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Comment by all2

11 hours ago

> For that you need to somehow make more money than you are spending.

I've had this idea of 'business as reducing entropy' floating around in my head for awhile. It's a neat way to think about the value a business offers to buyers; a washing machine manufacturer is selling reduced time to reduced entropy (clean cloths), spreadsheet software is selling reduced time to understanding (information from tabulated data), and so on.

From that perspective, a lot of AI-driven development is failing.

We're still in the phase of 'how do we get order out of semi-average chaos?' for LLMs. For ML we're largely past that point.

I've been using this framing as a means to guide me towards 'what is actually useful, what might someone actually buy'. I don't have my own business at this point, but its still fun to think about off and on.

I think this is application dependent. LLM's are quite good for brainstorming, even if they are not arguably creative, at least they draw from a lot of information that is already out there, which saves me time in researching and learning.

> I've had this idea of 'business as reducing entropy' floating around in my head for awhile

You could generalize this to the purpose of life itself, probably.

Just stop thinking of software products. There are a million businesses offering solid value propositions that need a lot of software to run, but software isn't the product.