The first generation of AI-powered products (often called “AI Wrapper” apps, because they “just” are wrapped around an LLM API) were quickly brought to market by small teams of engineers, picking off the low-hanging problems. But today, I’m seeing teams of domain experts wading into the field, hiring a programmer or two to handle the implementation, while the experts themselves provide the prompts, data labeling, and evaluations.
For these companies, the coding is commodified but the domain expertise is the differentiator.
— Drew Breunig, The Dynamic Between Domain Experts & Developers Has Shifted
Recent articles
- CaMeL offers a promising new direction for mitigating prompt injection attacks - 11th April 2025
- Model Context Protocol has prompt injection security problems - 9th April 2025
- Long context support in LLM 0.24 using fragments and template plugins - 7th April 2025