Kissing AI Bots Goodbye: Personal Website Exploration

I swore off making AI bots. Over the last few years, my work revolved solely around them, and I started seeing products as... no, not as solutions to user problems, but as a hypothesis for a solution, where we try to fit a square peg in the round hole of our perceived problems.

Users don't tackle a problem in one unified way; each of them blazes their own trail, yet we constantly try to box them in and herd them down a beaten path. I'm glad that AI assistants are gradually moving us away from this narrow-minded thinking.

And yet... a personal website. A simple product, where research takes minutes or hours, not days. I needed to give access to projects, books I've written, a gallery of my works, and ideally, add the capability to listen to music in the future.

For some reason, I decided to leverage my accumulated experience and train an AI assistant to respond to user inquiries and fetch information from a knowledge base I planned to update. A trivial task. What could possibly go wrong?

Well, of course, the bot traffic started triggering the input and making requests to my server (thank goodness I didn't use an AI API but stored the model locally on my server), which caused the maintenance cost to skyrocket. Plus, there were people who somehow thought it was a free-for-all GPT.

In the end, I went back to the If-Else model with conditional rendering and decided not to go for a UI messenger but to add feeds, like on social networks. So, there you have it.

No more AI bots for simple tasks.

Posted on Feb 2, 2024
Alex Shelvey
Product UX Exploration & Development ⤵

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