In 1999, I was a first-year MBA student at Dartmouth. I recall a group of my classmates sitting in the back of the class. They weren’t taking notes; they were trading stocks on their laptops. Between classes, we downloaded music on Napster. That same year, Blogger launched, and suddenly you didn’t need to know how to code to have a voice on the internet.
What I remember most about that moment wasn’t the technology itself — it was the momentum shift. The internet stopped being a place you visited and became a capability you used. It almost instantaneously weaved itself into how we worked, how we consumed, and how we connected. I hadn’t felt that same shift, the same change in velocity, until now.
AI feels like that again. But this time, it’s not about connectivity. It’s about cognition. And just like the early days of the internet, we’re at the point where the question isn’t whether this will transform how we live. It’s whether we’ll build it to truly be useful.