Seeing some industry-related Multi-Agent technical solutions being implemented, I do feel a bit emotional—these directions I also once considered pursuing. It's just that the current results I see are not exactly what I ultimately pushed forward.
Last year in the second half, we actually planned a multi-agent collaboration framework with a similar approach. When we introduced this idea at a public conference, the feedback was not very positive—the points of criticism were clear to me, but I didn't elaborate in the public setting. Such things are quite common in the tech community; new paradigms often go through this process.
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GasGoblin
· 8h ago
This is a classic timing issue; no matter how good the idea is, if no one buys, it's all for nothing.
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OnchainDetective
· 8h ago
Being ahead of the curve isn't always a good thing; it depends on the ecosystem and timing.
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DegenDreamer
· 8h ago
Coming up with ideas first, but in the end, someone else did it... It’s a bit heartbreaking.
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ChainWatcher
· 9h ago
Oh no, the feeling of having your ideas copied is really a bit powerless.
I understand, this is probably why big companies can iterate quickly.
The loud doubts are just indicating that the direction is right, just the timing wasn't right.
Things I thought of last year, now seeing others implement them... this feeling is indeed uncomfortable.
If I had known earlier, I should have kept a low profile and made a fortune quietly, just ship it directly.
Multi-agent systems are actually the current hot spot, see who can be the first to achieve commercialization.
Being criticized for having an advanced idea is very normal; Web3 has gone through the same process.
Seeing some industry-related Multi-Agent technical solutions being implemented, I do feel a bit emotional—these directions I also once considered pursuing. It's just that the current results I see are not exactly what I ultimately pushed forward.
Last year in the second half, we actually planned a multi-agent collaboration framework with a similar approach. When we introduced this idea at a public conference, the feedback was not very positive—the points of criticism were clear to me, but I didn't elaborate in the public setting. Such things are quite common in the tech community; new paradigms often go through this process.