Yuyue|11月 29, 2025 12:27
The emergence of a new wave always comes with opportunities, but the AI field has shown a very strong Matthew Effect. As Big Knife Bro puts it, it's a game where the big players just keep getting stronger. More money → more computing power and talent → even more money. This makes it extremely costly for small and medium-sized players to enter the competition later on.
I’ve been thinking about how individuals can commercialize AI tools, and here are a few possible entry points:
First, the most conventional and lowest-barrier option: 'Teaching people how to use AI.' This includes, but is not limited to, teaching people how to access the internet scientifically, register accounts, AI tutorials, etc. The core idea here is arbitraging the information gap.
Second, a more advanced version: offering paid subscription services based on AI tools. This has a relatively higher barrier but is still easy to fork, and the growth potential is relatively limited.
Third, this doesn’t directly generate economic value but has unlimited potential in terms of benefits. Scenarios include, but are not limited to, optimizing trading strategies, improving team efficiency, assisting in decision-making, etc. Essentially, it serves as an efficiency tool. But in my view, the effect of such AI tools is more multiplicative than additive. For someone with 100, the immediate impact of AI might not be significant. But for someone with 10,000, after going through a business transition period, the impact could be massive.
Some fragmented thoughts after chatting with @0xlianjinshu & @coolish.
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