Thursday, July 24, 2025
💥 𝐓𝐡𝐞 𝐅𝐮𝐭𝐮𝐫𝐞 𝐨𝐟 𝐖𝐨𝐫𝐤 𝐇𝐚𝐬 𝐚 𝐒𝐜𝐨𝐫𝐞𝐜𝐚𝐫𝐝. 𝐀𝐧𝐝 𝐀𝐈 𝐉𝐮𝐬𝐭 𝐆𝐫𝐚𝐝𝐞𝐝 𝐈𝐭.
AI and the Future: A New Epoch of Innovation and Optimism
Inspired by insights from the All-In Podcast with Scott Bessent, Howard Lutnick, Chris Wright, and Doug Burgum
Over the past 200 years, history has repeatedly shown that every seismic shift in innovation—while initially feared—has ultimately led to higher productivity, better living standards, and an expanded workforce.
From the industrial revolution to the digital age, new technologies have displaced some jobs but created many more in return, reshaping society for the better.
Today, we stand at the edge of a new paradigm: Artificial Intelligence
Lessons from the Past
In the recent All-In Podcast episode featuring financial luminaries and political leaders like Scott Bessent, Howard Lutnick, Chris Wright, and Doug Burgum, a compelling case was made for how AI is following a familiar arc of disruption—and opportunity. They placed AI in the context of:
- The Railway Boom – which shrunk vast continents and created global trade.
- The Airplane Age – opening the skies for commerce and culture.
- The Moon Landing – galvanizing innovation and national pride.
- Reagan’s Deregulatory 1980s – which unleashed capital markets.
- The Internet Explosion of the 1990s – digitizing communication and commerce.
- The Smartphone and Social Media Era of the 2010s – which changed how we interact and transact.
Each innovation came with existential hand-wringing over jobs and security. Each time, humanity adapted—and thrived.
AI: A Force for Growth, Not Fear
As Scott Bessent pointed out, AI will not shrink the workforce—it will grow it. But in new, unpredictable ways.
Yes, some repetitive, manual tasks may be automated. But AI will:
- Unlock new industries and creative roles
- Empower small businesses and solopreneurs
- Democratize expertise and education
- Accelerate scientific discovery and medical breakthroughs
Doug Burgum, with his experience in technology and governance, argued that AI could be the tool that helps governments do more with less—increasing productivity in the public sector, much like what Reagan’s deregulation did for the private sector in the ’80s.
The Challenges That Lie Ahead
However, AI doesn’t operate in a vacuum. As highlighted by the podcast panel:
- Geopolitical tensions, especially around China selling U.S. treasuries, raise questions about global trust in the U.S. financial system.
- High debt levels, interest rates, inflation, and tariffs may slow down adoption if capital becomes too expensive.
- The U.S. might even face a shift away from traditional Treasury Bills—will the next “currency” of trust be data and energy rather than coins and notes?
Cheap Energy: The Fuel for the AI Boom
One key insight from Chris Wright, a veteran in the energy sector, is that AI’s exponential computing power requires exponential energy supply.
This makes cheap, clean, and scalable energy essential for AI to reach its potential. That could mean:
- Major advances in nuclear fusion
- A resurgence in next-gen fossil fuel alternatives
- A breakthrough in battery storage and grid tech
Climate issues remain a parallel concern. Without a solution to sustainable energy, AI’s growth could be bottlenecked by physical and environmental limits
The AI Era: A Defining Chapter for Humanity
If the past 200 years have taught us anything, it’s this: technological disruption is not the end—it’s a beginning. The AI revolution will not just change how we work. It will change what work is, and who gets to do it.
The All-In Podcast team leaves us with a powerful takeaway: The future is not something we inherit—it’s something we build. And AI, like the railway and the internet before it, is our next great track to lay.
🔗 Follow the discussion on the All-In Podcast with Scott Bessent, Howard Lutnick, Chris Wright, and Doug Burgum to hear more real-time insights into AI, economics, and the evolving world order.
AI disrupting Research , Education and Work
Sunday, June 29, 2025
AI for good - the Robotic Dog takes out the Communications #ai awards for 2025
Designed to assist individuals with vision impairment, this smart companion can:
- Interpret user intentions
- Navigate complex environments (like train stations!)
- Provide auditory and haptic feedback
- Learn “socially acceptable” navigation – like avoiding walking between people mid-conversation!
More than just a mobility aid, it guides, describes surroundings, answers questions, and even helps users find a coffee shop and choose a seat and menu item.
Built in collaboration with Guide Dogs and the UTS Robotics Institute, this modular, evolving innovation is set to transform accessibility and independence for thousands.
An inspiring leap for inclusive AI – and proof that tech with heart changes lives.
#AI #Accessibility #Robotics #Innovation #GuideDogs #UTS #SocialImpact #TechForGood
Wednesday, June 11, 2025
VC Firm raises $250m so that AI can replace analysts to make Venture Capital Investment Devin’s
In 2022 Nik Storonsky , the founder of Revolut launched QuantumLight, an AI-driven investment platform that replaces traditional investors with machine intelligence and not only scaled a $45B fintech company - he’s now raised $250m and is challenging the entire venture capital model.
No coffee meetings.
No partner pitches.
No “gut feel.”
Instead, the system ingests over 10 billion data points across 700,000+ venture-backed startups. It looks for correlations, anomalies, and signals that even the sharpest GPs might miss.
So far?
It’s working. Their AI-led investments are outperforming top-tier VCs by 2x.
We already rely on #AI in trading, underwriting, even diagnosing disease.
So why are we still backing startups with human bias, pattern recognition, and anecdotal conviction?
versus
a system that’s less emotional, more scalable, and possibly more accurate.
“Should we remove humans from the investment decisions entirely.”
Will QuantumLight replace humans or enable humans to make investment decisions
How important is human bias, pattern recognition, and anecdotal conviction?
Can AI truly understand the founder journey?
The vision, resilience, and timing that often live between the data points?
What happens to VC when the pitch deck matters less than the dataset?
Would love to hear your take in the comment 👇
Source Valerie Bartel - venture Capital Invedtor in Silicone Valley
Substack for more news on #AI, #Investing and #Innovation 🧠
Thursday, May 15, 2025
The Future of Work - the Core Skills of 2030
Those of you who plan to be in the workforce in 2030 - take note
Sunday, May 11, 2025
A few ideas to land your ideal Job
💥 1. Stand Out with Follow-Up:
Sometimes, a simple gesture can make a huge impact.