Time and space travel. We don’t need faster ships, and we’re never going to be intelligent enough to use quantum entanglement to transport physical bodies across space-time. But I’m confident we will build AI and technology advanced enough to serve as the communication bridge.
Like the AI black box we’ll never fully understand, it will be intelligent enough to interpret the complexities of the universe and communicate them to our simple minds.
Say what you want about me, but whenever I've built one of my "lazy" workaround solutions, I've known I was onto something. Fast forward to today, and the most advanced AI agents on the planet are doing the exact same thing. Turns out my bootleg tactics weren't janky, they were just ahead of their time 🤣
iOS current version of Preview app has overtaken the absolute disaster that was the Photos app redesigned last year. The Preview app is the most frustrating poorly designed user interface I’ve seen since Windows Vista.
A Chinese engineering student built a weather tracking station in his dorm. Three Mac Minis. Two monitors. Satellite maps on both screens. Labels on each box: UI/UX. DEV. ADMIN. Total cost under $2,000.
His roommate thought it was a climate research project. His professors thought it was a thesis prototype. He let everyone keep thinking that.
Then someone noticed what the station was actually connected to.
A wallet. Making $101K. Betting on the temperature.
ColdMath. $101,042 profit. 5,252 predictions. Joined November 2025. Bio: Edge Compounds.
→ https://t.co/T1z9GFWKVT
The station does one thing. Claude pulls live pilot weather data. Real sensors. Real readings. Updated every 1-3 hours from stations worldwide. Compares it to prediction market prices. When they don't match the DEV box flags it.
Mismatch found. He places the trade. Green result.
$25 on Tokyo hitting 16C on March 20. Payout: $12,452. $24 on Chicago reaching 54F on March 11. Payout: $12,398. $13 on Lucknow hitting 39C on March 7. Payout: $6,850.
Twenty five dollar bets returning twelve thousand. On the weather.
A friend who flies commercial told him pilots get atmospheric data hours before any public forecast. Temperature to a tenth of a degree. This data is free. Aviation safety requires it. Nobody outside of aviation even looks at it.
He looked. Pointed Claude at the feeds. Said: find me every city where the forecast doesn't match the price.
Claude found dozens. Every single day.
His roommate saw the station running one morning and finally asked what it actually does. The student showed him the balance. The roommate didn't say anything. Just asked for a second monitor.
34K people watching. $96K still loaded in active positions. Three Mac Minis. Two screens. One quiet kid who realized the most predictable thing on Earth is the thing everyone ignores.
The weather.
Food for thought. CDs were once a breakthrough innovation. Entire industries were built around them. Today, that entire ecosystem has been replaced by MP3s and streaming, all accessible from your phone.
The lesson is straightforward. What feels foundational today can become obsolete faster than expected.
Businesses that cling to legacy processes don’t just fall behind. They lose customers, operate with unnecessary cost, and introduce friction into the customer experience.
Innovation is not a one time event. It is an operating discipline.
Evolve daily. Document what works. Stress test outcomes. Then optimize with intent.