Ask HN: Is Zuckerberg just a „one-hit-wonder"?
How bad CEO, in your opinion, is Mark?
How bad CEO, in your opinion, is Mark?
Yet just in 2026 we had:
- AI.com was sold for $70M - Crypto.com founder bought it to launch yet another "personal AI agent" platform, which promptly crashed during its Super Bowl ad debut.
- MoltBook-mania - a Reddit clone where AI bots talk to each other, flooded with crypto scams and "AI consciousness" posts. 250,000+ bot posts burning compute for what actual value? [0]
- OpenClaw - a "super open-source AI agent" that is a security nightmare.
- GPT-5.3-Codex and Opus 2.6 were released. Reviewers note they're struggling to find tasks the previous versions couldn't handle. The improvements are incremental at best.
I understand there are legitimate use cases for LLMs, but the hype-to-utility ratio seems completely out of whack.
Am I not seeing something?
[0] https://www.technologyreview.com/2026/02/06/1132448/moltbook-was-peak-ai-theater/
I have a nice side project (a macOS app) that uses a one-time fee. But very often (while listening to some podcasts about bootstrapped products) it feels like it's either subscription-based or nothing. Is there no point in having a one-time fee product? Is that correct? Am I living in a SaaS bubble?
I know that for SaaS-type products, the most optimal pricing strategy is almost always subscriptions, but what about desktop apps? What are your experiences (as a creator and as a user of such apps)? Should I change it to something like: - free tier (limited app) - one-year license fee (lower than the current price) - lifetime license fee (as it is now)
Or should I keep it as it is and stop thinking about it for now?
Thanks for any suggestions.