Anyone feel like OpenAI is acting like Google lately? They announce a lot of products/features and then kill them when they realize people don't use them[0]. They also announce products way before they're ready for launch, just like google[1].
- GPT Plugins? (HN went crazy over this, they called it the "app store moment"...)
- GPTs?!
- Schedules?
- Operator?
- The original "codex" model?
[0]: I know, the diff is that google kills them despite knowing that many people use them.
[1]: I know, the diff is that google sometimes doesn't launch the announced product at all...
yeah the custom GPT announcement was literally a carbon copy of steve jobs announcing the app store down to the mannerisms and tics. You could tell they were doing it to give VC and private equity the pavlov bell "ring ring! this company is apple!" and remember the sora announcement just a couple weeks ago? oh you guys are tiktok and instagram reels now too? cool...
everything that openAI does is laser focused on valuation valuation valuation
of course it's a weird form of valuation because like remember when these guys are a non profit? lol
It is weird though, the "I'm a bigtechco dance" seems to be working, even though the economics on providing LLM services do not in any way justify the valuation.
they have like five five credible competitors who are right behind them BTW
> yeah the custom GPT announcement was literally a carbon copy of steve jobs announcing the app store down to the mannerisms and tics.
And then they nabbed Jony Ive of all people for their hardware project, with Altman stating that Steve Jobs would be "damn proud" of what they're working on. It's about as subtle as a brick to the face.
> everything that openAI does is laser focused on valuation valuation valuation
idk it seems like a company filled with product and engineering where people are thinking of cool product ideas and shipping them. They don’t have to all hit, but it doesn’t seem bad to try them.
the company charter is not product and engineering it's "we are going to invent THE machine, the singular fulcrum upon which the infinite lever of history, the transcendent union of man and machine, the birth of a new GOD, rests."
I mean, ok, you're product and engineering, fine. You get $20/mo out of your million or so paying users and $200/mo from a small handful of freaks. what does that mean for the valuation? what does that do for sama's patek phillipe collection?? nothing good I assure you. the AI product and engineering landscape is insanely competitive, like actually competitive.
that's what I'm saying, the circle doesn't square here.
I remember custom GPTs also being touted as the "app store moment" for ChatGPT. OpenAI even had big plans to pay creators of custom GPTs, but it seems like that never really materialized. I think people quickly realized that custom GPTs are more or less useless, and certainly not something that would ever drive revenue.
They're doing a lot of cool experiments and don't mind discarding them when they feel like LLMs are moving in a different direction. I don't know why people are complaining here. Every time I read AI posts here there's like an army of commentators that seem to have little AI usage.
building, shipping, and then discarding when it becomes apparent that the product doesn't have a future, is about as good as it gets. most businesses have trouble doing just one, let alone all three.
What's with the assumption that everything needs to be a "moat"? Seems much more important/interesting to wire up society with cohesive tooling according to Metcalfe's law, rather than building stuff designed to separate and segment knowledge.
I think its funny how its a Chromium-based browser, and the live demo involved automating Gmail and Google Sheets. Google literally runs the world; we're just playing on their playground.
It's not that weird. Both of those examples are probably some of the most common automations people will be using.
Gmail and Google Sheets has not cannibalized the existence of alternate email providers or spreadsheet programs, we can relax a bit on those fronts. AdSense, on the other hand...
Maybe it depends on a person, but I find some of their products quite useful. For example, I use a few of my own custom GPTs almost daily and have a few scheduled tasks running.
> They announce a lot of products/features and then kill them when they realize people don't use them. They also announce products way before they're ready for launch
Agreed. They really should have named this product Atlas *shrug* ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
- GPT Plugins? (HN went crazy over this, they called it the "app store moment"...)
- GPTs?!
- Schedules?
- Operator?
- The original "codex" model?
[0]: I know, the diff is that google kills them despite knowing that many people use them.
[1]: I know, the diff is that google sometimes doesn't launch the announced product at all...