This is a spot-on observation about 'AI as a garnish.' In my own work, I've seen many teams rush to add a chat interface just to say they have AI, without solving any core user problems. It often does make the product more complicated.
I wonder if the path to true replacement starts in smaller, vertical niches rather than trying to overhaul giants like Excel from day one?
This is a spot-on observation about 'AI as a garnish.' In my own work, I've seen many teams rush to add a chat interface just to say they have AI, without solving any core user problems. It often does make the product more complicated. I wonder if the path to true replacement starts in smaller, vertical niches rather than trying to overhaul giants like Excel from day one?
very true, most end-users don't care what we call it or how it works--most drivers don't know how their brakes work, but they better
simplify with AI hasn't quite caught on lol