Running Is More Than Exercise
For me, running has never been just about fitness.
When my body settles into rhythm and my breathing becomes steady, my mind opens up.
Many of my most important ideas were not born at a desk, but while running.
During one run, I recalled something Jensen Huang once said while talking about entrepreneurship at Cambridge:
Don’t start by thinking about how hard it is.
Stay optimistic about the future, like a child.
That idea stayed with me.
The Emergence of an Idea
In that state, I began imagining a new way of working—
a form of AI assistant that truly augments human work.
Not an abstract cloud service, but something that plugs directly into reality:
like a USB device—connecting to your hardware, your network, your working context—
then beginning to understand you, assist you, and in some cases, act on your behalf.
It could take over repetitive and energy-draining tasks,
organize information, generate content, track execution,
and in certain scenarios, even become a digital proxy that represents you in meetings or collaborations.
That thought genuinely excited me.
Sobriety and Reality
Of course, once the excitement faded, reality set in.
The idea was clearly immature.
The technical path, product form, and business model all required serious validation.
But one thing remained unchanged: I chose to take the idea seriously.
I began reformulating it in English,
studying international crowdfunding platforms and early-stage projects,
and exploring how such a vision could be communicated to people willing to support long-term ambition.
At the same time, I kept questioning myself:
If I expect others to invest in me, have I thought deeply enough?
If I want supporters, have I earned their trust through logic, execution, and long-term thinking?
Perspective and Solitude
Through this process, I came to a difficult but honest realization:
The distance between me and many people is not about personality, but about perspective.
I find myself thinking about how humans and intelligent systems will collaborate over the next 10 or 20 years,
while many have yet to seriously reflect on how the nature of work itself is changing.
It reminds me of a familiar film narrative of Big Fish:
the protagonist didn’t become arrogant—the town simply could no longer contain his dreams.
So he had to leave, to step onto a larger stage.
Why I’m Writing This
That is why I’m writing here.
This blog is a place where I document my thinking and experiments around
AI, the future of work, and the evolving relationship between humans and technology.
And perhaps, somewhere in the world, these words will reach people
who are patient enough—and bold enough—to invest in the future.
This idea is still growing. So am I.
But once you see a direction clearly, you can’t unsee it.
And I’ve decided to keep running forward.