The dominant AI interface will be a universal conversational layer (chat/voice) for any task. This will be supplemented by specialized graphical UIs for power users needing deep functional control, much like an executive sometimes needs to edit a document directly instead of dictating to an assistant.

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Power users of AI agents believe the ideal user interface is not graphical but conversational. They prefer text-based interactions within existing chat apps and see voice as the ultimate endgame. The goal is an invisible assistant that operates autonomously and only prompts for input when absolutely necessary, making traditional UIs feel like friction.

Power users are discovering that direct, conversational interaction with AI agents is more efficient than clicking through graphical user interfaces (GUIs). This signals a shift toward an 'app-less' world where tasks are accomplished via chat, potentially making traditional UI/UX design roles redundant for many applications.

Comparing chat interfaces to the MS-DOS command line, Atlassian's Sharif Mansour argues that while chat is a universal entry point for AI, it's the worst interface for specialized tasks. The future lies in verticalized applications with dedicated UIs built on top of conversational AI, just as apps were built on DOS.

The primary interface for managing AI agents won't be simple chat, but sophisticated IDE-like environments for all knowledge workers. This paradigm of "macro delegation, micro-steering" will create new software categories like the "accountant IDE" or "lawyer IDE" for orchestrating complex AI work.

While chatbots are an effective entry point, they are limiting for complex creative tasks. The next wave of AI products will feature specialized user interfaces that combine fine-grained, gesture-based controls for professionals with hands-off automation for simpler tasks.

AI is best understood not as a single tool, but as a flexible underlying interface. It can manifest as a chat box for some, but its real potential is in creating tailored workflows that feel native to different roles, like designers or developers, without forcing everyone into a single interaction model.

The next frontier for conversational AI is not just better text, but "Generative UI"—the ability to respond with interactive components. Instead of describing the weather, an AI can present a weather widget, merging the flexibility of chat with the richness of a graphical interface.

The next user interface paradigm is delegation, not direct manipulation. Humans will communicate with AI agents via voice, instructing them to perform complex tasks on computers. This will shift daily work from hours of clicking and typing to zero, fundamentally changing our relationship with technology.

Legora pivoted from a dashboard with six fixed functions to a chat interface. They realized a fixed UI requires constant updates, whereas a conversational UI automatically becomes more powerful as the underlying LLMs improve, allowing the product to "rise with the tide" of AI progress.

Chatbots are fundamentally linear, which is ill-suited for complex tasks like planning a trip. The next generation of AI products will use AI as a co-creation tool within a more flexible canvas-like interface, allowing users to manipulate and organize AI-generated content non-linearly.

Conversational AI Will Be Paired with Bespoke GUIs for Power Users | RiffOn