75 pointsby informal0073 hours ago50 comments
  • neya2 hours ago
    > it costs almost nothing to build an app, it costs almost nothing to clone an app.

    I guess the author hasn't done real software development. The cost isn't just for the code. It's for the whole process - especially the architecture. Which database to use for the use case, which framework and language to use, how the database should be structured,table naming standardization, best practices, security audits and everything else.

    Can AI do all that? Sure, but you must know to ask for all that in the first place. Look what happened to Clawd/Molt.

    > It's because building an app went from a $50K project to a weekend with Claude.

    Sure, why don't you deploy your vibe coded app over the weekend and see if it falls apart after handling one request per second

    This article was written by AI btw

    • Dansvidania2 hours ago
      Vibe code to production perhaps not, but vibe code for regular personal use doesn’t seem out of the realm of possibility already.

      Unless there is inherent complexity in the problem (and assuming subscriptions don’t get pricey soon) I can see nontechnical people getting into designing their own apps.

      It makes me think of 3d printing. A lot of people got into 3d modeling because of it. And a lot of people publish cute baubles 3d models (analogous to vibe coded ai wrappers?) but there is genuinely useful stuff that people not in the fabrication or 3d design industry create and share, some even making money off of it.

      I just can’t think of a way saas margins will stay as high as they are now.

      • marcuschong5 minutes ago
        I don't disagree with the premise, but I still can't think of a SaaS that I'm paying for that I can replace. And I have many subscriptions.
      • cruffle_duffle2 hours ago
        3d printing is something I think about. LLMs do their best work against text and 3d printers consume gcode. I’ve had sonnet spit out perfectly good single layer test prints. Obviously it won’t have the context window to hold much more gcode BUT…

        If there was a text based file format for models, it could generate those and you could hand that to the slicer. Like I’ve never looked, but are stl files text or binary? Or those 3mf files?

        If Gemini can generate a good looking pelican on a bicycle SVG, it can probably help design some fairly useful functional parts given a good design language it was trained on.

        And honestly if the slicer itself could be driven via CLI, you could in theory do the entire workflow right to the printer.

        It makes me wonder if we are going to really see a push to text-based file formats. Markdown is the lingua franca of output for LLMs. Same with json, csv, etc. Things that are easy to “git diff” are also easy for LLMs…

        • SOLAR_FIELDS2 hours ago
          There is a text based file format for models. It's called OpenSCAD. It's also much more information compacted than a mesh model file like STL - e.g. in OpenSCAD you describe the curve, in the mesh file like STL you explicitly state all elements of it.

          It's just gimped to the point that you can basically only use it for hobbyist projects, anything reasonably professional looking is using STEP compatible files and that is much more complex to try to emulate and get right. STEP is a bit different - it's more like a mesh in that it contains the final geometry, but in BRep which is pretty close to the machining grade, while OpenSCAD is more like what you're asking about - a textual recipe to generate curves that you pass into an engine that turns it into the actual geometry. It's just that OpenSCAD is so wholly insufficient to express what professional designs need it never gets used in the professional world.

    • wiether2 hours ago
      > see if it falls apart after handling one request per second

      Most of the problems you talk about are problems if you intend your software to be used at scale.

      If you're building an app for yourself to track your own food habits; why does DB, framework, best practices matters?

      People used to do this in an Excel sheet.

      Now they can ask Claude to make them a nice UI similar to MFP or whatever.

      Data can be stored in a single JSON file.

      It's going to take years before they see actual performance issues.

      And even though it becomes an issue, right now an AI Agent can already provide a fix and a script to migrate the data.

      My only concern really is about security.

      But a private VPS only reachable through Tailscale and they're ahead of 99% of the rest.

      • neya2 hours ago
        All your points are valid and I myself use these types of apps (eg. For handling invoices) internally. But, the second your app talks to the internet, you are more likely to shoot yourself in the foot. Look what happened to Clawdbot. Everyone who used it had their instances exposed to the internet.

        AI can fix bugs, sure. But every time you ask it to fix the same problem, it will come up with a new solution - usually unnecessarily complex. Will we reach a point where the AI can be its own architect? Maybe. But, I know for a fact that it's not what we have right now.

        Right now, AI needs an architect to tell it how it should solve a problem. The real value of software is in the lived human experiences, not just the code. That's why we make certain decisions different than an AI would.

        Ask an AI to vibe code an invoice app. It will make some really lovely looking UI - which is what unfortunately people judge an app by - but with a MongoDb backend which is totally not the right solution for the problem. That's what I mean.

      • eddythompson80an hour ago
        > If you're building an app for yourself to track your own food habits; why does DB, framework, best practices matters?

        They don't, it's just annoying as shit when things break at the worst time for lack of these "best practices" and you know that the only answer will be "do better". I'll give you an example. Years ago I migrated a lot of my app usage to selfhosted OSS apps for all the reasons one might list them. I did like 80% of what I perceived as the "important best practices". Setup ZFS with redundancy to handle drive failures, a UPS for power interruption, wireguard for secure access, docker for application and dependencies isolation, etc.

        But there were always things I just thought "I should probably do that, but later. This is just for me"

        It would be the end of the day, I'm tired and on bed wanting to just chill and watch something on my ipad, and what do you know my plex is down, again.

        Why does it go down every few days? Now I need to go get a laptop, ssh into my server, docker logs. See a bunch of exceptions. I don't want to debug it today. Just restart it, ok it works again. Go to bed, start watching.

        20 minutes in.. I think it's down again.. wtf? get the laptop again, google the error, something about sqlite db on an NFS share not being very stable. All my ZFS storage is only exposed as NFS and SMB share to another machine.. Ok, just restart and hope it works and I'll deal with it latter.

        Forget for a couple of days. I'm with a friend as her place and want to watch again, and fuck me I never fixed the sqlite issue, nevermind lets just watch netflix.

        Over the weekend, I'm determined to get this fixed. Move the application folder out of NFS on the local machine SSD. It doesn't have redundancy, but it's ok for now. I'll setup an rsync job to copy it to the NFS share in case the SSD fails. I just want to see if it'll be stable.

        Few months pass, and it's been pretty stable until I have a power outage. The UPS was there, but the configuration to notify the OS to shutdown broke a while ago and I didn't notice. Files on ZFS are fine, but the some on the local SSD got corrupted and I didn't notice, including plex database. the rsync job just copied the corrupted file over the "backup" file.

        It's late at night again, and I just want to relax and watch something and discover this happened. I could try to figure out how to recover it, but it's probably easier to just do a clean scan. It's gonna take hours. Lets just start it and go to sleep.

        Later, lets just migrate everything to jellyfin. Have auto upgrade setup because I'm smart. Jellyfin 10.8 updates and unfavorites all the facorited music tracks. "You have backups right". "Well, yes I do. Let me make sure I have an evening cleared so I can setup another instance of jellyfin, run the old backups, export the favorite list, and import it in the new one"... oh there is no way to do that? I guess I can export it to CSV, get a plugin to automate it for me. the plugin hasn't been updated to 10.8 but there is a pull request. ok lets wait. Forget that I setup restic to delete backups older than 30 days. fuck me. I have the CSV somewhere I think. God my `/tmp` is ephemeral and I hope I haven't rebooted since then. phew it's there. fuck me still.

        I have worked in managing services for most of my career. I know what I'm doing wrong. I need to setup monitoring, alerts, health checks, 321 backups (not just rsync to a zfs pool) and actually use a backup software that tracks file versions, off site redundancy, dashboards for anomaly detection, scheduled hardware upgrades and checks for memtest, disk health, UPS configuration checks. I know how 3 or 4 9s are achieved in the industry.

    • aavci2 hours ago
      What happened to clawd/molt?
    • tasuki2 hours ago
      > This article was written by AI btw

      Unless you had an AI write the article, you can't possibly know that. I'm sick of this being randomly thrown around: it's basically mentioned for every article posted. Sometimes the author chimes in to say that no, they wrote it themselves. Other times sure, the article was written by AI. I don't know, and you don't know either.

    • colesantiago2 hours ago
      I vibecoded an app for my business and didn’t need any engineers and it is currently in use for our customers.

      I think this is great for everyone to be a developer, the gatekeeping has now been removed and we will see a creative explosion of apps that everyone can build.

      The security and maintenance aspect of apps is just a claude skill away to be a solved problem.

      • ThrowawayR22 hours ago
        > "The security and maintenance aspect of apps is just a claude skill away to be a solved problem."

        To think that someone on Hacker News actually wrote this seriously in 2026, after a couple of decades of CVEs, security breaches, and data thefts being in the news every single week and after 50+ years of the industry experiencing how arduous software maintenance is. I doubt even Anthropic or OpenAI would be brave enough to say that.

      • SoftTalker2 hours ago
        I think you overestimate the ability of AI to write perfectly secure apps. Humans can't do it, and AI is trained on their work.
        • benjiro2 hours ago
          > I think you overestimate the ability of AI to write perfectly secure apps. Humans can't do it, and AI is trained on their work.

          Ironically, AI tend to be better at securing code, because unlike the squishy human, it is much more cable of creating tons of tests and figuring out weaknesses.

          Let alone the issue when lots of meatbags with different skill levels are working on the same codebases.

          I have barely seen any codebase that has been in production for a long time, that did not have glaring issues.

          But if you tried to do a code audit, your spending somebody their time (assuming this is a pro), for a long time. Where as a AI with the correct hints on what too look for, can do insane levels of work, testing, etc...

          Ironically, when you try to secure test a codebase, and you use multiple different LLMs, you get a very interesting list of issues they can find. Many that are probably in tons of production level software.

          But its up to you, as the instructor of that LLM codebase, to actually tell it to do regular security audits of the codebase.

          • orwinan hour ago
            > Ironically, AI tend to be better at securing code, because unlike the squishy human, it is much more cable of creating tons of tests and figuring out weaknesses.

            Sentences like this make me think AI is honestly the best thing that happened for my imposter syndrome. AI is great for simulating test case, and that's it. If you leave it, it write the most basic, useless tests (i mean, half of them might be usefull when you refactor, but that's about it). It can't design reusable test components and have trouble with test double, which i would think is the easiest test case for AI. Even average devs like me write test double faster than AI, and i'm shit at writing tests.

            AI is also extremely bad at understanding versionning, and will use a deprecated API for no reason except increasing the surface of attack.

            AI is great for writing CLI scripts, boilerplate and autocomplete. I use it for frontend because i'm shit at it (even though i have to clean its shit up behind), and to rewrite small functionalities of some libraries i want to avoid loading (which allowed us to remove legacy dependencies). It's good at writing prototypes (my main use nowadays), and a very good way to use it is to ask it a plan to improve/factorize your code (it's _very_ bad at factorizing, but as it recognize patterns, it is able to suggest interesting refactors. Half the time it's wrong, so use the "plan" mode)

            I'm on a network security and cybersecurity tooling team, i guarantee you AI is shit at securing the code (and at understanding network).

      • neyaan hour ago
        > the gatekeeping has now been removed

        Nobody gatekept anything. The software, tools, knowledgebase (MIT, Coursera, etc) were always there. It was a choice. Some of us chose it, rest didn't for whatever reason.

      • hackingonemptyan hour ago
        > gatekeeping has now been removed

        Who was preventing you from learning how to do it yourself and then doing it?

  • sim04ful4 minutes ago
    I daresay we're going to see a burgeoning situations where the software (code) is open-sourced under a permissive or copyleft license, while the associated data, content, or assets (e.g., datasets, models, or databases) are handled under separate, often more restrictive licenses.
  • dzonga3 hours ago
    I guess for the author's limited worldview - "apps" are only available through the app stores.

    could be an unfortunate thing of the author growing up in an era of gated ecosystems.

    however much of the software out there - is via web - and some desktop - some internal use - some external - some shit without ui - some billed yearly, some billed by subscriptions

    but I guess tell us how AI is gonna kill subscriptions

    • INTPenis3 hours ago
      Actually I've been making several webapps with AI lately, for things I've always wished for and can now selfhost.

      At one point I had an idea I brought to AI, got ready to code it, then said "wait, someone has to have done this before me", sure enough, found it, written with warp!

      So I can't say it'll kill all app subscriptions, but AI is definitely enabling people to finally make reality out of that idea they've had rattling around their heads but never took the time to realise.

      • KumaBear2 hours ago
        As someone here with limited coding experience. I have built several custom applications that are too unique to be made by anyone. Now I can make several simple applications that do exactly what I need and want. It’s cut out hours of administrative work stuff I had to do. Do I share nope I gatekeep it at work. If only IT built these systems and databases to be easily used by us users.
    • giancarlostoro2 hours ago
      I can come up with a few ideas that could work, but lately I have opted not to give my ideas out for free. I do think we are over estimating actual apps complexity given that Apple is strict about what goes into their app store. As for websites the complexity of hosting a vibe coded app is often overlooked.

      That all said, I could see some killer features coming to AI companies if they really want to make a dent.

    • andsoitis2 hours ago
      The salient point is it is becoming easier and easier for end-users to create apps for their use cases, rather than having to rely on a developer, or packaged apps.
      • ethbr12 hours ago
        The implicit point here is that devtools-type standardization subscriptions are about to get juiced.

        Think Vercel, Supabase, et al. Because most of the time agents prefer glueing together managed services than building from scratch, unless they're told otherwise.

        And if I'm someone building a custom in-house solution to replace a SaaS subscription product, I'm going to pay lower managed costs without blinking.

    • informal0072 hours ago
      I think it depends on what percentage of apps need a website. Most users use apps on their devices, for me, I don't want to open another website when I need an App if it's avoidable.
      • SoftTalker2 hours ago
        Thats interesting. For me, I don't want an app if a website is available.
  • camdenreslink3 hours ago
    Counterpoint, why do current state of the art generative AI companies, with the ability to use models that the public can't even access, and the ability to burn tokens at cost, still pay for very expensive Saas software?
    • onion2k3 hours ago
      That's really simple - actually writing the software has never really been the hard part in most SaaS apps. So long as you're moderately disciplined and organised it's easy to build what most SaaS apps are e.g. a CRUD-app-with-a-clever-bit. The clever bit is the initial challenge that sets it apart from the rest, but encoding that in software has never really been that difficult.

      Having the ideas necessary to know what to write is where practically all the value lies (caveat: there is value in doing the same as someone else but better, or cheaper.) AI can help with that, but only in so much as telling you the basics or filling in the blanks if you're really stuck. It can't tell you the 'clever bit' because that is by definition new and interesting and doesn't appear in the training data.

      What this means is that at some point Anthropic will be able to prompt Opus to clone Jira and never pay an Atlassian bill again. Opus just needs to figure out what Jira is first. It's not there yet.

      • ethbr12 hours ago
        > What this means is that at some point Anthropic will be able to prompt Opus to clone Jira and never pay an Atlassian bill again. Opus just needs to figure out what Jira is first. It's not there yet.

        Bang on, and Jira is the perfect example! Because Jira isn't a bag of features: Jira is a list of features and the way they fit together (well or poorly, depending on your opinion).

        That's the second-order product design that it's going to take next-gen coding AI workflows to automate. Mostly because that bit comes from user discovery, political arguments, sales prioritization, product vision, etc. It's a horrendous "art" of multi-variable zero-sum optimization.

        When products get it right (early Slack) then it's invisible because "of course they made it do the thing I want to do."

        When products get it wrong (MS Teams, Adobe Acrobat, Jira, HR platforms) then it's obvious features weren't composed well.

        Expect there's more than one {user discovery} -> {product specification} AI startup out there, working on it in a hierarchical fashion with current AI now.

      • yellowapple3 hours ago
        On top of that, it's one thing to write the code, whereas it's another to actually run that code with maximal reliability and minimal downtime. I'm sure LLMs can churn out Terraform all day long, but can they troubleshoot when something goes wrong (as is often the case)?
        • oceansky3 hours ago
          Sounds like a fun experiment, let AI completely control an infrastructure, from application layer to load balancing and databases.

          I bet it would burn a lot of money very fast and not just on tokens.

        • 3 hours ago
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      • ej882 hours ago
        I would posit another large factor is "owning" the software comes with the long tail of edge cases, bugs, support, on-call, regulations, etc... that an established SaaS has learned and iterated on for many years with many customers.

        For the vast majority of companies they would (and should) rather let the SaaS figure that out and focus on their actual company

        • esafakan hour ago
          It seems people are forgetting that companies should develop their differentiators and pay for the rest.
      • Keyframe2 hours ago
        This is what people don't get, what's coming up and it'll hit them like a ton of bricks. Software development, after toy examples, was a scale limiting factor for the better part of software development if you had domain expertise. Now, we hear constantly that it doesn't matter since "muh experience" and architecture, choices, tradeoffs etc for which you need seniority to operate LLM efficiently (or at all). This is true, of course. What people don't seem to get that that's what's coming next. Your experience won't mean crap anymore and then the ride starts full blast.
      • exe342 hours ago
        AI companies already know what they need. they're paying for it. it would make a great case study for them to make a list of all external software they're using, list the features they use (or make the ai watch them for a week), and then prompt the AI to rewrite those in-house.
    • MontyCarloHall3 hours ago
      Addendum to counterpoint: why haven't those SotA gen-AI companies become the most productive software companies on earth, and release better and cheaper competitors to all currently popular software?

      People always gripe about the poor quality of software staples like Microsoft Office or GitHub or Slack. Why hasn't OpenAI or Anthropic released a superior office suite or code hosting platform or enterprise chat? It would be both a huge cash cow and the best possible advertising that AI-facilitated software development is truly the real deal 10x force multiplier they claim.

      If someone invents a special shovel that can magically identify ore deposits 100% of the time, they aren't going to sell it with the rest of the shovelmongers. They're going to keep it to themselves and actually mine gold.

      • ethbr12 hours ago
        Anthropic appears to have realized before OpenAI that code gen was an important enough market to specialize in.

        For now though, building smarter models / general integration tooling is a better us of model companies' capital.

        Once/if performance gains plateau, expect you'll see them pivot right quick to in-house software factories for easily cloneable, large TAM product spaces, then spin off those products if they're successful.

        • MontyCarloHall2 hours ago
          100% agreed. When/if that pivot happens will be the sign that gen-AI is truly disrupting the software market in a profound way. "You're using the model wrong/you're not using the latest model" is an oft-repeated argument against AI skeptics. Nobody knows how to use the latest models better than their developers.
      • Keyframe2 hours ago
        Why hasn't OpenAI or Anthropic released a superior office suite or code hosting platform or enterprise chat?

        My guess is two-fold. One, they are specialized in AI. Two, building another anthropic is a big moat and they like to keep it big vs what you could build with it.

      • hxugufjfjf2 hours ago
        Because it’s not their business to sell a chat app? "Our company is the frontier lab for AI models, oh and btw we also offer SlackClone, sign up for enterprise please". Their job is selling shovels, really good, increasingly more expensive shovels that keep getting better, let others waste their time looking for gold.
        • camdenreslinkan hour ago
          But they are marketing their AI as replacing all software engineers. Their CEO can’t stop saying it. According to them the cost of producing software is now just the cost of tokens to generate it.

          They have special knowledge to leverage AI to clone (and even improve) huge revenue businesses with high margin. If their claims about the abilities of LLMs are accurate it would be foolish to just leave that on the table.

          It would also prove the power of their LLM product as truly disruptive. It would be amazing marketing!

      • tayo422 hours ago
        Generating code isn't the bottleneck for selling software.

        Those apps aren't that bad, it's just internet people complaining about things like react.

        Imo "higher quality" isn't a way to sell software

      • plagiarist2 hours ago
        They're still training up using all of our extensive feedback to improve software architecture. Maybe later this year.
    • bieganski3 hours ago
      their costs are bound to compute anyway, they don't mind huge compensations also - it's not much of a cost saving to re-build, even cheaply, inhouse Slack or whatever?
    • vntok3 hours ago
      How is that a counterpoint? Do these companies currently use as many SaaS as other companies? More importantly, will they do so in the future?
    • OtomotO3 hours ago
      Bingo!
    • dist-epoch3 hours ago
      Opportunity cost.

      Cloning Slack and wasting ultra-expensive engineers on that might be more expensive, and it's not your core mission.

      • anonymous9082133 hours ago
        Why do you have to waste ultra-expensive engineers on it? You have agents. And verifying your product works as it is claimed should absolutely be part of your mission. How can you possibly claim that your models are revolutionising software development if you haven't even used them to revolutionise your own software development in-house? Not only that, it would produce a huge marketing coup that would immediately lead to a flood of enterprise spending if you could demonstrate that your agents actually do what you constantly claim them to do.

        PS. If you're claiming that coding an application is ultra-expensive, you are already entering the argument on the side of the comment you're arguing against, which is making a counterpoint to the article, which claims in the first sentence:

        > The math is simple: if it costs almost nothing to build an app, it costs almost nothing to clone an app. And if cloning is free, subscription pricing dies.

  • markbao2 hours ago
    Everyone who has built software knows that the hardest parts involve making complex, tricky decisions with tradeoffs. Let’s say you make a grocery list app. Now you have to make decisions about all the different ways to specify quantity. Units, weight, dollars, bunches… oh, and fractional vs. decimal weight, etc…

    The claim is that now every random person now will build their own app and have to make those hard decisions instead of paying $5 a month for someone else to do that work. Comparative advantage doesn’t just apply to the cost of writing code, but also the effort of making product decisions.

    Edit: I don’t mean that a grocery app should cost $5/month, the grocery app was a toy example and the $5/month refers to an example of a separate app you’d pay for with much more value.

    • noelsusman2 hours ago
      A grocery list app is the perfect example of the kind of thing that AI will make obsolete. Why would I pay $5/month for a list app when I can pay Claude $0.30 one time to make it for me?

      I in fact did just that. I used Claude to reverse engineer my grocery store's API and build a grocery list app that automatically pulls in the aisle information for each item and sorts it by how I typically walk through the store. It's the kind of thing that would be incredibly difficult to scale but works just fine when you only have one user. No SaaS grocery app can hope to compete with me being able to tailor my own shopping list app to my exact preferences.

      • markbao2 hours ago
        That is exactly the type of awesome app that can now be built. I edited my comment to clarify that the grocery app and $5/month app are separate examples, but I think your example shows that someone with coding knowledge can build something extremely useful for n=1 users which I fully support.

        I just don’t think most people will end up doing that just like how most people don’t 3D print their own desk drawer organizers even when Gridfinity does all the work for you. Automation doesn’t fully replace the volition to build a thing and make tricky decisions that are familiar to us software engineers but not others.

      • bavarianbob40 minutes ago
        I think an engineer might, but my mother and wife will certainly pick the $5/mo option every time.
      • notahacker2 hours ago
        Who pays $5 per month for grocery store apps anyway? The usual revenue model is the app is free and you pay for the groceries...
    • SoftTalker2 hours ago
      Some things are just not suited to an app. It's still easier to jot down a shopping list on a piece of paper than to use an app and a janky mobile phone keyboard. And bonus, nobody gets to sell your shopping preferences or blast you with ads as you're trying to use it!
      • eddythompson802 hours ago
        I spent years trying to find the PERFECT pantry tracking, auto shopping list generating, auto "what can I make tonight with what I have", auto meal preping app. The idea seemed so simple in mind back then. Let me input everything I have, then as I pull ingredients out of the fridge I just "decrease eggs by 3, decrease butter by 1tbsp, decrease bacon by 2 slices" then over time, it will just build my shopping list for me etc. I even built a requirement list and spent a year implementing my own thing.

        Given the number of apps put there, from dozens of OSS hobbyist apps to industrial resturant inventory management ones, I wan't alone in thinking this is a solved problem and someone should just have the perfect interface for it. Between auto-unit converting apps, natural language processing apps, @cooklang, a million ideas about tracking pantries and ingredients and their categories, frequency of use charts, etc..

        Then one time I went on a trip with a friend to his home town where we stayed at his parents house. His 78 year old mother had a 2 notepads attached to the fridge with a pencil on a string. As she worked in the kitchen, between washing hands she would just jot down random notes, cross others, doddles some on one notepad, and the other she would just add meal plans as she went along. Then when we were going to market she just ripped the page off.

        Sounds so fucking simple and easy and I felt so stupid for the amount of effort I put trying to figure out the right app, the right device to mount on my fridge, how to connect power to it. How to make it not always on to blind me at night, but also so I don't have to keep fiddling with it to unlock it. how to use it with wet fingers, how to keep translating units and "catch up" when I miss updating it for a couple of meals, how to hide ingredients I don't care about and highlight ones I do, how to rearrange the interface. It seriously gave me a pause at how dumb I was that the solution is much much simpler and I pigeon holed my thinking on a tech solution for some reason.

        Can't sell people notepads though. There is no margin or lock-in in that stuff.

      • esafak2 hours ago
        That's just a contrived example. Every application involves a million subjective decisions; from the architecture, algorithms, to the UI/UX.
    • xnx2 hours ago
      Or is the claim that someone will write the app and sell it for $5 one time or give it away free?
      • markbao2 hours ago
        Yes, that’s a possibility! And for app types that have a limited ceiling of how much value they can provide, that will definitely be a thing as an AI app can saturate all of that value.

        But for apps that have a lot of ceiling, people will still gravitate to apps that have had more care and attention than someone vibe coding it once and throwing it on the store, just like how people choose those well-built and maintained apps today over using their built-in Reminders app.

  • benoau2 hours ago
    Competition is absolutely going to crush the concept of mooching off a simple app costing $6/week or $10/month, but it doesn't matter where that competition comes from the problem is a guitar tuner shouldn't cost $100/year, it was always artificially successful derived from preventing users any other way to get apps. If AI doesn't kill this it will be 3rd party marketplaces or open source app distribution that does it.
  • LordHumungous3 hours ago
    > For apps that run locally—no servers, no cloud costs—subscriptions make no sense anymore.

    Did it ever make sense? I always scoffed at the idea of paying a subscription to use a text editor or paint tool.

    • barnabee3 hours ago
      It never made sense, it was just possible to get away with it because there's often been no alternative for many people.

      Good riddance to software subscriptions.

      I hope proprietary software goes the same way entirely. If it's trivial to build an open source competitor, why pay for software can't modify (also trivially).

      • Sytten10 minutes ago
        And we will all love from fresh water and love, can't wait for that world!

        Seriously, you pay for software so people can make a living to improve it. It is a service like anything else.

      • benjiroan hour ago
        > Good riddance to software subscriptions.

        Counter argument ... at what point is software still profitable to be sold?

        I am running my Office 2007 still, and that thing is now almost 20 years old. That was a one time sale, with no other revenue for Microsoft.

        I am not condoning subscriptions but one time selling software only works good, if your a small team with low overhead. The more you sell, the more support becomes a issue. And normal customers do not pay for support.

        Making software now has become easier with LLMs but the same problem keeps existing in regards to support. Sure, you can outsource this to LLMs but lets just say that is problematic (being kind).

        So unless you plan on making software that is not heavily supported/updated, and keep a low single/team cost...

        If you sold a program for a one time fee of ... $39.

        What if somebody now sells the same for $29 with LLMs. And the next guy in China does it even cheaper because his overhead is even smaller. Eventually you get into abandonware where software is made to just eat sales from the bigger guy and that is it.

        Unless you focus on companies, and they have way less issue paying for subscriptions (if it includes support). You see the issue. People kind of overlook the cost of actually running a self employed job or a company (this is a MAJOR cost the moment you need to hire somebody).

        So no, i do not see subscriptions going away because companies will pay for it. And on the normal consumer level, paid support as the solution?

      • colesantiago2 hours ago
        Agreed, the abundance of many apps and the fact that subscriptions and paid apps are going to zero means anyone can make an app for themselves or use an open source one.

        No need to pay for someone else’s one.

    • bdcravens2 hours ago
      (Assuming you're okay with paying for software, just not an ongoing subscription)

      Reasons why subscriptions may be a "better" than upfront licenses, even when the subscription cost more in the long run:

      1. Cashflow management

      2. Bypass budget approvals due to smaller amounts

  • neon_me2 hours ago
    Subscription is not about app ownership, but mostly running the infra. AI is going to make basically everything even more expensive and subscription based.

    Your point is based on wrong assumptions.

    • notahackeran hour ago
      Yeah. There's a power law distribution in successful apps. The valuable ones wrap content, networks, products your enterprise is subscribed to, or at least rank ahead of similar themed games or an abundance of free with ads clones in an App Store as the "everybody uses this, it just works and you can share with them too" solution.

      Sucks for the todo-list-for-x and pretty basic game app creators to have even more competition, but they weren't making bank from subscriptions anyway

  • marioloko3 hours ago
    I think that even if everything can be copied, some platforms are still hard to copy, and some have greater barriers that are legal compliance, and others needs to be able to scale to be viable. Even if apps can be copied, the underlying architectural decisions are usually not so visible as the interface, and the developer should have a good knowledge of building architectures to add value to the existing apps.

    My guess is that copying is not enough, but adding value or saving costs is.

  • sovietmudkipz3 hours ago
    I wonder if this will wind up being true. Yes it’s cheaper to produce an app but most normies I know don’t really want to produce an app. No instead they want to consume a curated app. If anything we’ve moved the value proposition from “it exists” to “it exists and is good, especially compared to the competition.”

    App creators will be competing and copying each other. The software that can support change will probably win in the market. Probably…?

    • BloondAndDoom3 hours ago
      What the OP says someone else will do it cheaper not the normies will do themselves. We already have tons of free and cheap software for the sake of it without making any commercial sense, now we will have way more it.

      It’s inevitable at this point.

  • fzaninottoan hour ago
    I don't agree with the premise that we pay a subscription because there is no better and cheaper alternative. We pay Slack subscriptions but we could get IRC for free. We pay Google Drive subscription but we could get rsync for free.

    The reason we pay a subscription is because the company that built the software knows our business, knows how to get in touch with the decision maker, and knows how to market their product as something desirable. The actual software has little influence in that decision.

    On the contrary, I think the price of SaaS subscriptions will go up as a result of AI. Because the only customers who will switch to a cheaper (or home made) alternative are the ones for whom the software is a commodity. These customers used to form the long tail of subscriptions, usually on the lower tier. When the entry pricer disappears, and the software editor has to generate a high return for their investors, the only way to keep profitability is to increase the price for the other tiers.

  • port1127 minutes ago
    Oh, thank god, it had been a week since we last saw a post about AI killing something. It’s subscriptions this time, all users will be vibe coding apps on their spare time.
  • yobboan hour ago
    > it costs almost nothing to build an app, it costs almost nothing to clone an app.

    For the types of apps that AI can clone on its own, this has always been true. It's the eternal bookstore example, recipe collection, or my-dvd-collection app. The type of apps that Basic and Visual Basic were designed for.

    If there was value in selling subscriptions to an app like this, it was probably coincidental.

  • jweatherby40 minutes ago
    The trick with this wave of fast apps will be getting others to use the things that are built. Sure you can build something for yourself quickly enough, but you'll likely need the rest of your team onboard, which comes with a slew of other problems and complexities.
  • MostlyStable3 hours ago
    I hadn't heard the app store submission stats. Does this answer Mike Judge's question of where the shovelware is [0,1]? Did we just need to wait a few months?

    [0] https://mikelovesrobots.substack.com/p/wheres-the-shovelware...

    [1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46262545

    • eterm3 hours ago
      That essay was written weeks before Opus 4.5 was released which was an inflection point for the ability of Claude code and specifically how well it would work with less guidance.
  • mettamage3 hours ago
    > The math is simple: if it costs almost nothing to build an app, it costs almost nothing to clone an app. And if cloning is free, subscription pricing dies

    Yes and no.

    I have created 15 small apps that solves all kinds of things for me. However, at the department I work full of non-technical people, most of them don’t even know lovable exists.

    And for the one that does know lovable exists, they tend to build stuff with some botched backend and you’ll get to scaling issues, security issues and who knows what else

    • barnabee3 hours ago
      They know ChatGPT exists and soon enough that'll probably be enough for many use cases.
    • OtomotO3 hours ago
      Exactly.

      AI can produce mediocre or outright bad code no problem.

      It was trained on the average, not just on Carmack level code...

      It needs to be checked by a professional.

      This won't ever change with LLMs or gen AI like it is now

  • marcuskaz3 hours ago
    I just did this at work, I was working with Postman testing an API and wanted it work in a slightly different way and be able to do some bulk testing, saving responses, all slightly different then how Postman worked. I clone just the features I wanted in about 15 minutes and now have my own API test tool that works exactly how I want. It is not something I would ever release or need to share, just a local tool for me to use. If your software doesn't provide a service, like sync, storage, availability, if it is just local, it'll be a tough market.

    This also got me thinking about open source might be dying. For this tool, there is no reason for me to open source it, anyone can create the same thing in minutes. I didn't add anything, the only maybe interesting part would be to share the prompt, but then someone else can create their own prompt to have their tool do what they want.

    Software world is really getting weird.

    • informal0072 hours ago
      I agree that software without a service model faces a tough market. Sometimes, users just want software that works indefinitely on their phones without subscriptions or ads. That’s why many people are big fans of one-time purchase apps. I’m one of them; I prefer local apps because I know the software won't deteriorate over time.
    • bwfan1232 hours ago
      > Software world is really getting weird.

      Automation of easy templated tasks will cause a huge disruption. Production of software used to be a skilled job, but now is automated to a large degree. This has huge impacts to the profession as a whole. Already, enrollment to the UC CS program is declining.

    • TZubiri2 hours ago
      You mean postman the curl frontend with a lot of bloat and an account + price tag? Not really the example of a very valuable app to begin with.
    • adventured2 hours ago
      Open source should acquire greater, multiplied value once the new scaffolding is put into place. The open source community is still using the past approach, which is going to be largely washed away.

      More people with more agents freely contributing more to even more concentrated and scaled-up projects.

      Those agents will get more potent. The projects can get more ambitious.

      One user with N Claude usage. 100 users with 100x the Claude usage. Who can build the superior product? If you put the right structure on it, the 100x wins by a drastic margin. Those 100x Claudes benefit in combination courtesy of the open source effect, their potential additive value is greatly enhanced.

      The 1x outcome will end up being relegated to triviality (the one page homepage as website). The bar is about to be raised really, really, really high in software if you want to be relevant. This is merely a very short transition period.

  • avaer3 hours ago
    What if "Stallman was right" and this means users will actually pay people to make software for them, even if it's "open source"? (TFA doesn't mention open source but it might as well be if cloning is cheap)

    Probably wouldn't be a bad thing.

  • rmoriz2 hours ago
    By using an external service, people outsource problems. Using agentic coding to „clone“ a service by naively specifying the features (not the implementation) will insource the problem. If the problem is static, separated, well understood and used internally only, it may be okay to do so. In other circumstances I highly doubt it. SaaS markt will come back stronger once people suffered enough pain in doing „the app myself“.
  • tomleelive3 hours ago
    From a developer's perspective, it seems like we're at a point where we're increasingly concerned about how to make a living and how to pursue a career.
  • Finbarr3 hours ago
    I wrote an article about this a few days ago that has been gaining a lot of traction: https://finbarr.site/2026/02/12/in-defense-of-saas.html

    Point solutions are going to be free. Complex systems with support, integrations, switching costs, customer data, etc., are not going to be free.

    • bwfan1232 hours ago
      > This is the same dynamic that kept IBM dominant for decades

      IBM still sells mainframes but is no longer a growth darling.

      > Markets are right to reassess multiples. But reassessing multiples is very different from pricing in extinction

      What you are missing is that the SaaS companies were extremely overpriced. For instance, crm after all the carnage is still priced at 25 times earnings which is historically high for anything that is not a growth company. The perception was that these companies would print money year after year selling software trinkets on their platforms and as such were placed in the growth category. Now, it is plainly obvious that these software trinkets can be produced easily by anyone using AI. Their pricing-power has dramatically declined. Hence the re-rating. None of this contradicts the thesis in your ai-assisted article that these businesses have moats just like IBM and its mainframes. These businesses are now in a vicious reflexive narrative loop where the narrative will impact the real-world which will further fuel the narrative.

    • reactordev3 hours ago
      Those platforms with a moat have some breathing room but it's only a matter of time. Remember Lotus Notes?
  • jkla5622 hours ago
    The article's right that build costs are collapsing, but that was rarely the hard part. The cost of a real product is architecture decisions, security, data modeling, ops — stuff that doesn't disappear because Claude wrote your CRUD layer.

    What I think actually changes is the packaging. Per-seat subscriptions assumed humans in dashboards. That's the part on borrowed time. The workflow logic underneath still has value — it just gets consumed differently as agents start doing the clicking.

  • 2 hours ago
    undefined
  • jmkni3 hours ago
    Surely unless you are building your own models, and running them locally, you still have to pay OpenAi/Anthropic/Google etc for the API usage?

    And even if you do build your own models, unless they run locally on the device, you still need to pay for hosting?

  • beej712 hours ago
    A lot of these apps already have free versions and businesses still stick with the paid ones. There's value in someone else taking responsibility.
  • _thisdot2 hours ago
    > For apps that run locally—no servers, no cloud costs—subscriptions make no sense anymore

    Never did tbh. These apps should be one time purchases at best.

  • 2 hours ago
    undefined
  • mmaunder3 hours ago
    I fundamentally disagree with the premise:

    "The math is simple: if it costs almost nothing to build an app, it costs almost nothing to clone an app. And if cloning is free, subscription pricing dies. We're already seeing this play out in the numbers. Apple's App Store got 557K new submissions in 2025, up 24% from 2024 (source: Appfigures). That's not because people suddenly got more creative. It's because building an app went from a $50K project to a weekend with Claude."

    No. It's because people got more creative. There are tens of thousands of us who are absolutely on fire creating new products, better versions of old products, new product categories etc. Many of us are burnt out OG programmers who have rediscovered our love for programming. Now we can create without the drudgery.

    You're about to see the most tech innovation our species has ever experienced. Hold on to your seat.

    • neversupervised3 hours ago
      Both are true. You’ll see innovation and you’ll see the cost of these very abundant simple apps go to zero. There’s no way around it. Supply and demand. Everyone can make apps, but there isn’t an obvious reason why people would be buying more apps. More apps made + same apps bought = cheaper apps.
    • jkla5622 hours ago
      This matches what I'm seeing. The AI tooling didn't make building cheaper — it made building fun again. The gap between idea and working prototype collapsed, and that's bringing a lot of experienced builders back off the sidelines.
    • bigyabai38 minutes ago
      > You're about to see the most tech innovation our species has ever experienced.

      With all due respect, we're definitely not. If any of what you said was even the faintest bit true, then we'd have something to show for it already.

    • ninjagoo2 hours ago
      > No. It's because people got more creative. There are tens of thousands of us who are absolutely on fire creating new products, better versions of old products, new product categories etc.

      Nitpicking, but I would argue that people have always been creative, it's a function of our brains. With the ubiquity of camera, videos now show that even birds and animals have levels of creativity. Biological/physical/physics/societal restrictions prevent them from taking it to the next level. Look at what ancient peoples managed to achieve without the benefit of modern tools and techniques; hard to argue people haven't always been creative.

      What has changed is the ability to implement our ideas and harness our creativity - that has become significantly simpler in the age of AI.

      Perhaps the discrepancy between the OP's framing of what's happening (negative impact to developers because app cost has gone to zero) and your positive perspective (hey, look at all these creative ideas we are now implementing) is a matter of perspective: you're both describing the same phenomenon, just different angles.

  • sunir2 hours ago
    After the dot.com, there was the O-pocalypse that terrified me as a recent grad.

    - Open source - Outsourcing - Offshoring

    It was driving the labour cost of an engineer to zero I felt as a young man.

    Then time passed, and I learnt that engineers aren't paid to code. Engineers are paid to solve problems for a business.

    If you recall, the dot.com bust and 9/11 crashed finances for a few years. When the money printing gun went whir because "Deficits don't matter" Washington, then engineers were in demand again.

    Right now we are in a weird situation where money is being printed and it is also tight. Most of it is going to the hardware and infrastructure layer, like the fiber optic bubble in the dot.com. Software will have its time in the sun again.

    • bwfan1232 hours ago
      > Software will have its time in the sun again

      Take a look at the history of the power loom which automated weaving in the 19th century. The number of handloom weavers dropped two orders of magnitude after the power loom.

  • ivanjermakov2 hours ago
    "I copied an icon from desktop to a thumb drive to copy the whole program" mindset.
  • chrisjj3 hours ago
    > if it costs almost nothing to build an app, it costs almost nothing to clone an app. And if cloning is free, subscription pricing dies.

    "AI", the new Napster.

    • gruez3 hours ago
      Where's the analogy breaks down is that AI isn't producing verbatim copies. There's no expectation that dropbox should be protected from clones, for instance.
  • elicash3 hours ago
    I think the options are:

    1. Local models or token cost plummets

    2. Subscriptions more prevalent, given token costs

    3. A single subscription (tokens) to rule them all

    4. Apps with use-based pricing

  • jackhab3 hours ago
    Good luck making your own clone of "simple" file sharing and synchronization app like Google Drive!
    • nativeit3 hours ago
      I’ve been running NextCloud with MinIO storage for several years now. If that didn’t kill subscriptions, I highly doubt whatever very brittle, low quality knock offs an LLM would produce will.
  • zug_zug3 hours ago
    I mean a 10 / month pdf editor sounds like an outrageously bad deal… that’s 120 a year so good riddance

    But if people want to make more good creative games and the store helps me find them I have plenty more money to shovel at them

    • knollimar2 hours ago
      Look at bluebeam revu for a good pdf editor. Pdf editing is harder than it looks
  • weatherlite2 hours ago
    There's a whole class of SAAS that's relatively well protected and that is everything that has to do with proprietry, hard to get data. For example a big cyber company like CrowdStrike could (and probably does) decare that its impossible to clone its cyber solution because their solutions and algorithms were trained on and improved on tons of clients data. So there's that - the data moat. Other than that I suppose everything that's a pain in the butt to duplicate - lots of regulation, tax codes etc etc. Think Shopify for instance, it's not just cloning the UI and some CRUD you need to clone a whole shitload of boring backend work that deals with this shit - and then keep a bunch of agents to constanty supervise regulation and update the software (And perhaps have a few humans overseeing the whole process); is it worth having the agents + few humans in the loop over paying for Shopify ? Currently - I doubt it. When agent costs plummet to almost zero and you dont need any humans in the loop - yes, probably worth it. We're not there yet.
  • CPLX3 hours ago
    I’ve been talking about this a lot with founder/coder types in my circle of friends with a wide variety of opinions.

    My theory as an old guy is that the standards will just go up.

    There’s a current business model where you can make a basic but useful tool that solves a specific business problem and make money. That’s going to end.

    We’ve seen this before. A good example would be when the mobile app stores launched and you could get traction with just about anything. And then you couldn’t.

    • wiether2 hours ago
      > There’s a current business model where you can make a basic but useful tool that solves a specific business problem and make money. That’s going to end.

      I don't know... Because the tool that solves a specific business problem usually requires tons of business expertise. And when company buy this tool, they mainly do it for the expertise diluted in it.

      If they didn't already made their own in-house implementation, it's because they don't want to invest in maintaining the tool that requires expertise outside of their actual business.

      Meanwhile, the company building the tool can invest in keeping this expertise because it's financed by the multiple companies paying for the tool.

    • kilroy1233 hours ago
      That's what I think will happen. Not just standards but taste and design as well. I think there's almost even more demand for good designers now than ever before.

      Why? VERY good design signals this is tasteful and quality. Not an AI-slop-vibe-mess.

      • kranner2 hours ago
        > Why? VERY good design signals this is tasteful and quality. Not an AI-slop-vibe-mess.

        I'm not too sure about this. Very good design, at least in terms of marketing materials such as screenshots, may be end up signalling the use of AI in the coding as well. I know if an app has obviously-AI-generated photos in the screenshots I would be disinclined even to try it.

  • tiku2 hours ago
    Only unique data will be worth something.
  • cyanydeez3 hours ago
    One subscription to rule them all.

    Subscriptions arnt going away. Software will just be like cable and now streaming.

  • rekabis3 hours ago
    People will still pay for convenience or functionality.

    If there is a feature that cannot be done on-device, and that on-Internet feature can be effectively moated and duplication-resisted, then if it’s a feature that people think they need they will absolutely open their wallets to pay for.

    The trick is finding that feature or attribute that cannot be done on-device, and then moating it against AI duplication. Do that, make it appear indispensable in the minds of people, and they will absolutely pay for it.

    • BloondAndDoom3 hours ago
      Yes but they will pay less because there will 50 competitors who provide similar enough software for fraction of prices. Having a moar that’s not replicable for cheaper is rare
  • orasis2 hours ago
    This is a terrible take. Competition in the app space is competition for distribution/attention. Subscriptions are just how apps convert that attention to dollars. Consumers almost never price shop apps.
  • jitl3 hours ago
    i don’t agree.

    most apps i use are not AI clone-able yet with AI’s current faculties. i’m not going to switch to an ai vibe code of Google Photos, Tailscale/Mulvadd VPN, or YouTube. For those three apps, i pay for cloud infrastructure. sure, you can say with enough AI i could vibe code a Tailscale backend system, but it sounds like it would take more tokens than my $20/mo ChatGPT plan PLUS a mountain of cloud provider bills and such to host my backend.

    i do pay for some premium apps that run entirely on device, like Halide Camera. But there again, is my $20/mo tokens enough to clone a high quality image processing app, to such a degree i will trust it to capture precious memories effectively? ehh.

    • colesantiago2 hours ago
      Yes they are easy to clone and for good reason.

      Thanks to AI abundance, everyone will be better off.

  • TZubiri2 hours ago
    I have no idea where this theory that SaaS is dead because vibe coding came from.

    My best bet is that some NYC traders take on agents was to post the same bullish take a million times in order to drive tech stocks (which make up the most of the market cap), and buy them for low.

    • rmoriz2 hours ago
      I don’t want to speculate who is behind that. Clearly some SaaS shops are way overpriced but this is in no way the end of the business modell. Some contrarian will find the right timing to counter play and become more wealthy…
  • tinyhouse2 hours ago
    I think the article has some truth but the author also ignores something important. Yes, subscription costs are going down. But there's a big difference between consumer and enterprise. Everyone needs to build fast now. A company cannot get distracted by building capabilities in-house that are not core to their product. This was true yesterday and will be true tomorrow. That means they will keep paying for quality solutions and not settle for sub-par solutions just because someone made them for free (there was always an open source solution available long before AI entered the scene). I may argue that not settling is even more important now that moving fast is key.

    For a company, paying $10K a year for a quality service, that's a no-brainer. Most companies spend that money on alcohol in company onsites. However, if you're charging really high prices (the Datadogs of the world), then you're going to face tougher competition from cheaper alternatives that might be as good as you, and when companies need to cut costs, which they often do, you'll be in trouble.

    I think what it means to many software companies is that prices will significantly go down on average but the median might not see significant decrease. Companies will be smaller and more lean, hiring less people in general (not just engineers!). There will be more companies out there, so hopefully it will even out.

    Last thing is that every product will have too many options to choose from. This has been the reality actually for a long time and going to get much worse. How you market and brand your product and acquire customers will become more difficult than ever.

  • adventured3 hours ago
    It's software eating everything that it can as capabilities and reach are added. This has been going on since the earliest software programs launched.

    It's identical to Craigslist hollowing out offline classified ads. Classified ads used to be a hyper lucrative market for newspapers (both local and national). That market imploded from ~$17 billion ($32b+ adjusted) in 2000 to $1-$2 billion last year. Once it could, it did.

    AI should enable software to touch more things more cheaply (more efficiently in many cases). As it can, it will. Expect a lot more wipe outs.

  • kibwen3 hours ago
    No. Apple makes money from subscriptions, and Apple controls the app store with an iron fist. In a hypothetical world where the price of apps falls to ~free, Apple will just ban free apps in order to recoup that revenue. Hell, if you think that you can build apps for free, then you need to explain why Apple wouldn't do the same themselves, charge users a recurring fee for the privelige of using them, and then muscle out any competitors using their natural monopoly to reap the profits for themselves. Apple doesn't work for your benefit; like every other paperclip maximizer, they have a sociopathic focus on profit at all costs.
  • siva73 hours ago
    > People have been complaining about app subscription costs for years. There's that old complaint: "Why do I have to keep paying for software after I already paid $1000 for my iPhone?" That might actually become reality now.

    I'm seriously wondering if this blog is just some rage bait or if that guy is really that dumb? I can't tell anymore.

  • ant6n3 hours ago
    I think AI is going to kill my sanity. But mostly, because the websites are so bad. It's just a chat interface, but apparently nobody knows how to write those anymore. They use 1GB of memory per instance, slow to load, UI constantly crashes. Then Gemini loses all context when you stop and edit a reply. Then the bots themselves with their hallucination, their gaslighting, their covering up of mistakes, covering up that they can't read a simple PDF. Not following simple instructions.

    It's like these companies are trying to get us hooked, then try to make us explode in frustration because it doesn't actually quite work. Not because the AI is bad, but because the interface (30-old-tech, a chat ui) is just broken.

  • tempodoxan hour ago
    This is yet another fairytale to sell us more “AI” subscriptions.
  • sergiotapia2 hours ago
    Have you seen non-technical people use AI for anything beyond read my emails or add a column to my sheet?

    Yes, the guy who owns a boat and wants to track his calories is going to fuck around in claude code and figure out deployment, and sign up to some free PaaS and pay $1.38 a month to self host their app.

    Sure.

  • colesantiago3 hours ago
    This is good.

    This is AI abundance for all and for free.

    Also the end of the app store grifting.

    I welcome this, having an app was never a competitive advantage at all.