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spacemadness parent
I think we’re going to have to deal with the stories of shareholders wetting themselves over more layoffs more than we’re going to see higher quality software produced. Everyone is claiming huge productivity gains but generally software quality and new products being created seem at best unchanged. Where is all this new amazing software? It’s time to stop all the talk and show something. I don’t care that your SQL query was handled for you, thats not the bigger picture, that’s just talk.

delusional
This has been an industry wide problem at silicon valley for years now. For all their talks of changing the world, what we've gotten the last decade has been taxi and hotel apps. Nothing truly revolutionizing.
> what we've gotten the last decade has been taxi and hotel apps. Nothing truly revolutionizing.

I’m not sure where you are from, but this is not my perspective from Northern California.

1. Apps in general, and Uber in particular, have very much revolutionized the part-time work landscape via gig work. There are plenty of criticisms of gig work if/when people try to do it full time, but as a replacement for part time work, it’s incredible. I always try to strike up a conversation with my uber drivers about what they like about driving, and I have gotten quite a few “make my own schedule” and “earn/save for special things” (e.g., vacations, hobby items, etc.). Many young people I know love the flexibility of the gig apps for part-time work, as the pay is essentially market rate or better for their skill set, and they get to set their own schedule.

2. AirBnB has revolutionized housing. It’s easier for folks to realize the middle class dream of buying an house and renting it out fractionally (by the room). I’ve met several people who have spun up a a few of these. Related, mid-term rentals (e.g., weeks or months rather than days or years) are much easier to arrange now than they were 20 years ago. AirBnBs have also created some market efficiency by pricing properties competitively. Note that I think that many of these changes are actually bad (e.g., it’s tougher to buy a house where I am), but it’s revolutionary nonetheless.

hippari2
Yeah but that's not tech, the positive are just result from legal loop holes. I would say though that Taxi companies now have proper app because Uber forces them to catch up with the tech. Calling taxi in the pre-Uber era was literally hell.
delusional
> Calling taxi in the pre-Uber era was literally hell.

We clearly live in two completely separate parts of the world. I'm from Denmark (where Uber ran away after being told they had to operate as a taxi company) and calling a taxi was never a problem for me. You called the dispatch, said roughly where you were, and they can by with a dude in a car who you then told where you wanted to go. By now the taxi companies have apps too, but the experience is roughly identical.

The prices suck, but that's not really a usability problem.

dasil003
Uber couldn’t exist before a critical mass had a smartphone with GPS in their pocket. I don’t see what the bar is if we don’t consider it revolutionary. Anything that goes mainstream is going to eventually feel pedestrian and watered down from a tech perspective. But if you look at how most people lived and worked 30 years ago to today it’s a massive change.
const_cast
The best part is those two things have only gotten worse over time. Turns out, they were never really that good of an idea, they just had money to burn and legislative holes to exploit. Now Uber is more expensive than Taxis ever were, and AirBNB is virtually useless now that they have to play the same legal ballgame as hotels. Oh, and that one is more expensive too.

Tech companies forget that software is easy, the real world is hard. Computers are very isolated and perfect environments. But building real stuff, in meatspace, has more variables than anyone can even conceptualize.

delusional
> But building real stuff, in meatspace, has more variables than anyone can even conceptualize.

and is also exactly what people want. Having and app is fine and maybe cool, but at some point what I want from my taxi company is to get in a real car with the person who is preferably not a murderer and drive somewhere. The app is not very valuable to me unless it somehow optimizes that desirable part of the exchange.

I've worked a few years in the enterprise now, and the same thing keeps popping up. Startups think they have some cool cutting-edge technology to sell, but we aren't buying technology. We will gladly pay you to take away some real life problem though, but that also means you have to own any problems with your software, since we will be paying for a service, not software.

Towaway69
An internet full of pointless advertising and the invention of adblocks to hide that advertising.

Digital devices that track everything you do, that then generated so much data that the advertising actually got worse. Thereby the data was collected with the promise that the adverts would get more appropriate.

Now comes AI to make sense of the data and the training data (I.e., the internet) is being swamped with AI content so that the training data for AIs is becoming useless.

I wonder what is being invented to remove all the AI content from the training data.

john2x
The revolution is happening at the top.
Top of what? It seems to be the same few people at the top for decades now.
zabzonk
And they are mostly sociopaths.
NitroPython
This really resonates with me, I want to see the bigger picture as well.
SwtCyber
It's one thing to speed up little tasks, another to ship something truly innovative
exclipy
I do see the AI agent companies shipping like crazy. Cursor, Windsurf, Claude Code... they are adding features as if they have some magical workforce of tireless AI minions building them. Maybe they do!
NitroPython
Alot of what Cursor, windsurf etc. kinda just feels like the next logical step you take with the invention of LLM's but doesn't actually feel like the greater system of software has changed all that much except the pure volume one individual can produce now.

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