cadblu
Well-Known Member
This looks kind of interesting. Amazon Autos is offering a generous incentive to order new vehicles on their website. Not difficult to imagine that Slate will somehow be included in the future.
Yeah, I was gonna say...An AI will build it in a few hours (given the token budget and the appropriate service tier). My career as a software engineer is happily over, as the placement rate for new computer science grads has plummeted from more than 90% to under 20%, and still dropping. And salaries are down by 30%.
Seriously. A prompt engineer with the latest Anthropic paid tier can build a beautiful and functional accessories site in a day. In my retirement, just for grins, I've built apps in an hour that would have taken me weeks to months back in the early days. It keeps freaking me out how good it is.
And the crazy thing is that these tools get exponentially better with each release. And the releases are accellerating. You go from one release to another - the changes are mind blowing.
Yes.In 2026 an e-commerce store for auto parts is a monumental task? Really?
This reinforces my point.TradeMotion (Automotive E-commerce): A company providing IT solutions for the automotive industry, specializing in online catalogs for parts, accessories, and mechanical products (often linked with Parts.com). Used by BMW, Benz, and VW, to name a few.
This.Its not the website, its the execution behind it. That is the part the tech world forgets - the website is nothing without the logistics, the supply chains, the quality control, the order processing, etc. That is the part that is a big task.
Yes.Isn't this the expertise of the new CEO?
Again, anyone can make a site that looks pretty, everything behind it has to work too. It sounds like the maker will be a big part of it too. They will have renders of all the hundreds of accessories from both Slate and 3rd parties, so you can add them to the truck with a click and see how they look.![]()
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This took approximately 5 minutes of effort. If Slate is hiring for this monumental task, sign me up!
Sure, totally agree. The original post said making the site will be hard. It isn’t.Again, anyone can make a site that looks pretty, everything behind it has to work too. It sounds like the maker will be a big part of it too. They will have renders of all the hundreds of accessories from both Slate and 3rd parties, so you can add them to the truck with a click and see how they look.
But that is already all planned out. They have to get all the logistics, supply, warehousing, shipping, etc all worked out, in detail, and be sure there are not going to be some unexpected costs that will sap the margin.
You can whip up an image of an AI Sop Website in five minutes, I know. Making a workable site that's universally compatible on all platforms and also maintainable requires a different level of talent.Sure, totally agree. The original post said making the site will be hard. It isn’t.
Those aren’t “Ai slop website images”- it’s a real working platform that works on PC, mobile, tablet, I didn’t test my smart TV so can’t say it’s universally compatible but…You can whip up an image of an AI Sop Website in five minutes, I know. Making a workable site that's universally compatible on all platforms and also maintainable requires a different level of talent.
What we're experiencing here is explained by the Dunning-Kruger Effect, with some Blind Men and an Elephant mixed in for good measure.
I should have anticipated this when I wrote the original post. The OP focuses on the presentation part of their E-Market because that's what I am most curious about.
Slate's E-Market site needs to be e-commerce hub with B-to-B (business-to-consumer), B-to-C (business-to-business) capabilities and APIs (Application Programming Interfaces) that all need to interact behind the scene with data interchange.
I stand by my original assertion that creating such a thing, and doing it well, is a tall order.
I'm sorry, but I can go on line input my VIN to BMW's Technical Information Service and up comes the part schematics for every part of my car and for every BMW automobile built since the 1950s. I can cut and paste the P/N into any dealership that uses the TradeMotion software suite and buy my parts with a credit card and the parts arrive at my house in a matter of days. I've been doing that for more than 20 years. It is already done extremely well.Yes.
Not just to do it, maybe, but to do it well, yes.
This reinforces my point.
If it were easy to do TradeMotion wouldn't need to exist.
This.
Yes.
Peter Faricy served as the Vice President of Amazon Marketplace, where he played a key role in expanding the platform to support millions of third-party sellers across multiple countries. He was instrumental in launching various initiatives that contributed to the growth and success of Amazon's e-commerce ecosystem.