Could be market for the automations, where people can for example sell "buy tickets on ticketmaster" actions.
They could also monetize all the data they have and will have training that particular model, which is very lucrative if the AI bubble continues to inflate.
In software we see a lot of these “re-imaginings” come and go, see Arc browser, new cloud databases and myriad other things rolling the dice and hoping that they can disrupt and monetize later.
I think this is rarer in hardware because
a. It is harder, requires more planning, inventory management, higher standards and budget
b. Higher barrier to entry means not a lot of small players taking risks. I suppose it takes a technological shift like AI or spatial computing to re-imagine hardware interaction as well.
The saddest part is, when software companies come and go all that is wasted is some VC money and Twitter rants. With hardware, we’re making more junk to fill up oceans and waste precious resources…
Then, they will either a) sell a new hardware with subscription b) sell only software likely as a subscription c) plan just to be acquired.
I could see some future LAM integrations be paid service extras.
At least it is not a complete subscription on the device itself or a SaaS for once.
I think the move is to raise more and more money and try to find a business model?