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Posted by u/Dicey84 6 months ago
Ask HN: Is the rise of AI tools going to be the next 'dot com' bust?
For context, attended an Australian based tech expo / conference recently and whilst at the show (I’m sure there were marginally more) only two exhibitors didn’t have the term AI or Agent in there pitch or stand marketing..

And for reference, the two companies that stood out for non-AI capabilities made monitor stands.

This got me dwelling back into the post title, is this influx of AI tools going to be sustainable, or is there going to be an impending crash leaving only the ‘best and brightest’ on the other side?

alberth · 6 months ago
I think it’s similar in that…

- Everyone knew the Internet (and now AI) was going to be transformational.

- It was clear it would reshape economies and open up entirely new possibilities.

- But no one really knew what the killer use case would be, or how big any given Internet (now AI) business might get.

So, like a gold rush, huge amounts of money poured in, and everyone hoped their idea would turn into the next massive market.

——

There’s also parallels between NVIDIA and Cisco.

When the Internet was in its infancy, Cisco stock soured because the thinking was that Cisco networking is what’s ultimately going to power the Internet. (Much like how NVIDIA powers AI).

But what happened was that, new networking companies entered the market and it was found that the Internet economics was so large it overshadowed the relatively small networking needed for it in comparison.

matt_s · 6 months ago
Cisco still exists and was a winner for a long time. The company that emerged hugely successful out of the dot com era was Amazon, they dominate ecommerce today.

Take a look further back to the Personal Computer era in the 80's into early 90's. There were tons of PC makers out there, IBM became dominant but they haven't been in that business for a long time now. Microsoft was the enormous winner coming out of that.

When grandma starts talking about GPU's and NVIDIA stock, this AI bubble might be at its peak. I think if history rhymes with past lyrics (that whole history doesn't repeat but rhymes thing), its more likely that a software company (OpenAI, Google, Microsoft) is going to be the dominant player emerging from a potential bubble burst.

A potential pin-prick to the bubble (looking into my crystal ball): pricing for AI - once companies realize their runways are running out and they want to turn a profit of some kind to stakeholders they will need to raise prices to offset the energy and hardware build outs. Customers may realize they aren't getting the productivity to offset those increased costs and hold back budgets on AI spend. Or chip tariffs depending on TACO volatility.

alberth · 6 months ago
And note: it took Cisco 25-years to recoup its market cap bubble from its high of 2000.

https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/CSCO/

agent008t · 6 months ago
By late 2001, Amazon share price collapsed by 94% from it's peak in late 1999! It did, however, fully recover by late 2009.
porridgeraisin · 6 months ago
This.

I am still thinking and trying to figure out what the new concepts i.e social media, streaming, etc, of the AI era will be. There are of course the extrapolations of existing concepts, e.g shopping just like it adapted to the internet world will adapt to the AI world and you'll have a few companies there -- equivalents of uber, amazon, zomato, etc (or maybe those companies themselves).

Products with no margin such as translation will of course get a million times better, but I mean in terms of economic value.

takinola · 6 months ago
5% of my social media feed is AI generated. I can easily imagine a completely AI generated feed that is custom tailored to my interests. The future is already here. It is just unevenly distributed.
scarface_74 · 6 months ago
The difference is that Cisco gear uses industry standard open protocols that anyone can duplicate. Nvidia’s current moat is CUDA.

But Amazon, Google, Tesla and to a lesser extent Microsoft are all creating their own chips to lessen their dependence on Nvidia

spacebanana7 · 6 months ago
There's a persistent pessimism - almost to the point of paranoia - in tech from the trauma of the dot come bust. People fear waves of mass layoffs and 99% reductions in the value of their companies.

In reality most things go in an S curve and the excitement fades in a rather boring way. People were worried about bubbles in 2016, but they never really happened.

There was never a mobile bust, or a social bust, or a big data bust. These things just got boring after a while and the valuations stabilised. Sometimes companies went bust and sometimes they kept growing, but the super exponential growth in validation stopped. And we moved on to talking about the next thing.

ratg13 · 6 months ago
AI is going to create endless jobs by allowing everyone to make a huge mess.

We are currently in the early phase where people are creating code messes with little oversight and future people will be expected to build on them, which will either take expanded effort or complete re-writes from scratch.

The quality of all products will suffer for the foreseeable future.

It's now a several times a day occurrence for me of trying to help someone figure out a problem, and when I ask them why they did that, the answer is always that the AI told them to.

If the people that are using these tools don't know right from wrong, it's a recipe for disaster.

This problem is amplified in non-technical fields where people are creating tools for businesses without even the knowledge of what a code review is.

AI will be around forever, and the problems it will create are immeasurable, but unfortunately, it will likely always be seen as the solution to the problem as well.

beardyw · 6 months ago
> is there going to be an impending crash leaving only the ‘best and brightest’ on the other side?

The way it usually goes is that the prize goes to best real life application. It's not entirely clear what that is just yet. I was involved in web commerce in the 90s and there was a good bit of casting around looking for applications. And not really any mobile use, though I did a bit of that too. It's hard to visualise the future.

prohobo · 6 months ago
Yes and no, for the respective reasons:

- Yes, I think people are already wary and have "AI fatigue" from all the chatbots and AI add-ons people have released over the past 2 years. It's already hard to convince people that your AI project isn't a wrapper flip.

- No, it's fundamentally useful in almost every industry, context, and environment.

Very similar to the 2000's internet on the one hand, and orders of magnitude more useful on the other. The difference that I see happening is like "AI literacy" taking over and thousands of failed startups getting immediately overrun by thousands of viable startups.

aynyc · 6 months ago
Personally, I don't believe they are the same. I view AI as the next natural update to worker productivity like PC and windows. It's like the old days where people put MS Office on their resume as a skill, prompt engineering or whatever AI is gonna be exactly like that.
feczeri_c · 6 months ago
This feels like a very realistic take and is probably already occurring given what you can see on LinkedIn and the like: people are using “prompt engineer” in their job titles ancillary to their primary role.
DanielHB · 6 months ago
I was too young at the time, but people who were there at internet companies in the 2000s what was it like? Did people think the same way as today where there is too money going in and not enough value coming out? Was it obvious to insiders only or to the general public as well?

These days it seems even a significant porting of the general public is aware of the overhype. But back then internet wasn't much of a thing so information didn't spread as fast so I imagine a lot of people didn't even know there was a huge hype around the internet.

scarface_74 · 6 months ago
I was working in Atlanta GA for boring old profitable enterprise companies and the environment didn’t change at all.

I started working in 1996. By 2001, I was making $70K. The company I worked for did bill printing for utility companies. To put that in perspective, I had my first house built in the suburbs for $175k. This was well within the rule of thumb of not spending more than 3.5x income for a house.

On the other hand, I didn’t have that much invested in the stock market. The entire dot com bust was a shrug and curiousity to me while it was happening.

On the other hand, the real estate crash in 2008…

While all of my latest projects (cloud consulting) have in some form another involved “AI”, they are really just AWS API calls that are much easier using Gen AI LLMs. But could have been done with much more development and training of ML models before.

When the AI bust happens, it will have the same affect on me - none. Until businesses stop needing people who know how to translate the latest tech into business value, my career is safe.

guestbest · 6 months ago
It didn’t last past 2001 (lasted from 1996ish to 2001) and much of the money was stock and not real money so the paper millionaires never had the money since it never vested by the time they were hired until the time the dot com company went bust. VA Linux was a prime example of a company that didn’t have a profitable exit and evaporated with the market correction that I remember started in late 2000. The 9/11 attacks in NYC erased any chance of a dot com recovery.

Everyone knew there was this thing called the internet because cable broadband was being deployed everywhere and being sold for less than cost. That company whose name I couldn’t remember went bust I think around 2003(?) and I think AT&T took them over and doubled the price.

I remember someone showing me that you could do to domino’s pizza website and get a free pizza (unlimited orders) just for going to their website. I think that was 2002-3(?). There were lost of giveaways during that era. It all came to a stop as the internet grew and costs pilled up more so than the dot com bust.

oinfoalgo · 6 months ago
No, it is not the same at all.

I worked at a small investment firm in college during the time and I remember the portfolio manager doing the portfolio allocation for a retirement plan. Randomly picking Janus mutual funds in the hall right before he went to lunch.

I remember the secretary complaining in December 1999 how she knew a secretary at another firm that got rich from an IPO.

There has just never been a level a speculation like in late 1999 that I have ever experienced. This was over geocities level webpages on dial up modems with almost no business plans to even make money.

HeyLaughingBoy · 6 months ago
I do miss it somewhat. At the time, a selected number of us on my product team were given retention bonuses because the company didn't want us being poached for internet jobs. I'm not complaining, because it was free money but anyone wanting to poach us away would probably have just offered more.

OTOH, I remember being in SF in spring 2001 for Embedded Systems Conference and overhearing a couple of Web developers on the same bus talking about how everyone they knew was losing their jobs. So I guess by that time, the end was in sight! Our bonuses continued for at least a year after that.

api · 6 months ago
It was largely the same. A ton of Internet companies struggled to find a way to make money after the initial land grab, and most failed. The hype was breathless and over the top.

A lot of late 90s to early 2000s hype has come true. Today we have substantial companies with no physical office and that have never used physical mail, delivery for everything, and ubiquitous connectivity for devices. It just took about 15-20 more years to get there.

I suspect we will have AI replacing programmers on non-trivial and non-slop projects in 15-20 years.

The social optimism of the late 90s and 2000s about the Internet was mostly wrong though. We didn’t really anticipate either surveillance capitalism or mass disinformation breaking whole segments of the population off from reality. Like most well intentioned people we had trouble even imagining the uses that “dark triad” personality types would have for the technology.

The pessimism around AI is, I think, an overcorrection from the excessive optimism around the net and the web.

telesilla · 6 months ago
It felt like we all had an equal chance at success back then. Now it's limited to those with enough money or very rare luck. The riches of today were sown almost in the first decade of the 2000s, it seems. Who today will get rich from AI starting from nothing? (not that wealth is the end goal, but in the context of this thread it is)
kbrkbr · 6 months ago
I find LLMs incredibly useful for some very specific cases: summarizing text for example. Even dialogues to learn something.

Now there are n use cases (10 <= n <= 50?). There is no real moat.

What we don't know is, if there will be significant advances, and how useful they will be. But we also don't know that for any other area.

What we do know however is that breakthroughs are rare.

Everybody is now in the hype train. AI here, AI there. I find most of it just annoying.

My guess is this that a reckoning is more probable than the new super feature.