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Ask HN: Anyone making a living from a paid API?

200•meander_water•1d ago•151 comments

Ask HN: How Are Parents Who Program Teaching Their Kids Today?

35•laze00•2h ago•49 comments

Ask HN: What is the best LLM for consumer grade hardware?

229•VladVladikoff•2d ago•175 comments

Ask HN: Why reinvent front-end frameworks and static site builders?

4•keepamovin•17h ago•5 comments

Ask HN: What's the best AI for meme creation?

2•faangguyindia•15h ago•2 comments

Ask HN: GEtting a Remote Job in the US

6•gsablewskinunes•1d ago•11 comments

Ask HN: How do I learn practical electronic repair?

11•juanse•1d ago•11 comments

What motivates you to contribute to open source projects?

17•rizs12•2d ago•13 comments

Ask HN: Hardware for 1k RPS?

5•gsky•1d ago•3 comments

Volume label field can't be longer than "VolumeLabel" when formatting in Windows

5•eisolo•1d ago•3 comments

How to improve interview skill?

6•gogo61•1d ago•10 comments

Ask HN: How do you improve code for future AI?

2•tmaly•1d ago•4 comments

Ask HN: Lisp eval vs. Lisp macros. Are they the same underlying concept?

9•behnamoh•2d ago•11 comments

Ask HN: Anyone struggling to get value out of coding LLMs?

340•bjackman•6d ago•276 comments

Tell HN: Namecheap pre-purchasing searched domain names?

20•iamtoomas•2d ago•28 comments

Ask HN: How are people using ChatGPT to increase productivity in personal life?

14•shreythecray•2d ago•13 comments

Ask HN: How do you set up a new dev machine? (2025 edition)

11•daryllxd•2d ago•8 comments

Ask HN: Career Plateau: Looking for Advice on How to Break Through

6•vaderyondu•3d ago•9 comments

Ask HN: Why doesn't Google offer POS credit card reader like Square?

2•Openai2•1d ago•5 comments

Tasks Per Day – A minimalist productivity app that works

8•TerrenceTian•2d ago•4 comments

Tell HN: eBay doesn't allow changing country

7•peterburkimsher•1d ago•5 comments

Ask HN: Management wants to talk to my Datalake. What's the best way to do this?

4•GaiusCoffee•2d ago•1 comments

Can we take a moment to appreciate what kind of web experience we are building?

11•tomdesantis•2d ago•8 comments

Ask HN: Why that many more US-based companies are hiring "US-only" remote?

18•soneca•4d ago•19 comments

Ask HN: New Economics of Software Development Lifecycle

4•breckenedge•2d ago•10 comments

Ask HN: Building LLM apps? How are you handling user context?

30•marcospassos•6d ago•18 comments

Ask HN: How do you stay motivated when hunting for a job?

7•tombert•2d ago•25 comments

Best Buy is selling a $400 "digital Ethernet" cable for "cleaner, clearer sound"

16•34679•4d ago•16 comments

Ask HN: What tools do you use to discover competitors?

4•flippyhead•2d ago•10 comments

Self-Hosted Cloudflare Alternatives

2•andyong71•2d ago•4 comments
Open in hackernews

Ask HN: Is it all becoming ChatGPT now?

4•doctorpangloss•1d ago

Comments

barrenko•1d ago
Yes. Next question.
johncoltrane•1d ago
FWIW… Tech fads used to be pretty limited to tech circles. You would be bombarded for a few months by content about this or that on HN and elsewhere without ever hearing about it on the subway or at a dinner. Crypto kind of crossed the line at some point, but it is still a niche thing. ChatGPT and that whole ML-marketed-as-AI thing, on the other hand… it is everywhere.

"Get rich quick" schemes are somewhat attractive to the masses but nothing seems to beat those new "don't do the work you are paid for" schemes.

eddythompson80•1d ago
I don't if I agree. Crypto, metaverse/vr, wearables, 3d printing, smart homes (iot), gig apps, smart assistants (the ChatGPT pre-alpha version), etc are all examples of fads that spanned tech and mainstream culture.

Sure, the NoSQL fad or the Rust craze didn't spill into pop culture, because that wouldn't make sense. Even something like html5/modern web while it had tremendous impact on pop culture and what the mainstream expectation of a website is like in 2025 vs 2006, the mainstream culture never really cared or commented on it for obvious reasons. The most it got is someone saying "something something, Steve Jobs was right about Flash, something something, html5, the web"

I'm NOT saying that AI/LLM are like the hype for wearables or the metaverse. Not at all. Just point that spills from tech into mainstream culture are common, they just have to make sense. tech impacts the internet, and the internet impacts mainstream culture.

bruce511•1d ago
Certainly there are lots of fads that went mainstream then flittered away. 3D TV to name but one. VR seems to be another. Generally categorized as "solutions looking for problems".

Crypto falls into that camp (it solves some problems for a small subset, notably criminals, but relies on 'bigger fool' ideas to appeal to the man in the street.)

On the other hand some fads are society changing. Phones being one. PCs in general being another. (I'm old enough to remember a time when all records etc were on paper.) Inagjbe z life without Visicalc (or Excel.)

AI is here to stay. But remember how the internet was hyped in the 90s? Sure it'll change the world, but it's too early to predict how or when. But clearly we've entered a new era and if will be interesting to see how it plays out.

It has very obvious limits - but the nature of every hype cycle is to ignore those limits and predict grandiose futures. (The phone was supposed to kill the PC, then the tablet was etc.) But it's only by trying it everything that we can find out for sure, what those limits are.

herbst•1d ago
> I don't have anything to hide, so bitcoin is for criminals
eddythompson80•1d ago
> But remember how the internet was hyped in the 90s? Sure it'll change the world, but it's too early to predict how or when. But clearly we've entered a new era and if will be interesting to see how it plays out.

Yes, I actually think we can have pretty good guess looking at how the internet evolved. It's really not how it was envisioned in the 90s. A lot of people knew it was gonna be big of course, but they couldn't tell you how. There is the type of applications/services the internet enabled, and how do you actually make monetize the internet.

Google, Amazon, Netflix, Microsoft, Apple, etc all had different "takes" on how the internet was gonna be big and how they will monetize it. The actual services they provide are things that WAS correctly envisioned and was "known" in the 90s. I remember people talking about the "future where you could have":

- On-Demand video streaming service

- News, weather, and communication (email, IM, chat, video conference) services

- Commerce

You could go to videos from the 90s on YouTube and see many people (including Bill Gates himself) easily say "One day you'll be doing all your shopping online. You can watch any movie in the world in a second. You can chat with your loved ones around the world in video in real time and send and receive messages from them instantaneously whenever and whereever you like. Everyone familiar with computers and networks knew that future was possible. It was a matter of timeline and when the technology/cost curves would cross for it to work.

How you monetize that though wasn't exactly known/agreed on. Monetizing a commerce and paid services is straightforward, and you just need the technology to be ready for the scenario you wanted to achieve.

Google on the other hand put all their cards on Ads for example. Microsoft initially thought they can just sell the software to run email or hosting for a web services, but they also dabbled in Ads, paid services (cloud and otherwise)

Not sure what the similar verticals in AI will be. It's not Application vs Monetization. I think it's something else.