SaaS didn't disrupt spreadsheets, it just gave people the opportunity to get the processes out of spreadsheets that never should have been there in the first place. What we are seeing today from LLMs is another flavor of how SaaS fixed overloaded spreadsheets: LLMs are fixing SaaS solutions that never should have been SaaS in the first place.
Yet neither spreadsheets nor SaaS is defunct. They are just getting refined down to their actual use case. AI also has finite use cases, but are currently in the part of the hype cycle where all kinds of crap in thrown in regardless of whether or not it is really the correct solution.
Some day in the future, something new will come along and diminish LLMs in this same way, when everything that never should have been LLM-driven in the first place will move along to the new thing and get its chance to be done correctly.
SaaS didn't disrupt spreadsheets, it just gave people the opportunity to get the processes out of spreadsheets that never should have been there in the first place. What we are seeing today from LLMs is another flavor of how SaaS fixed overloaded spreadsheets: LLMs are fixing SaaS solutions that never should have been SaaS in the first place.
Yet neither spreadsheets nor SaaS is defunct. They are just getting refined down to their actual use case. AI also has finite use cases, but are currently in the part of the hype cycle where all kinds of crap in thrown in regardless of whether or not it is really the correct solution.
Some day in the future, something new will come along and diminish LLMs in this same way, when everything that never should have been LLM-driven in the first place will move along to the new thing and get its chance to be done correctly.
The week that investors freaked out because of a set of prompts on a github repo.