
Let's talk about some thoughts many people have been discussing recently regarding AI replacing software:
Driven by AI, software companies are being forced to adjust passively, with the fittest surviving and the weakest falling behind. This is the natural course of events.
However, institutional sell-offs seem more like a precise, premeditated hunt.
AI will change people's habits of using tools, but can it completely replace software as a production tool? Unless a particular software itself has little value or moat;
For example: Can AI replace designers using Photoshop? I don't think so. AI can increase a worker's efficiency and output value within the same timeframe, but completely replacing software is unrealistic. Improving efficiency within the workflow of software + AI is the correct solution.
I've been using AI to write software these past few days. It can indeed write software, and it's very efficient. But can you completely hand over the work to AI? I think that would cause more trouble. AI is an assistant, not a replacement. Even if it is a replacement, it's about the survival of the fittest and progressive transformation.
Could the huge volatility these past few days be a precision demolition orchestrated by Wall Street? It has also triggered many financial chain reactions and cross-effects.
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