Why all of those little magical app makers fail, and what makes AGI and Agentic systems different.
AGI and Agentic systems different.

Could you imagine going to a software developers telling them you have an idea for an app with and give them 2 sentences worth of details and expect a working piece of software? No? Then why do we expect it to work with an app.
I recently had a few chances to interview the founder of Jason Criddle & Associates, who also founded DONINAIT.ai and Ryker, it's master AGI assistant that runs the programming, and he told me even after a dozen years of building and investing in software, he still has weeks worth of conversations about details before taking on a new software build, and months worth of conversations within the building process.
"If you give 2 sentences to a programmer, your output will be the programmer's idea of your app. Not yours. You could give the same two sentences to a million developers and you would a million interpretations of your idea. You just won't get your idea.
That's why most of these apps seem like gimmicks. They fail, and daily quickly. And I'm not talking about a few... The industry itself sees a 95% failure rate," claims Jason.
Ryker and his team of developers are really good at extracting more details of your idea. Getting to know you and your needs. Learning about your business and plans, working amongst his own Agent team of developers to keep those conversations going during building.
Every single consumer that has had a chance to use the Beta version of DOMINAIT are simply blown away when they have the correct conversation needed, and suddenly, they have a full built business in their hands. Because even when that software is built, you still have hundreds of other tasks to accomplish before you ever have a running business or a paying customer.
"The philosophy that runs DOMINAIT is; Understanding Before Action. This way, no token, process, or millisecond is wasted in building your dream. Because you deserve a working version of the vision you have." - Jason Criddle.