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This is a very public journal of anxiety, existential dread, and way too much tech knowledge. Basically therapy, but with Wi-Fi. asiandadenergy.substack.com

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31 episodios

episode The Real Reason They're Racing To Build AI? artwork

The Real Reason They're Racing To Build AI?

The Future That Quietly Keeps Me Up at Night Hello world, For the first time in more than two decades, I suddenly found myself with something I hadn’t had in years: Time. After spending 25 years as a software engineer in big tech, I entered what I jokingly call my “involuntary early retirement.” And when your daily rhythms disappear, your mind starts wandering into strange places. Mine wandered into the future. Not my future specifically, but humanity’s future. Like many engineers, I have always believed that technology is fundamentally a tool. A hammer can build a home or become a weapon; the hammer itself has no morality. Technology seemed no different. Artificial intelligence, robotics, biotechnology, these were simply instruments extending human capability. But the more time I spent reading, researching, and following emerging technological trends, the more a question began nagging at me: What if we are no longer merely building tools? What if we are building our successors? That question led me into the world of Transhumanism. For those unfamiliar with the idea, Transhumanism is a philosophical movement advocating the use of advanced technologies to fundamentally enhance humanity itself. The goal is not merely to cure disease or make life more comfortable. The goal is to overcome biological limits altogether. Disease. Aging. Cognitive limitations. Possibly even mortality itself. For decades, this sounded like science fiction, the sort of thing reserved for late-night conversations between futurists and authors. Today it feels different. Because the technologies that make this possible are no longer imaginary. Brain-computer interfaces now connect neurons to machines. Genetic technologies such as CRISPR allow us to edit the very code of life itself, precisely. Artificial intelligence increasingly performs tasks that once required human expertise. Robotics grows more capable every year. Individually, each technology seems understandable. Collectively, they begin to feel transformative. Potentially civilization-transforming. And here is where things become unsettling. Because if these enhancements become possible, they will almost certainly begin as expensive technologies available only to a small number of people. Perhaps the wealthiest. Perhaps the most powerful. Perhaps the descendants of today’s technological elite. What happens then? Imagine two groups emerging within humanity itself. Not nations. Not races. Not classes. Species. One group possesses enhanced intelligence, longer lifespans, superior biological capabilities, and direct integration with AI systems. The other remains largely unchanged. How long would those groups remain equals? History offers a sobering answer: they probably wouldn’t. Humans have never had an especially impressive record of treating less powerful groups as peers. And if one group genuinely became more capable, stronger, smarter, longer-lived, the incentives become uncomfortable to think about. The enhanced population might eventually ask difficult questions: Why sustain billions of unenhanced humans consuming resources? Why preserve inefficiencies? Why maintain systems built for biological limitations that no longer apply? I know how insane this sounds. Trust me, I hear myself saying it. But what makes this thought experiment disturbing is not the futuristic imagery. It’s the possibility that we may already be seeing early hints of these pressures emerging. Consider the enormous expansion of AI. Hundreds of billions of dollars are being poured into data centers, chips, energy infrastructure, and computational power. The public narrative is productivity. Efficiency. Innovation. And perhaps that is entirely true. But another possibility exists: The systematic reduction of the need for human labor itself. If labor becomes less valuable, then what happens to people? We may already be seeing fragments of that answer. Mass layoffs. Shrinking opportunities for younger workers. An economy where many increasingly rely on gig work, subsidies, and algorithmically mediated systems simply to survive. Meanwhile, social structures that once stabilized human life, families, communities, churches, neighborhoods, appear weaker than they once were. Instead, many people increasingly exist within digital ecosystems designed to capture attention. We become consumers of endless content. Endless outrage. Endless distraction. And perhaps the most striking consequence is demographic. Across much of the industrialized world, birth rates are collapsing. Young people aren’t rejecting families because they hate children. Many simply cannot imagine stable futures for themselves. If life increasingly feels like survival, building the next generation becomes difficult. East Asian nations may be offering a glimpse into this future. Population projections in some regions suggest declines so severe they would have seemed unimaginable just decades ago. Canaries in the coal mine. Which raises a haunting possibility: What if these aren’t disconnected trends? What if they are pieces of a larger transition? Imagine the year 2100. AI and machines perform most productive work. A small enhanced population controls technological systems and resources. A larger population of ordinary humans receives sufficient resources to survive, perhaps through mechanisms like universal basic income, but exists largely dependent upon the system itself. From the outside, this civilization might look beautiful. Clean cities. Renewable energy. Little pollution. No visible poverty. Almost a solar-punk paradise. A Star Trek future. But beneath the surface lies a difficult question: If basic material needs are met, but human agency disappears, is that still freedom? I don’t claim that this future is inevitable. I don’t even claim it is likely. I may be completely wrong. I sincerely hope I am. But history suggests civilizations often drift into destinations they never consciously intended to reach. Not because of a master plan. Not because of hidden conspiracies. But because countless incentives quietly push society in one direction over time. Perhaps Transhumanism will ultimately free humanity from suffering. Or perhaps it will simply create a newer, more technologically sophisticated dystopia. I don’t know. I only know that the question itself has become difficult for me to stop thinking about. And maybe that’s the point. The future rarely arrives all at once. It arrives gradually one technology, one incentive, one compromise at a time. Get full access to AsianDadEnergy's Newsletter at asiandadenergy.substack.com/subscribe [https://asiandadenergy.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

21 de may de 2026 - 13 min
episode The Tech Layoff Crisis No One Wants to Talk About artwork

The Tech Layoff Crisis No One Wants to Talk About

Another week passes and another wave of layoffs crashes through the technology industry like a tidal wave. At this point, the disappearance of thousands of highly experienced engineers has become so common that it barely shocks anyone anymore. Entire departments vanish overnight. Decades of institutional knowledge disappear behind a carefully worded email and a severance package. But there is another group of people affected by these layoffs that nobody really talks about. The survivors. The people who remain employed are often viewed as the lucky ones. They still have a paycheck. Their stock grants are still vesting. Their LinkedIn profiles still say they work at a prestigious company. From the outside, they appear safe. But inside many large technology companies, surviving layoffs can feel like becoming trapped inside a pressure cooker. The workload grows heavier while job security becomes thinner. Teams shrink while expectations expand. Critical systems still need to function, deadlines still need to be met, and billions of dollars still depend on software that was often stitched together over decades by engineers who no longer work there. The survivors inherit all of it. In the summer of 2023, I found myself inside exactly this kind of situation. After a brutal round of layoffs at my company, nearly half of my organization disappeared. Senior leaders were gone. Teams were forcibly merged together into a larger organization built from the wreckage of the previous one. I went from serving as a Chief Architect to functioning as a Senior Enterprise Architect again. Professionally, it felt like traveling backward in time. I was angry about it. But I stayed. Like many people in tech, I had financial reasons to endure it. My next round of RSUs had not vested yet, and walking away meant leaving a significant amount of money on the table. So I convinced myself to keep pushing forward. Then came the project that nearly broke me. Our company operated a massive legacy platform that handled relationships with partner companies. The system processed billions in annual revenue, but under the surface it was a digital Frankenstein monster. Over twenty five years, dozens of separate web applications had been piled on top of one another until the entire thing barely functioned. Different fonts. Different navigation systems. Different visual styles. Some pages looked like they belonged to completely different companies. Yet somehow this fragile structure continued to support an enormous stream of revenue. Executive leadership decided that our newly reorganized department would completely replace this legacy system with a modern enterprise CRM platform in a single release scheduled only four months away. It was the kind of decision that sounds bold in a PowerPoint presentation and terrifying to the engineers responsible for actually delivering it. The challenge was not merely technical. The layoffs had already gutted the teams that understood how the legacy platform worked. Much of the institutional knowledge had vanished. At the same time, the replacement CRM platform required specialized knowledge that very few people possessed. So every day became a race against time. I spent countless hours trying to understand both systems simultaneously while also coordinating teams spread across multiple continents. Meetings started at six in the morning and stretched late into the evening because our squads were distributed between North America and India. Then there was the commute. Our company enforced a hybrid return to office policy that required me to travel into New York City every other day. The round trip took roughly three hours by bus. By the end of each commute, I often felt physically nauseated from the constant swaying motion. At one point, I realized I was regularly working more than twelve hours a day while also sacrificing weekends to keep the project alive. That is when the burnout truly began. People often describe burnout as stress, but burnout feels different. Stress still contains energy. Burnout feels like the complete absence of it. I felt mentally foggy all the time. Concentration became difficult. Solving technical problems that once felt routine suddenly required enormous effort. I forgot details. I lost focus. Even after taking several days off during Labor Day weekend, I returned to work still feeling exhausted. Emotionally, something stranger happened. I stopped caring. Projects that once would have energized me now felt hollow and meaningless. I became detached from the work, detached from the teams, and in many ways detached from myself. Sunday evenings filled me with dread. Then the nightmares started. Over and over again, I dreamed that my coworkers and I had somehow become low wage restaurant workers. The product manager became the greeter. The Chief Architect became a busboy. The engineering manager became the dishwasher. I was always the waiter. And in every dream, disaster struck. A customer would die after eating spoiled food. The restaurant would catch fire. Chaos would erupt. Every single time I woke up drenched in sweat. Looking back now, I think my subconscious was trying to tell me something important. Burnout does not simply exhaust the body. It destabilizes your sense of identity and security. It transforms your career from a source of meaning into a source of survival anxiety. Eventually I realized that if I continued living this way, something inside me was going to break permanently. So I made changes. I forced myself to sleep consistently. I stopped scrolling through devices late at night and began prioritizing seven hours of uninterrupted sleep. I exercised every morning, even if only for thirty minutes on a treadmill. That small amount of movement changed my mental state far more than I expected. I intentionally reconnected with people outside of work including family, friends, church groups, and online gaming communities. These interactions reminded me that my existence extended beyond corporate deadlines and Jira tickets. Most importantly, I began enforcing boundaries. I stopped working weekends. I stopped responding to messages at all hours. On office commute days, I refused early morning and late night calls. At first, saying no felt uncomfortable. Then it felt liberating. Over several weeks, the nightmares stopped. The anxiety softened. My concentration improved. I became functional again. Not perfect. Not fully recovered. But functional enough to finish the project and survive the experience. The modern technology industry celebrates resilience almost obsessively. We glorify hustle culture, constant availability, and productivity at all costs. But there is a dangerous difference between resilience and self destruction. A human being is not a distributed system designed for infinite horizontal scaling. Eventually the system crashes. And increasingly, I think many engineers are approaching that point simultaneously. The layoffs may dominate the headlines, but the deeper story unfolding inside the industry is psychological exhaustion. Thousands of survivors are quietly carrying impossible workloads while trying to convince themselves they should feel grateful just to remain employed. That is not sustainability. That is survival mode. And survival mode comes with a cost. Get full access to AsianDadEnergy's Newsletter at asiandadenergy.substack.com/subscribe [https://asiandadenergy.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

15 de may de 2026 - 12 min
episode I Never Understood This Kind Of Love… Until I Had A Daughter artwork

I Never Understood This Kind Of Love… Until I Had A Daughter

Mother’s Day weekend took us to Pennsylvania to visit my parents. At some point during dinner at a fancy Chinese restaurant, an amusing but strangely revealing family intervention unfolded across the table. Two of the three most important women in my life joined forces against the third. My mother and my wife began criticizing the way I raise my eight-year-old daughter. According to my mother, I’m far too soft on her. She said I give in too easily, indulge her too much, and risk turning her into a spoiled, dissatisfied adult. My wife escalated the prosecution even further. She joked that if my daughter somehow climbed on top of my head and took a dump there, I would probably still smile and tell her she did a great job. And honestly? They’re probably not entirely wrong. But I also think they misunderstand why fathers become soft around their daughters. Because what a little girl gives her father is a kind of love many men go their entire lives without ever experiencing. Before the world hardens her, before social dynamics complicate everything, before adolescence introduces distance and self-consciousness, a young daughter often loves her father with complete sincerity. To her, he is a superhero. He is capable. He is safe. He can fix anything. He is the strongest person alive. And whether or not any of those things are objectively true almost doesn’t matter. What matters is that she believes it with her entire heart. That kind of trust changes a man. Especially because many men grow up learning that love is deeply conditional. You are valued for what you produce. For how much pressure you can absorb. For how useful you are. For how much suffering you can quietly endure without complaining. The modern workplace sharpens this instinct even further. Spend enough years in corporate environments and you begin to feel less like a human being and more like a performance engine. Your worth becomes measurable. Quantified. Ranked. Optimized. You are admired when successful. Tolerated when useful. Ignored when broken. But a little daughter doesn’t care about your LinkedIn profile. She doesn’t care about your title. She doesn’t care whether the world respects you. You bring her a cheap sticker from the grocery store and she treasures it like sacred treasure. You spend ten minutes drawing something silly with crayons beside her and she talks about it for days. You let her climb onto your shoulders and suddenly you’ve given her the greatest moment of her week. And in return, she gives you something that no promotion, no paycheck, no professional accomplishment can ever truly replicate: The feeling of being loved simply for existing. Not for winning. Not for providing. Not for performing. Just… for being you. I think this is why even the hardest men often melt around their daughters. The exhausted worker who never complains suddenly softens when a tiny voice asks, “Daddy, did you have a hard day today?” The exhausted engineer who spent all day absorbing stress suddenly feels his nervous system unclench when small arms wrap around his neck as though he is still the greatest hero in the world. For one brief moment, the armor comes off. Because many men spend their entire lives pretending to be invincible. At work, they swallow stress silently. They internalize disappointment quietly. They carry responsibility without acknowledgment because somewhere along the line they were taught that this is simply what being a man means. So when they come home exhausted and their daughter still looks at them with complete love and admiration, even if they are ordinary, flawed, frightened men, it touches something incredibly deep inside them. To her, they are still enough. Still safe. Still her favorite person in the world. And perhaps that is why fathers become so soft. Not because they lack discipline. Not because they are weak. But because that tiny little girl may be the only place in their entire lives where their heart is allowed to fully rest. And honestly? I think that’s worth protecting. Get full access to AsianDadEnergy's Newsletter at asiandadenergy.substack.com/subscribe [https://asiandadenergy.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

11 de may de 2026 - 5 min
episode Quantum Computing Is a Lie (Here’s What I Discovered) artwork

Quantum Computing Is a Lie (Here’s What I Discovered)

Hello world. I’m an unemployed ex–Big Tech software engineer, watching from the outside as the industry I helped build pours billions into its next obsession: quantum computing. Some say it’s the next trillion-dollar industry.Others say it will dwarf the current AI boom. And having briefly stepped into that world myself… I understand the excitement. I also understand the madness. The Promise: A Computer That Tries Everything at Once A couple of years ago, I attended an internal conference at my company, a kind of innovation showcase where research teams unveiled their latest breakthroughs. Tucked inside that facility was something extraordinary: A quantum computer. At the time, it may have been one of the most powerful machines of its kind in the world. Now, I’m not a physicist. I barely survived physics in school. But even I could grasp the core idea: A classical computer solves problems step by step. A quantum computer? It explores many possibilities at the same time. Imagine trying to solve a problem with four possible inputs. A normal computer checks each one individually. A quantum computer, in theory, evaluates all four simultaneously and gives you an answer in a single step. Scale that up to trillions of possibilities, and suddenly you’re talking about solving problems that would take classical supercomputers centuries. Drug discovery. Climate modeling. Cryptography.Entire categories of “impossible” problems become… possible. It felt like magic. The Reality: One Answer, Not All Answers Then I started experimenting. And that’s when things got weird. The fundamental problem with quantum computing isn’t generating answers, it’s getting useful ones out. Yes, a quantum system can represent many possibilities at once. But the moment you measure it… everything collapses into a single outcome. One answer. Chosen probabilistically. The rest? Gone. This is the paradox at the heart of quantum computing: * It can explore many paths simultaneously * But you only get to see one After decades of research, we’ve discovered only a handful of algorithms like Shore’s and Grover’s that can reliably extract useful information from that chaos. For most real-world problems? We don’t yet know how. That’s the bottleneck. Not hardware. Not funding. Algorithms. The Descent Into Quantum Weirdness The deeper I went, the less intuitive things became. At the core of these systems are qubits, often represented by particles like electrons. And unlike anything in classical computing, these particles don’t exist in a single state. They exist in superposition. Not here. Not there.But somehow… both. Like a coin spinning in the air, neither heads nor tails until you stop it. Except this isn’t a metaphor. This is reality at the smallest scale. And it gets stranger. Distance Might Not Be Real To perform operations, quantum systems rely on something called entanglement. Two particles become linked. Their states are connected. Change one… and the other changes instantly. Not at the speed of light. Instantly. Even if they’re separated by unimaginable distances. Which raises a deeply uncomfortable question: Is distance even real in the way we think it is? Or is everything somehow connected at a deeper level we don’t yet understand? The Moment That Broke Me At some point, I came across research exploring whether quantum systems could be manipulated in ways that resemble reversing time. Not time travel in the Hollywood sense. But something subtler and arguably more unsettling. A system evolves.Then, using carefully designed operations, you force it back into its previous state. As if the past had been… undone. When I first wrapped my head around that, something clicked and not in a good way. If you can reconstruct the past from the present… What does that say about cause and effect? What does that say about time? About free will? When Physics Starts Sounding Like Philosophy From there, the rabbit hole deepened. I started reading late into the night: papers, books, theories. Some of them sounded like science. Some sounded like science fiction. * That our universe might exist inside a black hole * That reality could be layered, like nested simulations * That everything we experience might be a projection of deeper underlying rules At one point, I was lying in bed, muttering to myself about quantum states and reality. That’s when my wife woke up, looked at me, and said: “Stop thinking so much. Go to sleep.” Honestly? That might have been the most practical advice I encountered the entire time. So… Is Quantum Computing the Future? Yes. But not in the way most people think. Right now, quantum computing is less like the early internet… …and more like early flight. We’ve proven it’s possible. We’ve had moments of brilliance. But we’re still figuring out how to make it useful in a practical way. The Real Takeaway My brief, feverish journey into quantum computing left me with three conclusions: * The potential is enormousEntire industries could be reshaped. * The practical barriers are realEspecially on the algorithmic side. * Reality is far stranger than we’re comfortable admitting And maybe that last one is the most important. Because once you start pulling on that thread, once you truly engage with how the universe behaves at its most fundamental level. You realize something unsettling: We don’t just lack the answers. We might not even be asking the right questions yet. If you’ve made it this far, you probably share that same curiosity. The kind that keeps you up at night. The kind that makes you question things you probably shouldn’t. Stick around. This journey is just getting started. Get full access to AsianDadEnergy's Newsletter at asiandadenergy.substack.com/subscribe [https://asiandadenergy.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

6 de may de 2026 - 12 min
episode The Career Advice You Grew Up With Is Dead in the Age of AI artwork

The Career Advice You Grew Up With Is Dead in the Age of AI

Reflections from an unemployed ex–Big Tech engineer navigating a changing world Hello world. For the first time in more than two decades, I find myself standing outside the system I once helped build. After 25 years in the tech industry, I am now an unemployed former software engineer. A title I never imagined I would carry. And yet, every week, that story becomes less unusual. The headlines keep arriving in waves: another tech company, another restructuring, another round of layoffs measured not in dozens, but in thousands. Increasingly, the explanation is familiar, it’s automation, efficiency, AI. Artificial intelligence is no longer a distant future. It is not a speculative technology sitting quietly in research labs. It is here. And it is reshaping the labor market in real time. As a parent of two children, I find myself thinking about this constantly. What does work look like ten years from now? How do people not just survive, but thrive, in a world where machines increasingly perform cognitive labor once reserved for humans? I have had more time than usual to sit with those questions. And after months of reading, observing, experimenting, and reflecting, I have come to believe something uncomfortable: Many of the strategies we were taught to trust may no longer work. The End of the Traditional Career Conveyor Belt For generations, the formula looked simple. Go to college. Gain specialized knowledge. Build a stable career. Climb steadily upward. That model made sense in an era where knowledge changed slowly and expertise compounded over decades. But AI introduces a different reality. When a machine can instantly retrieve, summarize, and apply vast quantities of information, the economic value of memorized knowledge begins to erode. The traditional promise of higher education, that four years of study naturally convert into decades of stable income, feels increasingly fragile. This does not mean education has no value. Education has always served multiple purposes. In ancient Greece, academies existed to broaden perspective and cultivate reasoning. During the Victorian era, higher education also functioned as a signal of class, privilege, and social standing. But the modern idea of college as a predictable employment pipeline may be reaching its expiration date. The world is changing too quickly. Knowledge alone is no longer enough. The Myth of the “Safe” White-Collar Career Many people respond to technological disruption by searching for stability. Accounting. Administration. Insurance. Compliance. The assumption is understandable: avoid glamorous industries, choose something practical, and ride out the storm. But AI does not evaluate professions the way humans do. It does not care whether a job sounds prestigious or boring. It only cares about workflows. A better question is not What profession are you in? A better question is: What percentage of your work consists of repetitive, structured tasks? If large portions of your day involve predictable information processing, documentation, reporting, communication, or analysis, then AI may slowly begin dissolving parts of that role. Not necessarily replacing it all at once. More like an ice cube melting under sunlight. The profession still exists. But fewer people are required to do the same amount of work. That distinction matters. The future may not arrive through dramatic replacement. It may arrive through gradual reduction. Are the Trades Really Safe? One of the most common pieces of advice circulating online is simple: “Forget tech. Go into the trades.” Electricians. Plumbers. HVAC specialists. Welders. There is truth in this argument. Physical work remains more difficult to automate than cognitive work. But the picture may be more complicated than it appears. In the short term, the trades face a supply problem. Large numbers of displaced white-collar workers are looking for stability. Recent graduates are struggling to enter knowledge work. Gig economy workers are searching for reliable income. Many of them are converging toward the same solution. When too many people chase the same opportunity, competition intensifies. And intense competition puts downward pressure on wages. Then comes the medium-term issue. Humanoid robotics. Today’s robots still struggle with dexterity, battery life, environmental unpredictability, and physical durability. But these are engineering problems, not theoretical impossibilities. If progress continues at current rates, general-purpose robotics could become commercially viable within the next decade. That means trades may remain resilient but perhaps not permanently immune. So What Might Actually Work? If the old playbook is losing relevance, what replaces it? There are no guarantees. But there are strategies that seem increasingly rational in the age of AI. 1. Learn to Work With AI, Not Against It The most practical near-term strategy may be simple: Master the tools. AI is proliferating into nearly every professional discipline. Software engineers use AI coding assistants. Designers use AI-generated mockups. Lawyers analyze contracts with AI. Accountants automate bookkeeping workflows. The future may not belong to the person with the most raw knowledge. It may belong to the person who knows how to amplify themselves. In software engineering, experienced developers can now produce dramatically more output using AI-assisted workflows. Five times more productive. Ten times more productive. Sometimes more. And that creates an uncomfortable truth. For the foreseeable future, AI may not directly replace workers. People using AI may replace people who do not. 2. Disrupt Your Own Job Before Someone Else Does This is one of the hardest ideas to accept. But it may also be one of the most important. If your workflows can be automated, you should be the first person to automate them. Look closely at your workday. What tasks repeat? What decisions follow patterns? What emails, reports, summaries, or administrative work consume time? Modern AI tools can already handle many forms of repetitive cognitive labor. Research. Reporting. Scheduling. Drafting communications. Data organization. And increasingly, they can do so without requiring technical expertise. By automating portions of your own job, two things happen. First, you become more valuable. Second, you reclaim time. And time may become one of the most valuable currencies of the next decade. Because time creates optionality. Time lets you experiment. Time lets you build. Time lets you prepare. 3. Invest in Human-Centered Skills Machines can analyze information. They can summarize, recommend, and optimize. But trust remains stubbornly human. Fields rooted in emotional intelligence, nuanced judgment, and relationship-building may prove more durable. * Healthcare. * Leadership. * Coaching. * Human services. * Therapy. * Community-building. The future may place increasing value on work that requires empathy, interpretation, and interpersonal trust. These are not simply “soft skills.” They may become economic differentiators. 4. Build the Infrastructure Around AI We often think of AI as the main event. But every technological revolution creates an ecosystem around itself. The internet created web hosting, cybersecurity, payment processors, cloud platforms, analytics tools, and marketplaces. AI will likely do the same. AI agents increasingly perform tasks on behalf of humans. They research. Write. Analyze. Schedule. Transact. But agents require infrastructure. They need tools for discovery, authentication, communication, workflow integration, and commerce. The supporting layer around AI may become just as valuable as AI itself. And building that infrastructure could become a massive opportunity over the coming decade. 5. Reimagine Existing Businesses Through AI One of the most overlooked opportunities may not be inventing something entirely new. It may be redesigning what already works. Every profitable business contains inefficiencies. Every workflow contains friction. Every market contains incumbents who are reluctant to disrupt themselves. History repeats this pattern. Large companies often struggle to abandon existing revenue streams. They protect what works. Until someone else builds a faster, cheaper, more efficient alternative. This happened with photography. It happened with streaming. It happened with e-commerce. And it will happen again. AI allows individuals and small teams to replicate services that once required entire organizations. The barrier to entry has dropped. Which means opportunity has expanded. The downside is obvious. This path carries risk. Many attempts will fail. But successful disruption can produce outsized returns. 6. Create Entirely New Business Models This may be the most exciting possibility of all. AI does not simply improve old workflows. It enables things that were previously impossible. Consider automatic language dubbing. A person records a video in one language. AI translates it into dozens of others while preserving tone, pacing, and personality. That business model could not realistically exist at scale before deep learning. And it raises an important question. How many business ideas were once impossible because the cognitive labor required was too expensive? How many ideas sat dormant because humans simply could not execute them efficiently enough? AI changes that equation. We may be standing at a moment that resembles the early internet. Most ideas will fail. But some will create entirely new categories. And those categories may reshape industries. The Larger Truth We May Not Want to Admit I suspect we are still underestimating how disruptive AI could become. Not just economically. But socially. Politically. Psychologically. At some point, our economic system may need to evolve to accommodate a world where productivity no longer maps neatly to employment. That conversation feels distant. But perhaps it is approaching faster than we think. In the meantime, I do not claim to have answers. Only strategies. Experiments. Ways of navigating uncertainty. I use many of these approaches myself. Because when the map disappears, movement matters more than certainty. And perhaps the real challenge of the AI age is not learning how to outcompete machines. Perhaps it is learning how to remain adaptable while the world rearranges itself beneath our feet. If you are navigating this transition too, you are not alone. We are all figuring it out in real time. And maybe that shared uncertainty is the beginning of something new. Get full access to AsianDadEnergy's Newsletter at asiandadenergy.substack.com/subscribe [https://asiandadenergy.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

30 de abr de 2026 - 16 min
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Fantástica aplicación. Yo solo uso los podcast. Por un precio módico los tienes variados y cada vez más.
Me encanta la app, concentra los mejores podcast y bueno ya era ora de pagarles a todos estos creadores de contenido

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