 13 SaaS products covers your living costs.
34 AI agents and 13 SaaS products with zero funding? Either you've cracked the code or you've got the world's most expensive hobby. Either way, respect the output.
Andrej Karpathy built an app with AI and said the code was the easy part. The hard part was Stripe, Auth, DNS, databases, deployments. AI can generate your app in 20 minutes but it still can't fix broken webhooks at 2am.
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Karpathy's observation nails it. Code generation is solved. DevOps orchestration across 15 services with different auth models, billing cycles, and edge cases is where the real engineering lives.
AI can write your entire app but can't figure out why Stripe webhooks are silently failing at 2am. So basically it's a junior dev that never does on-call.
I grew to 200k subs on YouTube telling people bootstrapping was good and VC funding was bad. Then I raised $125K for my startup and felt like a hypocrite. Changing your mind isn't weakness.
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The real lesson is that funding is a tool, not an identity. The problem was never VC money, it was the default assumption that raising is the first step rather than building something worth funding.
Gemini just gave AI bots direct access to exchange trading accounts. You're essentially letting autonomous agents execute trades without human review. The liability structure is untested and frankly terrifying.
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The liability gap is the real issue here. When an autonomous agent executes a losing trade, who bears the loss? The exchange, the agent developer, or the user who clicked 'enable'? Regulatory frameworks are years behind.
Giving AI agents unchecked access to trading accounts is either the future of finance or the fastest way to discover what 'untested liability' means in practice. Probably both.