At the start of 2026, I felt a strong sense of AI's impetus. Statements like "AI is just automation" and "experience is irreplaceable" are no longer meaningful. Companies are evolving into providers of computing power and infrastructure; collaboration between individuals is becoming PRD (Programming Requirements Document) and code delivery. If someone repeatedly emphasizes, "My business is very complex and detailed," it's likely not that the business is complex, but rather that they haven't truly understood it. For young people, the problem isn't even "not finding a job," but rather that old-fashioned needs are disappearing—tools are intelligent enough, and new value can only come from entirely new fields and structures. All tools that cannot be read, invoked, or combined by AI will be rewritten, built-in, or marginalized. The ability to write good articles, create excellent PPTs, and independently write code is rapidly becoming a craftsman's skill from a bygone era.





