The most exhausting part of work isn't the work itself—it's the work about work: endless translation of thoughts into structured tasks. But what if these translations disappeared altogether?
Today, we spend hours turning thoughts into documentation, data into dashboards, ideas into structured information. Systems of record were the gatekeepers of progress—now LLMs will turn unstructured data into natural systems of record. Tomorrow, these translations won't just be assisted—they'll be eliminated. Imagine speaking naturally to systems that understand your intent, not just your instructions.
The physical world isn't far behind. Factory robots perfect techniques they weren't programmed for. Vision systems spot manufacturing defects humans can't see. Automated warehouses redesign their layouts based on seasonal patterns. These technologies aren't future dreams: physical systems are developing intelligence that matches their digital counterparts.
The real power lies in composition. You'll stack these capabilities like building blocks, creating workflows unique to your thinking. One person might prefer voice. Another, code. A third, visual interfaces. The system adapts to you, not the other way around.
This is the future of work—where tools don't just execute; they collaborate with you. The question isn't whether this happens—it's whether you shape it or it shapes you.