Mark Andrusko says the next generation of AI applications will move beyond prompt-based interfaces, shifting toward systems that act with initiative and require far less direct instruction from users.
In a new video update, the Andreessen Horowitz partner believes that the familiar prompt box is nearing the end of its usefulness as AI systems become more capable of observing context and acting proactively.
“My big idea for 2026 is the death of the prompt box as the primary user interface for AI applications.”
Andrusko says the next wave of AI apps will not rely on users carefully telling systems what to do, but instead will monitor activity and step in with suggested actions.
“The next wave of apps will require way less prompting. They’ll observe what you’re doing and intervene proactively with actions for you to review.”
To explain the shift, Andrusko compares AI systems to different levels of human employees, ranked by how much agency they exercise.
“What do the best human employees do…? It’s a pyramid of the five types of employees and the ones with the most agency, and why they’re the best. So if you start at the bottom rung of the pyramid, it’s people who identify a problem and then come to you and ask for help, and ask what to do. And that’s like the lowest agency employee. But if you go to the S-tier, the highest agency employee you could possibly have, they identify a problem. They do research necessary to diagnose where the problem came from. They look into a number of possible solutions. They implement one of those solutions, and then they keep you in the loop.”

Andrusko says this is the model AI applications are converging toward.
“And that’s what I think the future of AI apps will be, and I think that’s what everyone wants, and that’s what we’re all working towards, so I feel pretty confident that we’re almost there.”
He says continued improvements in large language models (LLMs) make this transition feasible, even if humans remain involved at the final decision point.
“I think LLMs have continued to get better and faster and cheaper, and I think there’s a world in which the user behavior will still necessitate a human in the loop at the very end.”
Andrusko predicts that in the future, AI systems will be capable of doing the heavy lifting and presenting high-quality recommendations for approval.
“But I think the models are more than capable of getting to a point where they are suggesting something really smart on your behalf and you basically just have to click accept.”
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