Future Clock
When I was a boy, in quiet moments I’d ask my mother. The answer was always the same. For me, it is a memory, formative and deeply rooted in choice and probability, A moment as tiny as it was, larger than it needs to be, and just as it is.
As I grew, I asked anyway; later, I learned there was something in the nuance of the reply that said more about the moment than the outcome. The outcome, invariant.
I work in AI now, all the time, really; it's captured my imagination even more than most, as I should. My future clock, given to me by my mother, still reads the same.
I don’t worry about the future, or about Ai, or about the future of Ai, though I worry a little about our future with Ai. I know my plans haven’t changed at all, nor has my outcome.
It’s still about the people, I know that. Ai will be a part of us. I aways design things to help people realize their potential.
Each of us shares a common responsibility. I have faith that, based on what you will do with what we make, we will be fine.
As I always comment, and hope, we are better together.