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36 - AI Fallacies

36 - AI Fallacies

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The Good Stuff, with Pete and Andy - Episode 36: AI Fallacies Hosts: Pete and Andy

Pete and Andy tackle common AI fallacies head-on, starting with the "junior developer" myth. They explore why juniors will actually thrive and why we're entering a golden age for small teams.

Plus: reflections from their first Touch Don't Look workshop, the death of traditional SaaS, and why Pete is "insanely excited" about where they're going with Wingman.

Key Moments:

* [01:49] The seating configuration theory: why talking side-by-side works better for blokes

* [02:10] The junior developer fallacy: "Coding AI is here, we don't need junior devs anymore"

* [03:11] The fallacy extends to junior lawyers and accountants—basically all junior roles

* [04:04] Pete's take: juniors actually adopt new tech faster because they don't have baggage

* [04:44] London law firm story: how partners explained the inefficient system

* [05:06] "The associate crosses it all out and starts again, then the senior does the same"

* [05:47] Weighing paperwork to charge: "Six inch file? That's $600,000"

* [06:25] The uncomfortable truth: junior lawyers never added value in the old system anyway* [07:30] Why couldn't a tech-savvy junior lawyer act more like a senior with better tools?

* [09:15] New business models emerge: one senior lawyer with AI could serve 1000 clients differently

* [11:00] SaaS companies are building for the average—your specific needs don't matter to them

* [14:30] The "golden age of small teams" thesis: 2-10 person teams can now compete

* [16:45] Historical precedent: juniors always adopt new technology first (mobile, cloud, etc.)

* [19:20] The real question: will there be work? Not "will juniors be employable?"

* [22:00] Why AI makes protectionism harder—you can't hide that you're not using the tools

* [24:15] People who don't adopt will look obviously incompetent compared to those who do

* [27:30] Traditional education is completely misaligned with what's needed now

* [30:45] The credentialism trap: spending $100k on degrees that don't teach relevant skills

* [33:20] "Buy a Mac Mini, get Wingman, spend a year learning—you'll be miles ahead"

* [36:15] Touch Don't Look workshop debrief: people helping each other, energy in the room

* [38:40] The realization moment: "Wait, this is on my phone? It's real?"

* [42:00] Why cohort-based learning works: people bounce ideas off each other

* [45:30] Speedrun positioning: build a CRM, website, and agent onboarding in 4 hours

* [48:15] Marginal gains model: monthly rapid prototypes for the community

* [51:20] The 1000 True Fans model: economics work when you deliver to a cohort

* [54:00] Why Nostr-based infrastructure solves authentication and authorization for free

* [56:30] "I can just give them a key, they never see it, they can sign into a thousand things"

* [58:00] Pete's excitement: "I've got big plans. Insanely excited about where this goes."

* [59:00] The education business wrapped around tech enablement with AI

* [1:01:19] Final thought: "We've landed on a nice spot"

Quote: "The fundamental fallacy is assuming that the work and the industry and the company is all packaged the same and not that there's some disruption to the business model."


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