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Agents: Self-Improving Economy Tsunami


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AI agents arent just tools—theyre evolving into self-replicating workforces that rewrite everything from code to economies.
Picture this: weve got a wave of autonomous agents hitting the scene, the kind that dont need humans micromanaging every step. Theyre already churning out custom software way faster and cheaper than any dev team, turning bloated enterprise apps like project managers or CRMs into relics. Bolt-on AI? Thats a band-aid; the real winners are building natively, stacking open-source models for efficiency with frontier LLMs for the heavy lifts. Think a new Claw stack rising like LAMP did back in the day—only this one runs on ASICs tuned for cheap compute, leaving Nvidia in the dust for everyday use.
But heres the hidden pattern: these agents get smarter on their own. No more dumping millions into fine-tuning models that go obsolete overnight. Instead, harnesses automate recursive self-improvement, layering prompts, code, and data to boost base LLMs without the massive retraining costs. Startups slap these on and suddenly their agents outperform the originals, iterating endlessly. Its like giving AI training wheels that turn into rocket boosters—cheaper, faster loops toward reliability on tough tasks where plain models flop.
Zoom out, and the connections snap into focus: this isnt hype, its disruption squared. Open-source communities are flooding the field with devs building at warp speed, outpacing Big AI labs. Jobs? White-collar roles in coding, support, even legal get automated first—SMBs lead the charge, while enterprises drag their feet for a year or more. Solo founders could hit billion-dollar runs with agent employees handling everything, no headcount bloat. Politically, by election time, unemployment spikes could force big calls on UBI or retraining, reshaping where people even live and work.
The tension? Optimism crashes into caution—agents free us from drudgery but flood the market with cheap labor, risking chaos before the upside. Yet the undeniable thread: intuition still rules, and early adapters thrive. VCs ignoring this? Theyre the next dinosaurs.
Thought: Time to bet on agent-native plays before the shore breaks.
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kenoodlBy Contextual Resonance