Happy New Year 2026!
Every automation frees humans from labor, so we can climb
the ladder of meaning.
Not horses and bulls lost their jobs to cars, but they were
freed — just as humans will be freed from mundane tasks through AI
advancements.
Tools don’t steal our jobs — they hand us the ladder to more
meaningful ones.
From spears to spreadsheets to AI: every leap frees our
hands for the next rung of human purpose.
Automation doesn’t end work; it upgrades it — turning
survival into significance.
From hunter-gatherers to AI collaborators, human history is
not a story of replacement, but of ascent — where tools evolve so people can
move toward judgment, creativity, and wisdom.
As technology reshapes every sector, ethical capacity must
keep pace. Supporting this work is an investment in resilient institutions,
informed citizens, and a humane future.
As AI grows more capable, human responsibility must scale
faster.
May the coming year bring not just faster machines, but
wiser societies.
Evolution of humanity from hunter-gatherers to AI
collaborators ->
Foundations of Civilization
- Hunter–gathering
→ Agriculture
~12,000–8,000 BCE (Neolithic Revolution)
Food discovery → food production, surplus, civilization - Stone
tools → Metal tools
~3,300 BCE onward (Bronze → Iron Age)
Fragile tools → durable, scalable technology - Nomadic
life → Permanent settlements
~10,000 BCE onward
Mobility → cities, governance, culture - Oral
tradition → Written language
~3,200 BCE (Sumer, Egypt)
Memory → recorded knowledge - Manual
counting → Structured mathematics
~3,000–2,000 BCE
Tally marks, abacus → abstraction
Energy & Physical Labor
- Human
muscle → Animal labor
~9,000 BCE (domestication)
Carrying → force multiplication - Animal
power → Mechanical power
~1,700–1,800 CE
Mills → steam engines - Manual
farming → Mechanized agriculture
~1800–1900 CE
Plows → tractors, harvesters - Craft
production → Factories & assembly lines
~1760–1910 CE
Artisanal → industrial scale - Industrial
labor → Robotic & AI-assisted manufacturing
~1950s–2010s CE
Repetition → supervision & design
Transport & Mobility
- Walking
& sledges → Wheeled transport
~3,500 BCE
Foot → carts, chariots - Bullock/horse
carts → Steam engines
~1800–1850 CE
Biological → mechanical motion - Steam
engines → Internal combustion vehicles
~1880s CE
Coal → oil-based mobility - Cars
& trains → Airplanes
~1903 CE onward
Surface → sky, time compression - Human
control → Autopilot & autonomous transport
~1910s–2010s CE
Operation → oversight
Navigation & Time
- Sun
& stars → Instruments (compass, sextant)
~1100–1700 CE
Natural cues → tools - Instruments
→ Precision timekeeping
~1700–1950 CE
Chronometers → atomic clocks - Maps
& charts → GPS & satellite navigation
~1970s–1990s CE
Skill-based → system intelligence
Communication
- Messengers
→ Postal systems
~500 BCE–1600 CE
Individuals → institutions - Postal
mail → Telegraph & telephone
~1830–1876 CE
Days → real-time voice - Telephone
→ Mobile & internet communication
~1970s–1990s CE
Fixed → ubiquitous - Email
→ Instant messaging & social platforms
~1990s–2000s CE
Asynchronous → continuous presence
Computation & Knowledge
- Mental
arithmetic → Calculators
~1600s–1960s CE
Brain-only → mechanical aid - Calculators
→ Spreadsheets & computers
~1970s–1980s CE
Single calculation → dynamic models - Spreadsheets
→ Analytics, ML, AI insights
~2000s–2010s CE
Reporting → prediction - Human
memory → Databases & cloud storage
~1960s–2000s CE
Recall → searchable persistence - Manual
lookup → Search engines & AI search
~1990s–2020s CE
Indexes → intelligent retrieval
Commerce, Services & Intelligence
- Barter
& cash → Digital finance
~1950s–2010s CE
Physical money → online banking, wallets, crypto - Clerical
& call-center work → Software & AI agents
~1980s–2020s CE
Scripts → automated interaction - Human-only
decision-making → Human + AI collaboration
~2020s CE onward
Execution → judgment, ethics, meaning