Thinking through AI, economics, and accelerating change.
Every company is carrying 'automation debt'—processes that could be automated but haven't been. When AI makes automation cheap, that debt comes due all at once. Most companies will implode.
Google isn't just a company—it's infrastructure. The entire web was built assuming Google exists. If AI agents replace search, the internet breaks in ways nobody's prepared for.
Everyone who lived through previous AI winters sees another one coming. They're wrong. The math is completely different this time, and understanding why matters.
In a world where AI can execute anything, the ability to know what's worth executing becomes the only scarce resource. Taste is about to become the most valuable human skill.
OpenAI just hired the creator of the hottest AI agent platform on the planet. Meta bid billions. Anthropic? Nowhere to be seen. This strategic blunder could define the next era of AI competition.
Every AI company is racing to expand context windows. They're solving the wrong problem. Here's the architecture that makes context limits irrelevant—and why it should already exist.
What I really think when someone confidently dismisses AI creativity at a dinner party. A deep dive into why the 'AI can't be creative' argument reveals more about human ego than machine limitations.
Most tech companies are about to become irrelevant. Not because they're bad at what they do, but because what they do is about to become worthless. Here's the brutal math.
Everyone points to historical unemployment data to argue AI won't cause mass displacement. Here's why that argument fundamentally misunderstands what's different about this technological revolution.