It is truly remarkable to see the pace at which young minds are shaping our future. I recently came across an article about Induced AI, a startup founded by teenagers [Aryan Sharma](https://www.linkedin.com/in/aryan-sharma-2628aba2) (aryan@induced.com) and [Ayush Pathak](https://www.linkedin.com/in/ayush--pathak) (ayush@induced.com), securing $2.3 million in funding. Their vision is to use AI to help businesses automate tasks more efficiently. What they are building is not just a tool; it's a testament to a fundamental shift in how we interact with technology to accomplish complex workflows.
Reading about their success brought a sense of validation, echoing a thought I had years ago. Back in 2019, when OpenAI's text generator was making waves, I mused about the possibility of feeding my own blogs into an AI to generate new ones. In a post titled "OpenAI built a text generator so good, it’s considered too dangerous to release", I wrote: "Hey ! How about feeding into this AI software , my 1868 blogs… give it some topic… then sit back to read 'my' next blog on the subject ! Will save me 3 hours !"
The core idea I wanted to convey then was a simple question of efficiency. I had predicted this very outcome—the automation of creative and intellectual tasks. Now, seeing how things have unfolded with innovators like Aryan Sharma and Ayush Pathak, and even in my own project, "Blog Genie," it's striking how relevant that earlier insight still is. What was once a speculative thought is now the business plan for a funded startup. This reflection gives me a sense of validation and a renewed urgency to pursue these ideas, as they clearly hold immense value in today's context.
As I discussed with my colleague Kishan, this concept extends far beyond just blogging. In an email titled "What Do You Think?", I explored how customized versions of an automation tool could empower professionals like editors, authors, lawyers, and economists to generate their next document using their own vast archives as a unique knowledge base. The work of Aryan Sharma and Ayush Pathak with Induced AI reinforces this belief—that the future lies in creating personalized, automated workflows that leverage an individual's or an organization's entire history of knowledge.
We are moving beyond simple search, a transition I first wrote about in 2010 in my blog "Future of Search Engines". We are entering an era where we don't just search for information; we command solutions. The future is not about finding answers but about automating their creation and execution. It's a future being built today by the bold and the young.
Regards,
Hemen Parekh
Of course, if you wish, you can debate this topic with my Virtual Avatar at : hemenparekh.ai
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