@yonfrula
in the art world, there's a clear separation between pro-ai and anti-ai.
i don't expect this wall to last too long, but that's where it is right now.
ai isn't just a water-consuming machine stealing from real artists to generate 6-fingered humanoids. that narrative got old pretty quickly.
ai today is far more powerful than it was one or two years ago, in ways that i'm still finding hard to process.
i've been tinkering with it for a while, mainly trying to find the best use cases for curious artists like me.
i believe artists who adapt and embrace these tools authentically, will have a better chance at building a sustainable life from their craft. and i'm not talking about letting ai draw for them.
processes are changing. workflows are changing...the way most things function is shifting, all at once.
we're sprinting towards a future where the internet as we know, might not exist anymore. where the web is purely navigated by autonomous agents.
and they can become managers, producers, researchers — autonomous systems running in the background, handling heavier (sometimes boring) tasks while we stay focused on creating.
not replacing our creativity, but expanding the world around it.
an agent can learn your taste, understand your direction, your goals. it doesn't respond like your chatgpt subscription; it builds memory, context, continuity. the relationship deepens, and so does its usefulness.
agents could seek grants and opportunities aligned with your style, manage your shopify store and inventory, talk to suppliers, discover new artists you might love — and maybe send them to you first thing in the morning. daily.
i'm honestly blown away by this shit.