Original Reddit post

“This is abstract but I keep coming back to it. Command line interfaces required you to translate everything you wanted to do into specific syntax the machine understood. You described your intent in the machine’s language. GUIs changed the fundamental interaction model. Instead of describing what you wanted, you could point at the thing you wanted to act on. Drag the file. Click the button. The action happened closer to the object. Early AI chat feels like a command-line pattern to me. You describe the situation in text. The AI responds. You translate the response back into action. The model is far more capable than a command interpreter, but the core pattern is the same: describe → respond → translate back. The ““GUI equivalent”” for AI might be something that can see what you’re already looking at. Something where you don’t describe the situation because the AI already has it. You point at the email and ask a question about it, rather than copying and pasting the email text into a chat box. I’m not sure what the right implementation looks like or whether it exists yet. Do other people think AI chat interfaces are in a CLI phase right now, and if so, what does the shift look like?” submitted by /u/Few-Jackfruit-3010

Originally posted by u/Few-Jackfruit-3010 on r/ArtificialInteligence