I was thinking about waitlisting a bunch of AI products I don't yet have built. It costs no real development time to make a landing page. Then you can prioritize your development on the thing that got a lot of attention. With AI you could launch wait lists for 100 products you don't have code for.
Once enough people figure that out the internet is going to be flooded with wait lists that are basically product proposals.
Yeah, unfortunately a waitlist for now - I just thought this is close to my idea of using top 200k Wikipedia entries as tags/topics, so seems interesting enough to watch.
It's a difficult situation. Sites like reddit pivoted away from being factual and information based, to being tribalistic and emotionally focused. It's worse for intelligence and society in general, but it generates clicks and revenue from all the average folks willing to engage low-effort outrage bait. Sad part is, both can't really co-exist, as once those mobs flood the place, they advocate for banning/silencing anyone they don't "like" or "agree with", and the knowledgeable intelligent people are driven out. Maybe that's why most of the reddit clones have failed. Capitalism rewards reddit's shitty modus operandi.
Oh weird. A waitlist. Why not just run the thing?
I was thinking about waitlisting a bunch of AI products I don't yet have built. It costs no real development time to make a landing page. Then you can prioritize your development on the thing that got a lot of attention. With AI you could launch wait lists for 100 products you don't have code for.
Once enough people figure that out the internet is going to be flooded with wait lists that are basically product proposals.
Yeah, unfortunately a waitlist for now - I just thought this is close to my idea of using top 200k Wikipedia entries as tags/topics, so seems interesting enough to watch.
It's a difficult situation. Sites like reddit pivoted away from being factual and information based, to being tribalistic and emotionally focused. It's worse for intelligence and society in general, but it generates clicks and revenue from all the average folks willing to engage low-effort outrage bait. Sad part is, both can't really co-exist, as once those mobs flood the place, they advocate for banning/silencing anyone they don't "like" or "agree with", and the knowledgeable intelligent people are driven out. Maybe that's why most of the reddit clones have failed. Capitalism rewards reddit's shitty modus operandi.
I wonder if they're gonna call their moderators bouncers.
Archived (as similar post was removed from /r/RedditAlternatives/ the other day): https://archive.is/WnPWp