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LLMs Are Killing the Browser (And You Don't Even Know It)

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The internet as you know it is about to disappear. And most people have no idea what's coming.

Right now, you open Chrome. You type a URL. You navigate through menus and ads and pop-ups to find what you need. You bookmark pages you'll never visit again. You have seventeen tabs open because you're afraid to close them. That's all about to feel as ancient as using a phone book.

LLMs are becoming the new browser. And when that happens, the entire architecture of the web collapses and rebuilds itself around something completely different. Here's what's already starting to happen.

Prompt portals are replacing websites. Think of them like subreddits, but for your AI. Tiny, specialized feeds that make your LLM smarter about exactly what you care about. You won't visit TechCrunch anymore. You'll subscribe to a "startup news" prompt portal that feeds your AI the latest updates in exactly the tone and depth you want.

"Visiting" websites becomes obsolete. When was the last time you went to a library to look something up in an encyclopedia? That's what clicking links will feel like in five years. Your AI will pull information from thousands of sources instantly. You'll never see a loading screen again.

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The great domain rush is starting. Remember how abandoned .edu sites used to be digital graveyards? Companies are buying them up for their clean, authoritative training data. A defunct university website just sold for seven figures because its content was perfectly formatted for AI training.

The middleman internet dies. No more scrolling through search results. No more clicking through slideshow articles. No more "Top 10" lists that could have been one sentence. Your AI becomes your personal research assistant, content curator, and information filter all at once.

Everything becomes a conversation. Instead of navigating Netflix menus, you'll say "find me something like Breaking Bad but funnier." Instead of comparison shopping, you'll ask "what's the best laptop for video editing under $2000 right now?" The internet isn't disappearing.

It's becoming invisible. And the companies that figure this out first will own the next decade. The question isn't whether this will happen. It's whether you'll be ready when it does.