There has been a lot of talk about SaaS platforms whose front page essentially just has a textarea for collecting the user's intent, and what comes after that is a canvas for the outcome. Call these agentic or AI native startups, but I think there might be something in this pattern. Most famous examples include Lovable and ChatGPT, but obviously, these will spread to other domains like legal, and I happen to know that some medical startup is also working on this. So what's the big deal here? Firstly, we can eliminate the endless form filling and table layouts. Not that there is that much bad in those - we are all used to them, and they play a part in making websites familiar and easy to use. It’s more than the UIs become more personalized in the sense that you don’t need to squeeze all users through a funnel with forms that have tons of fields and tables or visualizations with dozens of variables. The textarea approach flips this. Instead of asking use...
I’ve been looking into agentic workflows to act as an operations assistant for the SaaS I'm working on. A big part of that work is getting the assistant to make sense of all the alert and monitoring data that pours in every day. Passing a bunch of raw time-series data to an LLM generally doesn’t work that well. You need to tell the LLM to aggregate the data and give it the means to do so. Using aggregates will often lead to better insights from the LLM. This is a well-known fact to anyone who has tinkered with this (at least at the time of writing this). Humans, of course, like to build visualizations and dashboards to solve this issue (yes, yes, dashboards are often useless, but complaining about that is another blog post). LLMs can analyze them as well and in fact are pretty good at that, so the aggregate can be something both humans and LLMs can digest. I’ve been tinkering with the idea of appending some LLM-only content to a dashboard—for example, additional context, specific d...