Who?
I'm Marc Sala. Dad, family man, and someone who's been building with AI for years — including, once, a daily newsletter that emailed bedtime stories for little kids. So I've used this thing to do something genuinely sweet. I've also watched it get used to spin up faceless YouTube channels by the thousand. Both are true. That's kind of the whole problem.
This started while I was scrolling Reddit and realized the AI news had turned into soup — a thousand headlines a day, every one insisting it mattered, not one telling me where this is actually going. The data just spun in circles. I wanted a direction. A number. Are we there yet, or not?
Since you should know your driver's bias: I think this might be the best thing that's ever happened to us — proof we can create in our own image, that we're a little bit godlike. And then I watch it churn out garbage and I roll my eyes. We're on the verge of something enormous and we keep not quite arriving. It's getting late. We're getting tired.
And here's the part that actually keeps me up. The 60-plus crowd can retire — not their fight. The 20-somethings will adapt; they always do. It's the 40s and 50s I think about: too old to start over, too young to stop. A lot of us, sitting in the back seat, asking the exact question this site is named after.
To be clear about where I sit: I'm in the engine room, not the boardroom. I use their tools, but I don't decide anything — same as you. I'm just the one who bolted a dashboard to the windscreen so the rest of us in the back seat can see how fast the scenery's going by.
So I built the car. Still driving. — Marc