I wholeheartedly agree--the hype has become toxic, just like in 2001 when the bubble burst. I think the author overestimates what will be salvageable from this. What I witnessed back in 2001-2003 was beyond comprehension. Find someone who worked for Northern Telecom back then to explain their experience of not only losing their job, but also their retirement (the entire 401K was in company stock). The former workers I encountered still lived in denial about the stock's worthlessness even into 2005, but it was finally, inevitably de-listed and the last remnants of those dead 401Ks was swept away.
In RTP, the amount of office space that was built out has never been fully utilized to this very day.
These tech bubbles come and go, but leave enormous craters of destruction in their wake.
windexh8er · 6h ago
> These tech bubbles come and go, but leave enormous craters of destruction in their wake.
They also leave a select few propped up to move on to their next, entitled, adventure [0].
> It could simply be a tool, and we could get back to the real, unglamorous, but ultimately more rewarding work of using it to build better things.
I agree completely from a developer point of view, as for it being a bubble.. I'm not sure. It seems that it's a couple of companies enticing people to integrate things into their system so deeply that later, they can name their price and dictate their terms so that all technology falls in line with how they want things to play out.
We can see it already happening with VC investment not touching anything that doesn't have AI integrated.
Less innovation and creativity from smaller startups means less competition, which is great for business.
dasil003 · 6h ago
Feels a little like AWS in that regard, no?
bilekas · 4h ago
In the sense of hosting and "cloud" when it was the craze at the time, yes. Absolutely. But what you developed and ran on the aws platform was not dictated by aws. If it didn't suit, you could adhoc it.
Great example though, so many companies grew from the IAC movement. Those were startups though, doing what Amazon probably didn't have the resources to do themselves and also didn't need to.
This AI craze feels to hit at a bit of a lower level, I feel awful for any junior or new Devs entering the market.
Edit for clarity : Hashicorps terraform wouldn't be here without making aws infra easier.
mycall · 18h ago
A bubble assumes there is a bell curve to the system. So far, all graphs show it is going up, either linear or curving upwards. This shows there hasn't been a hint (yet) at slowing down. Until there is some sign, don't assume a bubble.
ath3nd · 9h ago
I wholeheartedly disagree. We have already for some time plateaued both in terms of LLM model usefulness and in terms of efficiency.
You can already see some of the bigger players trying to squeeze out more money out of their victims, pardon, users, in order to maintain at least the illusion of a future where they are profitable. We also see some players eg Apple give up on the race, and some other players, eg Microsoft, Google and OpenAI switch personnel and positions in the race, which should be a good signal it's a mined out field and they are scrapping to be the one that gets the few remaining spoils before it all crumbles down. Very bearish on LLMs.
mountainriver · 6h ago
I would challenge you to prove that with data
antithesizer · 3h ago
You could prove it yourself if you actually care whether or not it's true and aren't just positioning yourself in an imaginary debate so you can claim "burden of proof". If what they're saying is true then it will still be true whether any proof is posted by them here or not.
mediumsmart · 15h ago
Not going to happen, this bubble knows what it’s doing.
ksec · 12h ago
The AI "bubble" if you call it a bubble, it currently provides most of the oxygen for transistor improvements. Had it not been AI, Smartphone and PC alone would not be able to scale the 2 - 2.5 years improvement cycle alone.
And as someone who have seen the PC, Internet and Smartphone cycle. I will say ChartGPT ( or AI ) adoption cycle is way faster than anything I have seen.
d00mB0t · 18h ago
"It has become less a field of engineering and more of a speculative gold rush, complete with a quasi-religious fervor that is completely disconnected from the reality of what these tools can actually do."
tim333 · 2h ago
>The core of the problem is the mythology. You have chief executives and venture capitalists acting like high priests, delivering sermons from conference stages about the imminent arrival of this ill-defined "Artificial General Intelligence".
A lot of the AGI prediction is a fairly mundane business of extrapolating Moore's law like growth in computing and comparing it to the human brain. I don't think calling it mythology from high priests is a very accurate appraisal.
paulpauper · 18h ago
Unlike past bubbles, there are only a handful of publicly traded AI stocks, which have notably preformed poorly despite considerable AI hype. This bubble is limited to private companies. Also the AI market is capable of accommodating many entrants and each getting a high valuation and filling some sort of niche, instead of the old Google vs Yahoo or Apple App Store vs Google App Store duopolies or winner-take-all markets like with seen with MySpace vs. Facebook. There is Eraser, Claude, Anthropic, etc. Each fills some sort of purpose and has strengths and weaknesses. In past bubbles, the market was more concentrated among a few names or interchangeable. So this means looking it from the lens of past bubbles may not work.
j45 · 17h ago
Except it might not be a bubble if companies are using it in production.
palmotea · 15h ago
> Except it might not be a bubble if companies are using it in production.
"Being a bubble" and "companies are using it in production" are not mutually exclusive.
haiku2077 · 13h ago
People were buying houses in 2006.
kjkjadksj · 16h ago
Companies were using websites in production during .com bubble too
andrewstuart · 16h ago
>> a legitimate, if incremental, step forward in developer productivity
It’s not incremental it’s revolutionary. Nothing has come before that has such power and capability.
kryptiskt · 15h ago
So where is the product? Why haven't the vibecoders built a browser or a kernel or anything remotely ambitious? They have had years at this point. With their fabled productivity increase, making a better kernel than Linux in that time should be child's play. So where is it?
andrewstuart · 13h ago
AI is an assistant not a magician.
ath3nd · 7h ago
So where is the revolution then? How can it be both a revolution and not a magician at the same time?
At the same time when studies are coming out that experienced developers are losing 19% of productivity using AI tools, it makes me question whether it's not a devolution. Especially considering how widely unprofitable is for Claude to be run at scale where it's at least a net neutral for the average dev, where is that revolution you are talking about?
Is it the same revolution like NFts or blockhain or whatever web3 was, cause I am still waiting for those?
alpaca128 · 13h ago
Then why are AI-based contributions in the open source space generally so low quality that they get rejected, while the biggest observable effect of big tech investments is the addition of AI buttons everywhere that sometimes don't even do anything other than annoy users? Aside from AI-powered tech support leading to loss of customers and reputation, see Cursor AI.
If it's revolutionary as you say, why are companies laying off people when higher productivity per employee should mean that more employees increase the advantage from AI? Why aren't early adopters running circles around competitors and producing larger, more frequent and/or higher quality updates and products in a measurable way?
jchonphoenix · 15h ago
The author misses the forest for the trees. He's accurately articulating the current state of tools he's using but isn't acknowledging or extrapolating the next derivative I.e the rate of improvement of these tools.
That being said, everything is overvalued and a lot of this is ridiculous.
lelanthran · 14h ago
> He's accurately articulating the current state of tools he's using but isn't acknowledging or extrapolating the next derivative
Extrapolation would reasonably show that they're reaching an asymptote, graph cost vs improvement on a chart; you'll see that they are not proportional.
ath3nd · 7h ago
I think you are the ine missing the forest for the trees.
- The improvements from each subsequent model have also plateau-ed, with even regressions being noticeable
- The biggest players are so wildly unprofitable that they are already trying to change their plans or squeeze their current fanbase and raise their rates
They have stopped improving to match for the increase of the rate their costs and benefits. It's simple mathematics, improvements in efficiency don't match the increases in costs and the fact that they are extremely unprofitable, and all that data points to a bubble.
It's one of the most obvious bubbles if I have ever seen one, propped only by vibes and X-posts and Sama's promise that AGI is just around the corner, just inject a couple trillion more, trust me bro. All that for a fancy autocomplete.
In RTP, the amount of office space that was built out has never been fully utilized to this very day.
These tech bubbles come and go, but leave enormous craters of destruction in their wake.
They also leave a select few propped up to move on to their next, entitled, adventure [0].
[0] https://web.archive.org/web/20100326134422/http://www.phonep...
I agree completely from a developer point of view, as for it being a bubble.. I'm not sure. It seems that it's a couple of companies enticing people to integrate things into their system so deeply that later, they can name their price and dictate their terms so that all technology falls in line with how they want things to play out.
We can see it already happening with VC investment not touching anything that doesn't have AI integrated.
Less innovation and creativity from smaller startups means less competition, which is great for business.
Great example though, so many companies grew from the IAC movement. Those were startups though, doing what Amazon probably didn't have the resources to do themselves and also didn't need to.
This AI craze feels to hit at a bit of a lower level, I feel awful for any junior or new Devs entering the market.
Edit for clarity : Hashicorps terraform wouldn't be here without making aws infra easier.
You can already see some of the bigger players trying to squeeze out more money out of their victims, pardon, users, in order to maintain at least the illusion of a future where they are profitable. We also see some players eg Apple give up on the race, and some other players, eg Microsoft, Google and OpenAI switch personnel and positions in the race, which should be a good signal it's a mined out field and they are scrapping to be the one that gets the few remaining spoils before it all crumbles down. Very bearish on LLMs.
And as someone who have seen the PC, Internet and Smartphone cycle. I will say ChartGPT ( or AI ) adoption cycle is way faster than anything I have seen.
A lot of the AGI prediction is a fairly mundane business of extrapolating Moore's law like growth in computing and comparing it to the human brain. I don't think calling it mythology from high priests is a very accurate appraisal.
"Being a bubble" and "companies are using it in production" are not mutually exclusive.
It’s not incremental it’s revolutionary. Nothing has come before that has such power and capability.
At the same time when studies are coming out that experienced developers are losing 19% of productivity using AI tools, it makes me question whether it's not a devolution. Especially considering how widely unprofitable is for Claude to be run at scale where it's at least a net neutral for the average dev, where is that revolution you are talking about?
Is it the same revolution like NFts or blockhain or whatever web3 was, cause I am still waiting for those?
If it's revolutionary as you say, why are companies laying off people when higher productivity per employee should mean that more employees increase the advantage from AI? Why aren't early adopters running circles around competitors and producing larger, more frequent and/or higher quality updates and products in a measurable way?
That being said, everything is overvalued and a lot of this is ridiculous.
Extrapolation would reasonably show that they're reaching an asymptote, graph cost vs improvement on a chart; you'll see that they are not proportional.
- The energy efficiency and cost improvements of LLMs has plateau-ed as of late. https://arxiv.org/html/2507.11417v1
- The improvements from each subsequent model have also plateau-ed, with even regressions being noticeable
- The biggest players are so wildly unprofitable that they are already trying to change their plans or squeeze their current fanbase and raise their rates
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44598254
https://www.wheresyoured.at/anthropic-is-bleeding-out/
- And, as it turns out, experienced developers are 19% less productive using LLMs: https://www.theregister.com/2025/07/11/ai_code_tools_slow_do...
> I.e the rate of improvement of these tools.
They have stopped improving to match for the increase of the rate their costs and benefits. It's simple mathematics, improvements in efficiency don't match the increases in costs and the fact that they are extremely unprofitable, and all that data points to a bubble.
It's one of the most obvious bubbles if I have ever seen one, propped only by vibes and X-posts and Sama's promise that AGI is just around the corner, just inject a couple trillion more, trust me bro. All that for a fancy autocomplete.