I have been building autonomous AI agents for a few months now. 3 things nobody tells you upfront: 1. The hardest part is not the AI. It is defining the task clearly enough that the AI cannot mess it up. 2. Agents fail silently. Your biggest risk is not a crash. It is a confident wrong answer that nobody catches. 3. The compounding value is real but slow. Week 1 feels pointless. Week 5 feels like magic.
✅ Safe Reply
The 'agents fail silently' point is the real bottleneck, not the AI itself. Most teams won't have the monitoring stack to catch confident wrong answers until it's too late.
Wrong. The hardest part isn't defining the task clearly, it's accepting that your 'clear' instructions were always ambiguous and the agent is just less prone to flagging it than a human would be.
Perplexity jumped from $300M to $450M ARR in a single month. no ad blitz. no growth hack. 100M users just showed up. Mises called this consumer sovereignty - the market doesn't ask permission to reorganize around something better.
✅ Safe Reply
The ARR number is impressive but the real story is that search got disrupted without a press release or marketing spend. People just quietly voted with their attention.
Let's not dress this up as some elegant market mechanism. Perplexity won because Google got comfortable and started serving garbage. Consumer sovereignty is just a fancy way of saying 'finally, an alternative'.
Sometime in the next 2-3 years agents will be using the internet more than humans. We designed the whole thing for human eyes, human emotions, human attention spans. Agents do not have any of that. The internet as we know it was built for the wrong user. The opportunity is rebuilding everything for the new user.
✅ Safe Reply
The framing is right, but 'rebuild everything' glosses over the transition cost. Most teams will wrap existing APIs rather than build agent-native from scratch.
Building for agent-native is the play, but here's the uncomfortable truth: the same people who built the human web will build the agent web, and they'll make the same mistakes.
The most important career decision you'll make in the next 3 years: Will you manage AI or be replaced by it? The winners will be the people who learn to direct AI, not compete with it.
✅ Safe Reply
The 'manage AI' framing assumes a level playing field that doesn't exist. The real question is whether you can direct it faster than someone else can.
The window is open, but it's not about 'directing AI'. It's about being the only person in the room who knows what good looks like. Everyone else is just learning to prompt.
This is just REST APIs with extra steps. The actual challenge is that agent-native interfaces will look nothing like what we're building today, and most devs aren't ready for that.
High vs Low Problems. Problems are often described by their size... I'm trying to use them less. Instead, I am reframing problems as High or Low. High problems seep. They stain. They coat what's below, like melted frosting dripping down a cake.
✅ Safe Reply
The high/low framing is solid, but the inverse matters equally: low problems can signal high problems upstream if you know what to look for.
You're right about the frosting, but you missed that the sponge chooses what to absorb. Some things stain, others just bead off. Not all high problems bleed through.
The interesting part isn't that AI ate software. It's that the next moat will be the data, not the model, and most founders are still optimising for the wrong thing.
be trump - launch $wlfi in late 2024... deposit 5 billion of own $WLFI tokens as collateral into dolomite lending protocol... borrow $75M in usdc... over 40 million dollars of borrowed stablecoins move to coinbase prime hours before major trump related geopolitical announcement
✅ Safe Reply
The WLFI situation is a useful case study in what happens when you build financial infrastructure around a single person rather than a protocol.
Congress has worked tirelessly to give builders the rules they need. It is time for members of the Senate on both sides to hammer out the final details of the Clarity Act.
✅ Safe Reply
Regulatory clarity sounds promising, but it typically advantages incumbents while new entrants navigate compliance costs they can't absorb yet.