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Please subscribe 👌 For decades, apps defined the digital world. From the rise of the App Store in 2008 to the explosion of over 5 million mobile apps globally, software became synonymous with icons, downloads, and endless updates. Entire careers were built on mastering frameworks, UI systems, and platform ecosystems. But history repeats itself. There was a time when fax machines were revolutionary. According to industry reports from the late 1980s, millions of businesses relied on fax as critical infrastructure. Then email replaced it. Not gradually. Inevitably. Now, the same shift is happening again. AI agents are moving beyond passive interfaces. Instead of opening apps, navigating menus, and switching between platforms, users are beginning to issue commands. According to McKinsey, generative AI could automate up to 70% of work tasks in some roles. Gartner projects that a majority of enterprise workflows will integrate AI decision systems before the end of the decade. PwC estimates AI could contribute $15.7 trillion to the global economy by 2030. The model is changing. Apps require humans to operate them. Agents operate on behalf of humans. This video explores: • Why the app model is structurally inefficient • How AI agents collapse multiple apps into a single intelligent layer • What this means for developers, startups, and the app economy • Why the interface itself may be disappearing If you are building software, this shift matters. If you are investing in tech, it matters more. And if you rely on apps daily, you may already be using the last generation of them. The fax machine didn’t disappear overnight. It just became irrelevant. The question is not whether apps will vanish. The question is whether you’re preparing for what replaces them. Subscribe for fact-based breakdowns on AI, software evolution, and the future of digital power.