The disappearing AI middle class

14 points
1/21/1970
3 days ago
by nick217

Comments


nick217

In 24 hours last week, OpenAI and DeepSeek made opposite bets on what frontier AI is worth. One says it is a closed product that just got more expensive. The other says it is open infrastructure that just got dramatically cheaper. The price gap between the two ends of the market is now wider than it has been in years, and the comfortable middle that most coding agents have been routing through is thinning out. Until last week, you could pick a model on a fairly smooth price-performance curve. There was a top tier, a middle tier, and a budget tier, and most workloads found a comfortable home somewhere on the slope. That curve still exists, but it has stretched. What used to be a continuous gradient now looks more like two clusters with a gap in between, and developers building agents, coding assistants, and high-volume inference pipelines now have to think harder about which side to route to.

3 days ago

taffydavid

This is particularly awkward timing for anthropic, in a week when everyone is complaining about Claude token usage and effectiveness. Now they have a new competitor that's suddenly cheaper, a competitor that everyone had pretty much forgotten about

2 days ago

motbus3

I did a deepseek v4 flash Vs gpt 5 .5 comparison for a project and, honestly... Gpt 5.5 has no chance. Ive got a great output on a fraction of the price...

And gpt 5.5 wasn't even that good

2 days ago

iugtmkbdfil834

Could you elaborate a little? I am super curious.

2 days ago