Brian Maucere
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
That there's a lot of disruption coming there.
And so this little article I was reading, it was one of the in one of the newsletters.
I don't know if you guys saw it could have been runway.
I'm just talking about how we will see disruption first there and then and then it will trickle out from there.
And I just thought that was a really great insight.
I hadn't really put thought to that before, but that totally makes sense is that you have these pockets of the world who, their economy thrives on the ability to have a lot of people who can work.
And maybe for Western countries, that might be considered cheap labor, but over in India, it might be a perfectly suitable wage, you hope, for that person working and living.
And it's going to be disrupting
people in those jobs because there's going to be less need for jobs if you can just simply put a couple agents on it and get it done now the the inverse of that is like they're saying an open clause somebody had done like a simple a simple application or whatever um in over four in over four minutes it touched 400 apis
And so there's that sort of runaway train problem with, whoa, whoa, whoa, we can't have that either.
So there obviously needs to be more advancement on the efficiency of ideas like open cloud or like multi-agents and how they're maybe confined to how many times they can open an API or whatever.
Because if you just give it free sort of free range, well, it doesn't really care that...
how many times it has to ping different areas, but of course I can get very, very expensive.
So I don't know that we're necessarily there yet.
I'm sure we're there in some places more than others.
I just thought it was an interesting conversation about, you know, Hey, yes, we think about like, I read the news and I say things about like the junior lawyers who maybe traditionally would have come in and, and just been doing grunt paperwork for a while looking at, you know, mergers and acquisition or whatever.
And that's going to go away.
But I hadn't really thought much about other parts of the world who have entire economies that are reliant on these lower wage positions that are probably going to get swept away too.
And what damage will that do?