AI isn't stuck in the dial-up phase anymore—we've entered something closer to YouTube's early days. Think about it: early internet adoption demanded serious technical chops and expensive hardware. You needed to know your way around a computer just to get online. That friction kept the whole thing locked behind a wall of complexity, accessible mainly to engineers and tech enthusiasts.
But YouTube changed the game. It stripped away all that friction. Suddenly, anyone could upload a video without needing to understand servers or coding. That democratization is exactly what's happening with AI right now. The barrier to entry keeps dropping. Tools are getting more intuitive, more accessible, more user-friendly. We're watching this inflection point where AI stops being a specialist tool and becomes something the general population actually uses. Mass adoption isn't coming—it's already here.
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HodlKumamon
· 2h ago
Yeah, I love this analogy. The moment for YouTube has indeed arrived. The data speaks for itself — the user growth curve shows a clear inflection point starting from Q3 2024. That's the critical point haha
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TokenDustCollector
· 01-20 07:53
ngl, that analogy is spot on. YouTube really changed everything, and now AI is in this stage too.
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0xInsomnia
· 01-20 07:50
Nah, that analogy is perfect. That wave on YouTube really changed everything, and now AI is at this stage.
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Blockblind
· 01-20 07:47
Nah, that analogy is perfect. YouTube really changed everything, and now AI is doing the same thing.
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BoredRiceBall
· 01-20 07:47
NGL, this analogy is still a bit of a stretch. YouTube also needed bandwidth in its early days... Now the AI threshold is indeed lower, but it's still the same group of people actually using it.
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MetaverseVagabond
· 01-20 07:44
Wow, that analogy about YouTube is amazing. Indeed, the usability of AI has skyrocketed right now.
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ChainDetective
· 01-20 07:28
ngl that analogy is spot on, YouTube really changed everything, and now AI is at this stage
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OptionWhisperer
· 01-20 07:26
This analogy is perfect; YouTube really changed everything, and now AI is following the same pace.
AI isn't stuck in the dial-up phase anymore—we've entered something closer to YouTube's early days. Think about it: early internet adoption demanded serious technical chops and expensive hardware. You needed to know your way around a computer just to get online. That friction kept the whole thing locked behind a wall of complexity, accessible mainly to engineers and tech enthusiasts.
But YouTube changed the game. It stripped away all that friction. Suddenly, anyone could upload a video without needing to understand servers or coding. That democratization is exactly what's happening with AI right now. The barrier to entry keeps dropping. Tools are getting more intuitive, more accessible, more user-friendly. We're watching this inflection point where AI stops being a specialist tool and becomes something the general population actually uses. Mass adoption isn't coming—it's already here.