@andrewpprice AI automating technical work is a mixed blessing.
Technical skills were a filter; they required commitment and rewarded specificity.
Now, everyone needs raw creativity and vision just to start.
But not everyone wants that, and not everyone can do it.
This is an exaggerated demo video, and this product can't exist:
1. You can't fit the necessary computational power in such a small body.
2. I don't think the wide FOV, the screen, and the display technology can be as advertised. We're not there yet.
How many more model releases do we need for folks to realize we are not getting to magical superintelligence with what we got?
How many times do you have to see a model benchmaxxing to realize Humanity's Last Exam is a freaking idiotic name and that answering questions on it doesn't tell us shit about the true intelligence of the model?
How many models do we have to see demonstrating superficial intelligence but utterly failing at long running, contextual understanding for people to wake up and realize that AI is just another tool?
A good tool, a useful tool, a wonderful tool but not magic and not the end of all jobs and not the end of humanity or any other absurd fantasy of fools and dreamers.
Fool me once, shame on you.
Fool me twice, shame on me.
I honestly don’t know at what point it’s not the product’s fault but distribution. One of the hardest things when starting a business is knowing when to stop because there’s no demand, or maybe you're just distributing it wrong.
It’s very delicate to navigate that.
Been diving into how the economy works, and it's wild how it's this intricate mix of psychology, math, and human behavior. Fascinating and almost impossible to fully grasp.
Comparison isn’t a flaw — it’s a tool.
Used well, it shows you the path.
Used poorly, it builds resentment and low self-worth.
The tool isn’t bad. The user just has to be careful.
You don’t need to be the richest or most successful person to feel good about yourself.
But you do need to stop tying your worth to someone else’s life.
That’s a losing game.
There’s a difference between:
• “He has more than me, and that sucks.”
vs
• “He has more than me — and I can learn something from that.”
Only one of these builds you up.
Not all comparison is bad.
If it inspires action, it’s fuel.
If it destroys your self-worth, it’s poison.
The difference is in how you feel after comparing not in the act itself.