Generative AI is not only impacting how travel is bought and sold as we heard in Part 1 of our AI Effect series, it’s also impacting how companies are building and delivering the travel services that are bought and sold.
Companies used to stockpile servers, engineers and access to bandwidth, all of which required considerable capital. In this new AI era, anyone can use Replit or Lovable to spin up their own travel app in a matter of hours. Companies no longer need teams of expensive engineers to code up a new application — the just need a Cursor subscription and a few developers with some free time to vibe code. Legacy infrastructure is getting deprecated in favor of AI-based solutions that didn’t exist a few months ago.
So what does the enterprise tech stack look in this era of AI? Is it proving to be more cost-effective than the legacy platforms our industry was built on? Is it unlocking opportunity for startups with fresh ideas to take share from incumbents? Or is it enabling the incumbents to finally catch up to startups in terms of speed of innovation? Or is it a combination (or collaboration) of both?
Follows
Gilad Berenstein – host
Cara Whitehill - host
Josh Dow — guest
SJ Sawhney — guest
Go Deeper
- From Prompts To Products: The Business Of No-Code AI Is Booming - Forbes [$]
- McKinsey Technology Trends Outlook 2025 - McKinsey & Company
- This Week in Lessons from (Technical) Founders - Gilad Berenstein
- Building the Foundation for Agentic AI - Bain & Company
- Agentic AI in the enterprise: An evolution, not a revolution - Red Hat Blog
정보
- 프로그램
- 주기매주 업데이트
- 발행일2025년 11월 11일 오전 10:00 UTC
- 길이58분
- 등급전체 연령 사용가
