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lmeyerovtoday at 7:29 AM0 repliesview on HN

RIP low-code, long live low-code companies :)

For our startup, the low-code vs LLM shift started hugely frustrating and scary, but also hopeful. After years of dev, we were getting ready to launch our low code app product #2, and then bam, chatgpt 3.5 happened and LLMs stopped sucking so much.

We had to look at our future for our corner of the world -- bringing our tricky gpu graph investigation tech into something that goes beyond the data 1%'ers at top gov/bank/tech/cyber investigation teams to something most teams can do -- and made the painful and expensive call to kill the low-code product.

The good news is, as a verticalized startup, the market still needed something here for the same reason we originally built it. LLMs just meant the writing was on the wall that that the market expectations would grow as would what's possible in general. We correctly guessed that would happen, and started building louie.ai . Ex: While we previously had already viewed our low-code platform as doubling a way for teams to write down their investigation flows so they can eventually do ML-powered multi-turn automations on them.. we never dreamed we'd be speed running investigation capture the flag competitions. Likewise, we're now years ahead of schedule on shedding the shackles of python-first notebooks & dashboards.

So yeah, for folks doing generic low-code productivity apps, it's not great. n8n and friends had to reinvent themselves as AI workflows, and there's still good reason to believe that as agent experiences improve, they'll get steamrolled anyways... but...

Verticalized low-code workflow tools get to do things that are hard for the claude codes. Today the coding envs are built better than most of the non-ai-native vertical teams, but the patterns are congealing and commoditizing. It'll be interesting as the ai side continues to commoditize , and the vertical teams get better at it - at which point the verticals get much more valuable again. (And indeed, we see OpenAI and friends hitting ceilings on generic applications and having to lean in to top verticals, at least for the b2b world.)