In the long run, yes. And that tends to be the end stage of behemoths. But in the mean time the juggernaut carries on, running on inertia, crushing everything in front of it.
If a 10 person startup has something better than android, you first offer them a couple of millions, and if they don’t accept it, use your power to crush them.
Maybe. I suppose many successful startups came along after better tools such as python/JavaScript/cloud hosting also made it dramatically cheaper to create a product it would have taken a behemoth before. See Dropbox as an example.
So gpt-4 is like another order of magnitude more productive a tool, similar to prior improvements.
In the long run, yes. And that tends to be the end stage of behemoths. But in the mean time the juggernaut carries on, running on inertia, crushing everything in front of it.
If a 10 person startup has something better than android, you first offer them a couple of millions, and if they don’t accept it, use your power to crush them.
Maybe. I suppose many successful startups came along after better tools such as python/JavaScript/cloud hosting also made it dramatically cheaper to create a product it would have taken a behemoth before. See Dropbox as an example.
So gpt-4 is like another order of magnitude more productive a tool, similar to prior improvements.