I haven’t posted in a while because work and life have been busy, but I finally found a moment to write. The technology conversation moves so fast that even a short break can feel like returning to a different world. Right now, the pace of change is both exciting and overwhelming.
AI is everywhere. Tech leaders are racing to release new models every other week. Companies large and small are shipping AI features. Nearly every new startup calls itself “AI-driven,” promising automation, intelligence, or efficiency. The hype is peaking, and if a product doesn’t mention AI, it risks being overlooked.
At some point, the AI boom will reach an inflection point. The bubble may deflate, budgets will shrink, and many of us will feel exhausted by yet another “AI-powered” release. That moment is not here yet. We are likely still a few years away, but when it arrives, the reset will cut through the noise and highlight only those applications that create real and lasting value.
There is also another possible path. If progress continues to accelerate, we may move closer to systems capable of handling reliable, end-to-end work, something approaching artificial general intelligence. In that world, AI would no longer be just a feature but a collaborator, working for us in everyday life.
Whichever way the future unfolds, the workforce will change dramatically. Some professions will fade, while entirely new ones will emerge. What will remain crucial are the human strengths of problem framing, judgment, ethics, and oversight. The tools may evolve rapidly, but our ability to adapt will determine who thrives and who becomes obsolete.
Thanks for reading. I will try to post more consistently.