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AI Bubble

  • Mar 31
  • 5 min read

Updated: Apr 29

Wattle Labs has created a "Large Behaviour Model" (LBM) of the human population. The LBM, an analogue of LLM's, which seeks to understand human behaviour, rather than language.


Wattle Labs has 3 x solutions to help big tech pop its AI bubble!




Transcript

Hello big tech, my name is Aaron and this is Wattle Labs. Currently the world is in the grip of an AI bubble and we're desperate to find a killer app. So the first app is enterprise orchestration — or CEO force multiplication — and it's reliant on the ability of AI to analyse, summarise, and recommend.


To start with, I have to show you a model of an organisation. Any organisation has an illustrious leader and direct reports. Each one of those direct reports will have more direct reports, and those will have more direct reports again. An organisation modelled abstractly relies on the CEO to have stated goals. These goals can then be broken down into tasks. It's within the ability of AI to break down those goals automatically into departmental tasks, domain-specific tasks, and further into sub-tasks — all the way down to a singular worker's to-do list.


So this app isn't an email engine, it's not a project management tool, it's not something like Jira — it's a combination of all of those things, and it doesn't exist yet. A worker can either say they've completed a task, or flag that there's an issue. Furthermore, they might identify an opportunity and even nominate a dollar amount. The CEO, using AI enterprise orchestration, can set a goal, which gets actualised and implemented via to-do lists. Workers complete the tasks or raise issues, submit opportunities, or flag problems. Those problems can then be pushed all the way up to the CEO. The CEO could quite simply ask daily: what are the biggest issues? What are the greatest opportunities? Can we quantify the returns on those opportunities? AI becomes a force multiplier for the CEO. Everything is costed, time is logged, and the whole enterprise runs — without 80% of middle management.


So 80% of the workforce would be made redundant, and the company that creates this app will effectively change the way humans work — in much the same way that the PC changed the way we work, or social media changed the way we interact, or Google Search changed the way we access information. This enterprise orchestration enables one CEO to potentially manage 100,000 staff. Obviously, everyone who does hands-on work still has a job after orchestration. Middle managers, on the other hand, are superfluous to the requirements of an organisation in the future.


So that's app one. It could reduce costs by around 80% in this model. We could reduce the size of government by 80% by implementing AI enterprise orchestration. This means I'd pay 80% less tax. The government workers previously doing menial tasks could be freed up to work on high-speed rail, satellite imagery, sustainable produce, and efficient energy. We can unlock our population — both public and private sector — to work on things that are far more impactful and important than paper-pushing within huge government organisations or enterprises.


The second app uses vibe coding to completely eliminate software distribution. Here's how it works. Currently, developers make software and publish it into various app stores, which is then consumed by the masses. The problem is the software is not what we individually want. It's got features I don't want. It bloats over time. It's got bugs, DLL hell, versioning issues — it's a complete nightmare.


What vibe coding allows us to do is completely reverse software distribution. There is no software distribution. The OS looks like this: you click on an MPEG file. The OS says, "I don't know what to do with it — would you like me to create a viewer for you?" It starts playing, but you notice it's windowed. You click the augment button and say, "I need this to be full screen." And now it hands you a full-screen version. Fantastic — I'm getting exactly the player I want.


Then you realise it's in Chinese. So you click augment again and say, "Can you please translate this in real time?" The OS says, "Yes, I can do that, but you'll need a translation partner." It produces a new app — it's been translated, it has subtitles. But you don't want subtitles, you want it dubbed. You click augment again, it makes you a new version, and now you've got a dubbed movie player. Done. It's always up to date. Updates simply mean applying patches to the underlying capabilities and reintegrating the dubbed movie player — just for me — into version two of the API. The operating system creates the apps that you want. In this case it was version four of my player.


Over time you can invest in the ecosystem. You might want to play MKV files, make recording software, or build a text editor — and not one like Notepad, which at the moment wants you to sign in. I don't want that. I don't want all those developers constantly fiddling with things. Office is a classic example. Office with their little Copilot button — what a joke. Microsoft has how many thousands of developers? The only point of their existence is to keep making changes to the software. And the software was perfect in 2010. You didn't need to touch it. They could have taken those developers and put them onto something else entirely, because Office was really nailed. But they just keep plugging away because that's their job — to keep making software, keep making bugs, keep adding more and more bloat until in 2025 it's completely unusable. I almost dare anyone to try to get automatic numbering done with indentation in Word today. I know it worked in 2010, but today? And then there's Excel — you can't even open two files with the same file name. This is not what I want.


I don't want any of this. I just want to ask my little vibe coding assistant: create a document editor, export in XML or JSON, just the features I want. Same with Excel — there are 300 buttons and I don't know what any of them do anymore. I use maybe 1% of Word or Excel. So how about someone makes an operating system where I can manifest the tools I want to do my job, in the way I want to do it, rather than just being a victim of whatever these developers decide to foist on me.


It also levels the playing field between Microsoft, Linux, and Mac. There'll be no competitive difference between platforms — they'll simply provide the vibe coding interface, putting me at the centre of everything. I'll create the editor of my dreams. My toolbar will be empty but for the things only I want. My software will be super fast. I won't have any malware issues, and I won't have a team who continually makes the software worse year on year. But most importantly, it'll enable Linux to compete on an even playing field with both Mac and Microsoft. Reinvent the operating system and allow me to manifest the applications and tools that I want.


I think these are the two killer apps. One revolutionises enterprises, and the second revolutionises the human-machine interface. That's all I want to say on that. Can someone please make these two apps? Thank you very much. Have a good day. Bye.



 
 
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