This is a fascinating "dataset" of the unedited human psyche.
For the first time, we have a public, raw, unfiltered log of what people actually think about and worry about—not the curated, performative versions they post on social media.
The article's list (from "hair removal" to "paracetamol overdose" to "analyze my boyfriend") says it all. It's a mirror of our mundane anxieties, our deep fears, and our loneliness, all in one place.
This is less a story about AI and more a story about us.
thank you for this incredibly transparent and honest post.
The section on "Setting Expectations" (5 employees vs 180) is the most valuable insight. As an indie developer myself, I'm deeply curious: how does this new "sustainable" mindset (vs. the old VC-funded model) change your prioritization for the software roadmap?
Does it mean focusing 100% on the core functions and being more ruthless about saying 'no' to feature creep, which is something that plagues so many other wearable companies?
The article's "reverse terraforming the Earth" quote is the real story here. This is what makes the dot-com analogy imperfect.
The dot-com bubble required relatively little CapEx. This AI bubble is a physical infrastructure bubble (data centers, power, $5T in chips).
It feels far more analogous to the fiber-optic bubble of the late 90s. Trillions were spent laying "dark fiber" across the globe. The companies that laid it all went bust, but that exact infrastructure was what enabled the next generation (Google, Facebook, etc.) to be built for almost free a few years later.
We are in the "building the dark fiber for AI" stage. The immediate ROI isn't there, but the infrastructure is the prerequisite.