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        <title><![CDATA[John Martinez]]></title>
        <description><![CDATA[Delve beneath the ink of culture, economics, international relations, and the family structure in order to build a healthier community for a better tomorrow.

If you like what you see here and would like to read some of my fiction writing check out Fervid Fables at npub1j9cmpzhlzeex6y85c2pnt45r5zhxhtx73a2twt77fyjwequ4l4jsp5xd49]]></description>
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        <itunes:author><![CDATA[Beneath The Ink]]></itunes:author>
        <itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[Delve beneath the ink of culture, economics, international relations, and the family structure in order to build a healthier community for a better tomorrow.

If you like what you see here and would like to read some of my fiction writing check out Fervid Fables at npub1j9cmpzhlzeex6y85c2pnt45r5zhxhtx73a2twt77fyjwequ4l4jsp5xd49]]></itunes:subtitle>
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      <pubDate>Tue, 11 Mar 2025 16:16:18 GMT</pubDate>
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        <title><![CDATA[John Martinez]]></title>
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      <title><![CDATA[The Next Economic Shift: Craftsmanship Will Define the Future]]></title>
      <description><![CDATA[AI will replace corporate jobs—humans can adapt through decentralized craftsmanship.
]]></description>
             <itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[AI will replace corporate jobs—humans can adapt through decentralized craftsmanship.
]]></itunes:subtitle>
      <pubDate>Tue, 11 Mar 2025 16:16:18 GMT</pubDate>
      <link>https://john-martinez.npub.pro/post/n1m90dpenf6qv4rh3cy8t/</link>
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      <category>Bitcoin</category>
      
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      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2>The Next 1000 Days</h2>
<p>Steam drifts from Jeffrey’s cup of coffee on the worn wooden table as he settles onto his familiar front porch, his only refuge from a world entirely different than the one he grew up in.</p>
<p>Three years into retirement, he’s cultivated a quiet ritual: watching his neighbors through softly lit windows as they scurry about their morning routines.&nbsp;</p>
<p>Fathers in tailored suits exchange tender goodbye kisses with their children, while others—dressed down in basketball shorts—sprint to gather their little ones. Mothers go for jogs; mothers in suits pause, a foot outside their front doors, to take deep breaths before flipping their phones to their ears to jump on their first morning meetings as they strut down their driveways in high heels.&nbsp;</p>
<p>Men and women in rugged pants and long sleeve shirts packed in Ford 3500 trucks pile out in the street corner and begin unloading lawn care equipment for the work of the day.&nbsp;</p>
<p>Jeffrey has lived his life and is now watching the people of his neighborhood go about theirs. &nbsp;He watches the evolving cadence of life; a rhythm that in his younger years would have seemed like science fiction.&nbsp;<br><img src="https://yakihonne.s3.ap-east-1.amazonaws.com/c43d6de3de463a1e5d508926f1e0fa3c316bbc1ddf8340d565b70e71a6583169/files/1741709429989-YAKIHONNES3.jpg" alt="image"></p>
<p>Smartphones, cars with backup cameras, Teslas navigating on autopilot: technology has woven itself into the fabric of every routine.</p>
<p>As his neighborhood empties and Jeffrey cues up a podcast with his coffee in hand, one truth emerges: his world has shifted dramatically.&nbsp;</p>
<p>And soon, yours will too. In just three years, artificial intelligence is set to upend corporate jobs. When the machines take over, where will you find your place?</p>
<blockquote>
<p>"In 1000 days the world will be dramatically different than it is today"&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;-Daniel Priestly.&nbsp;</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Those words do not linger in times new roman font deep in some obscure forum on the internet somewhere. They were spoken by prominent entrepreneur and writer, Daniel Priestly, on Peter McCormack's podcast a few weeks ago.&nbsp;</p>
<p>People echo these words in conversation as they ruminate on what has become of them since their schooling days and what still lies ahead.&nbsp;</p>
<p>Donald Trump, only a few days after his inauguration, brought the foremost leaders of AI on the stage to announce project "Stargate", an initiative which will pump billions of dollars and remove legislative red tape to further develop breakthroughs in AI.&nbsp;</p>
<p>How could anyone watch all of this unfolding and not think to themselves that something huge is coming. If you haven’t, I urge you to start thinking about it now because in as soon as three years you may find yourself sitting in a world you don’t recognize or fully understand like our friend Jeffrey on his porch.&nbsp;<br><img src="https://yakihonne.s3.ap-east-1.amazonaws.com/c43d6de3de463a1e5d508926f1e0fa3c316bbc1ddf8340d565b70e71a6583169/files/1741702796815-YAKIHONNES3.jpg" alt="image"></p>
<h2>The Holdouts</h2>
<p>This isn’t the first time society has faced the precipice of life-altering change. In fact, it’s happened countless times, and each era required humans to adapt in order to survive.</p>
<p>The good news? Most of the time, this adaptation has led to swaths of the population enjoying better, less combative lives. But let’s be clear, some never made it through the transformations.</p>
<p>The ones left behind in the wake of progress were those too stubborn to abandon old ways. Today, these holdouts are the ones clinging to the traditional life blueprint: go to university, earn a degree, seek out an entry-level job, and work for a large, reputable corporation. Tomorrow, however, those same corporations will replace human workers with machines that are not only cheaper but also infinitely better at the specific tasks central to their employment.&nbsp;</p>
<p>No hard feelings. For decades, education trained human beings to be pliable workers, cogs in the vast machinery of the economy. If you think this won’t affect your livelihood—or worse, if you’ve given it little thought—understand one thing: you are charging headfirst toward disaster. All your proverbial eggs are in one basket, and AI is about to knock that basket out of your hands.</p>
<h2>Natural Progression</h2>
<p>Consider this undeniable truth today: the affluent seek out one-of-a-kind, handcrafted treasures from those who labor with passion, while the masses settle for cheap, mass-produced widgets. Many voices predict a future where society either drifts into endless entertainment or reverts to a modern feudalism—an elite class of AI owners living like royalty while the rest labor merely to sustain the machine. I reject that dystopian vision.</p>
<p>Instead, if we heed the dramatic shifts unfolding around us, it becomes clear that people, driven by the need for multiple income streams, will increasingly pivot toward what they do best. They’ll embrace the art of crafting custom-made products—whether by hand or through locally powered 3D printing—infusing each creation with a unique allure.</p>
<p>In this future, while AI churns out soulless, mass-produced widgets, human hands will continue to craft irreplaceable works of art. A vibrant, decentralized marketplace will emerge, where neighbors and artisans trade items imbued with character and individuality. Look to the bitcoin space for a hint: platforms like NOSTR are already witnessing exchanges of goods and services for sats, transactions driven by genuine heart and soul. This is the future—a flourishing human economy that prizes the unique over the uniform.</p>
<h2>The Choice is Ours</h2>
<p>This&nbsp;transformation isn’t a fantasy or a guess, it’s a reality unfolding in real-time. AI will soon take over corporate roles it will redefine industries, it will displace workers, and it will shift&nbsp;the foundations of the traditional economy. The question isn’t if change is coming, but whether you will be ready when it does.</p>
<p>We are at a crossroads. The choice&nbsp;is stark: continue relying on outdated systems that are on the verge of obsolescence, or take an active role in shaping the new economy. The sooner we embrace this shift, the smoother the transition will be—not just for individuals, but for society as a whole.</p>
<p>A new marketplace is forming, one where human ingenuity, craftsmanship, and individuality hold more value than ever before. Many here on Nostr recognize this, albeit they may not be able to fully articulate it.&nbsp; Those making active and early moves to adhere to these changes will be the ones that thrive in the next era—offering handcrafted, uniquely designed goods and services in a decentralized, global economy. The tools are already in place. Platforms like NOSTR and Bitcoin are glimpses of what’s to come—a world where economic exchange is no longer dictated by faceless corporations but by individuals trading real value with one another.</p>
<p>But make no mistake—this transition will not be without obstacles.</p>
<p><img src="https://yakihonne.s3.ap-east-1.amazonaws.com/c43d6de3de463a1e5d508926f1e0fa3c316bbc1ddf8340d565b70e71a6583169/files/1741709640759-YAKIHONNES3.jpg" alt="image"></p>
<h2>The Challenges Ahead</h2>
<p><strong>Proof of Identity Will Become Crucial</strong><br>As digital marketplaces grow, verifying authenticity will be essential. Fake identities, deepfakes, and AI-generated fraud will make it harder than ever to determine who is real and who isn’t. Those who build trust and credibility early in decentralized markets will have a significant advantage.</p>
<p><strong>Geo-Politics May Stand in the Way of a Globalized Economy</strong><br>While technology enables a worldwide marketplace, governments and institutions will resist. Economic protectionism, sanctions, and restrictions on decentralized trade could create friction, limiting global participation and increasing the risk of international conflict.&nbsp;</p>
<p>Looking at the recent Trump tariffs, it's easy to see how truly decentralized trade could be stymied as nations worldwide attempt to rein in natural global trade.&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong>Truth Will Become Harder to Define</strong><br>AI will not only disrupt jobs but also the flow of information. Deepfake videos, synthetic news, and hyper-targeted misinformation will make it nearly impossible to discern what’s real. In an era where perception shapes reality, those who fail to sharpen their ability to seek truth will be left vulnerable.</p>
<p>The world will change, of that, there is no doubt. But will you change with it? The next 1,000 days will define the trajectory of the next 100 years. If you’re waiting for someone to give you permission to adapt, you’ll already be too late.</p>
<p>Start now. Be an active participant. Take control of your future before AI makes that choice for you.</p>
<p>Here are some profiles of people taking advantage of this new change that are worth following and supporting!</p>
<p><a href="https://njump.me/npub1uzt238htjzpq39dxmltlx60vxym9fetk9czz6kddq6fhvkf4z3usy9qtrh">oshi</a><br>Oshi- Makes hand-made date bars and delicious goodies<br><img src="https://yakihonne.s3.ap-east-1.amazonaws.com/c43d6de3de463a1e5d508926f1e0fa3c316bbc1ddf8340d565b70e71a6583169/files/1741702475613-YAKIHONNES3.jpg" alt="image"></p>
<p><a href="https://njump.me/npub1e2rd2k45ym2jmctnysfadxumrvrr57vqj69ck6trt2y62c40r0kqs9lx8t">𝔼𝕣𝕪𝕟 𝔹𝕣𝕒𝕔𝕔𝕠</a><br>Eryn- Makes hand-made pottery of all kinds for your home<br><img src="https://yakihonne.s3.ap-east-1.amazonaws.com/c43d6de3de463a1e5d508926f1e0fa3c316bbc1ddf8340d565b70e71a6583169/files/1741702432007-YAKIHONNES3.jpg" alt="image"></p>
<p>There are plenty more people leveraging their craftsmanship to serve the market and looking to establish relationships directly with you as their patron. Find more people like Oshi and Eryn at plebmall by <a href="https://njump.me/npub1f0e6xymc9hy4wmepa7em60tp8p7s6kgnq53q06grq6n5r0m27l2s6tc5r6">Baked Potato</a> </p>
<p>This is how we actively participate in the future that is unfolding. </p>
<hr>
<p>Thank you for reading! </p>
<p>If this article resonated with you, let me know with a zap and share it with friends who might find it insightful. </p>
<p>Your help sends a strong signal to keep making content like this! </p>
<p>Interested in fiction? Follow <a href="https://njump.me/npub1j9cmpzhlzeex6y85c2pnt45r5zhxhtx73a2twt77fyjwequ4l4jsp5xd49">Fervid Fables</a> for great short stories and serialized fiction. </p>
<p>More articles you might like from Beneath The Ink: </p>
<p><np-embed nostr="naddr1qvzqqqr4gupzp3padh3au336rew4pzfx78s050p3dw7pmhurgr2ktdcwwxn9svtfqq2n23zrgg68x5rw2pg477t6fezks36z940kcth39v6"><a href="/post/5dcb4spnpq_yznehgb-_l/">Dearly Departed- The People Left Behind</a></np-embed></p>
<p><np-embed nostr="naddr1qvzqqqr4gupzp3padh3au336rew4pzfx78s050p3dw7pmhurgr2ktdcwwxn9svtfqq2nwd6829tkgwf3d9dyk42zdedx233d24f57yyvkjt"><a href="/post/77gqwd91izkubnzef-uso/">The Lost Coffeehouse: Where Did Our Public Forums Go?
</a></np-embed></p>
<p><np-embed nostr="naddr1qvzqqqr4gupzp3padh3au336rew4pzfx78s050p3dw7pmhurgr2ktdcwwxn9svtfqq24s4mrfdm55utg23z55ufs94argvn523k5yqhkrc3"><a href="/post/xwckwjqhtejq0-z42ttmb/">Dwindling Flames: How the Mentorship Void is Fueling an Unhappy Generation</a></np-embed></p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <itunes:author><![CDATA[Beneath The Ink]]></itunes:author>
      <itunes:summary><![CDATA[<h2>The Next 1000 Days</h2>
<p>Steam drifts from Jeffrey’s cup of coffee on the worn wooden table as he settles onto his familiar front porch, his only refuge from a world entirely different than the one he grew up in.</p>
<p>Three years into retirement, he’s cultivated a quiet ritual: watching his neighbors through softly lit windows as they scurry about their morning routines.&nbsp;</p>
<p>Fathers in tailored suits exchange tender goodbye kisses with their children, while others—dressed down in basketball shorts—sprint to gather their little ones. Mothers go for jogs; mothers in suits pause, a foot outside their front doors, to take deep breaths before flipping their phones to their ears to jump on their first morning meetings as they strut down their driveways in high heels.&nbsp;</p>
<p>Men and women in rugged pants and long sleeve shirts packed in Ford 3500 trucks pile out in the street corner and begin unloading lawn care equipment for the work of the day.&nbsp;</p>
<p>Jeffrey has lived his life and is now watching the people of his neighborhood go about theirs. &nbsp;He watches the evolving cadence of life; a rhythm that in his younger years would have seemed like science fiction.&nbsp;<br><img src="https://yakihonne.s3.ap-east-1.amazonaws.com/c43d6de3de463a1e5d508926f1e0fa3c316bbc1ddf8340d565b70e71a6583169/files/1741709429989-YAKIHONNES3.jpg" alt="image"></p>
<p>Smartphones, cars with backup cameras, Teslas navigating on autopilot: technology has woven itself into the fabric of every routine.</p>
<p>As his neighborhood empties and Jeffrey cues up a podcast with his coffee in hand, one truth emerges: his world has shifted dramatically.&nbsp;</p>
<p>And soon, yours will too. In just three years, artificial intelligence is set to upend corporate jobs. When the machines take over, where will you find your place?</p>
<blockquote>
<p>"In 1000 days the world will be dramatically different than it is today"&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;-Daniel Priestly.&nbsp;</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Those words do not linger in times new roman font deep in some obscure forum on the internet somewhere. They were spoken by prominent entrepreneur and writer, Daniel Priestly, on Peter McCormack's podcast a few weeks ago.&nbsp;</p>
<p>People echo these words in conversation as they ruminate on what has become of them since their schooling days and what still lies ahead.&nbsp;</p>
<p>Donald Trump, only a few days after his inauguration, brought the foremost leaders of AI on the stage to announce project "Stargate", an initiative which will pump billions of dollars and remove legislative red tape to further develop breakthroughs in AI.&nbsp;</p>
<p>How could anyone watch all of this unfolding and not think to themselves that something huge is coming. If you haven’t, I urge you to start thinking about it now because in as soon as three years you may find yourself sitting in a world you don’t recognize or fully understand like our friend Jeffrey on his porch.&nbsp;<br><img src="https://yakihonne.s3.ap-east-1.amazonaws.com/c43d6de3de463a1e5d508926f1e0fa3c316bbc1ddf8340d565b70e71a6583169/files/1741702796815-YAKIHONNES3.jpg" alt="image"></p>
<h2>The Holdouts</h2>
<p>This isn’t the first time society has faced the precipice of life-altering change. In fact, it’s happened countless times, and each era required humans to adapt in order to survive.</p>
<p>The good news? Most of the time, this adaptation has led to swaths of the population enjoying better, less combative lives. But let’s be clear, some never made it through the transformations.</p>
<p>The ones left behind in the wake of progress were those too stubborn to abandon old ways. Today, these holdouts are the ones clinging to the traditional life blueprint: go to university, earn a degree, seek out an entry-level job, and work for a large, reputable corporation. Tomorrow, however, those same corporations will replace human workers with machines that are not only cheaper but also infinitely better at the specific tasks central to their employment.&nbsp;</p>
<p>No hard feelings. For decades, education trained human beings to be pliable workers, cogs in the vast machinery of the economy. If you think this won’t affect your livelihood—or worse, if you’ve given it little thought—understand one thing: you are charging headfirst toward disaster. All your proverbial eggs are in one basket, and AI is about to knock that basket out of your hands.</p>
<h2>Natural Progression</h2>
<p>Consider this undeniable truth today: the affluent seek out one-of-a-kind, handcrafted treasures from those who labor with passion, while the masses settle for cheap, mass-produced widgets. Many voices predict a future where society either drifts into endless entertainment or reverts to a modern feudalism—an elite class of AI owners living like royalty while the rest labor merely to sustain the machine. I reject that dystopian vision.</p>
<p>Instead, if we heed the dramatic shifts unfolding around us, it becomes clear that people, driven by the need for multiple income streams, will increasingly pivot toward what they do best. They’ll embrace the art of crafting custom-made products—whether by hand or through locally powered 3D printing—infusing each creation with a unique allure.</p>
<p>In this future, while AI churns out soulless, mass-produced widgets, human hands will continue to craft irreplaceable works of art. A vibrant, decentralized marketplace will emerge, where neighbors and artisans trade items imbued with character and individuality. Look to the bitcoin space for a hint: platforms like NOSTR are already witnessing exchanges of goods and services for sats, transactions driven by genuine heart and soul. This is the future—a flourishing human economy that prizes the unique over the uniform.</p>
<h2>The Choice is Ours</h2>
<p>This&nbsp;transformation isn’t a fantasy or a guess, it’s a reality unfolding in real-time. AI will soon take over corporate roles it will redefine industries, it will displace workers, and it will shift&nbsp;the foundations of the traditional economy. The question isn’t if change is coming, but whether you will be ready when it does.</p>
<p>We are at a crossroads. The choice&nbsp;is stark: continue relying on outdated systems that are on the verge of obsolescence, or take an active role in shaping the new economy. The sooner we embrace this shift, the smoother the transition will be—not just for individuals, but for society as a whole.</p>
<p>A new marketplace is forming, one where human ingenuity, craftsmanship, and individuality hold more value than ever before. Many here on Nostr recognize this, albeit they may not be able to fully articulate it.&nbsp; Those making active and early moves to adhere to these changes will be the ones that thrive in the next era—offering handcrafted, uniquely designed goods and services in a decentralized, global economy. The tools are already in place. Platforms like NOSTR and Bitcoin are glimpses of what’s to come—a world where economic exchange is no longer dictated by faceless corporations but by individuals trading real value with one another.</p>
<p>But make no mistake—this transition will not be without obstacles.</p>
<p><img src="https://yakihonne.s3.ap-east-1.amazonaws.com/c43d6de3de463a1e5d508926f1e0fa3c316bbc1ddf8340d565b70e71a6583169/files/1741709640759-YAKIHONNES3.jpg" alt="image"></p>
<h2>The Challenges Ahead</h2>
<p><strong>Proof of Identity Will Become Crucial</strong><br>As digital marketplaces grow, verifying authenticity will be essential. Fake identities, deepfakes, and AI-generated fraud will make it harder than ever to determine who is real and who isn’t. Those who build trust and credibility early in decentralized markets will have a significant advantage.</p>
<p><strong>Geo-Politics May Stand in the Way of a Globalized Economy</strong><br>While technology enables a worldwide marketplace, governments and institutions will resist. Economic protectionism, sanctions, and restrictions on decentralized trade could create friction, limiting global participation and increasing the risk of international conflict.&nbsp;</p>
<p>Looking at the recent Trump tariffs, it's easy to see how truly decentralized trade could be stymied as nations worldwide attempt to rein in natural global trade.&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong>Truth Will Become Harder to Define</strong><br>AI will not only disrupt jobs but also the flow of information. Deepfake videos, synthetic news, and hyper-targeted misinformation will make it nearly impossible to discern what’s real. In an era where perception shapes reality, those who fail to sharpen their ability to seek truth will be left vulnerable.</p>
<p>The world will change, of that, there is no doubt. But will you change with it? The next 1,000 days will define the trajectory of the next 100 years. If you’re waiting for someone to give you permission to adapt, you’ll already be too late.</p>
<p>Start now. Be an active participant. Take control of your future before AI makes that choice for you.</p>
<p>Here are some profiles of people taking advantage of this new change that are worth following and supporting!</p>
<p><a href="https://njump.me/npub1uzt238htjzpq39dxmltlx60vxym9fetk9czz6kddq6fhvkf4z3usy9qtrh">oshi</a><br>Oshi- Makes hand-made date bars and delicious goodies<br><img src="https://yakihonne.s3.ap-east-1.amazonaws.com/c43d6de3de463a1e5d508926f1e0fa3c316bbc1ddf8340d565b70e71a6583169/files/1741702475613-YAKIHONNES3.jpg" alt="image"></p>
<p><a href="https://njump.me/npub1e2rd2k45ym2jmctnysfadxumrvrr57vqj69ck6trt2y62c40r0kqs9lx8t">𝔼𝕣𝕪𝕟 𝔹𝕣𝕒𝕔𝕔𝕠</a><br>Eryn- Makes hand-made pottery of all kinds for your home<br><img src="https://yakihonne.s3.ap-east-1.amazonaws.com/c43d6de3de463a1e5d508926f1e0fa3c316bbc1ddf8340d565b70e71a6583169/files/1741702432007-YAKIHONNES3.jpg" alt="image"></p>
<p>There are plenty more people leveraging their craftsmanship to serve the market and looking to establish relationships directly with you as their patron. Find more people like Oshi and Eryn at plebmall by <a href="https://njump.me/npub1f0e6xymc9hy4wmepa7em60tp8p7s6kgnq53q06grq6n5r0m27l2s6tc5r6">Baked Potato</a> </p>
<p>This is how we actively participate in the future that is unfolding. </p>
<hr>
<p>Thank you for reading! </p>
<p>If this article resonated with you, let me know with a zap and share it with friends who might find it insightful. </p>
<p>Your help sends a strong signal to keep making content like this! </p>
<p>Interested in fiction? Follow <a href="https://njump.me/npub1j9cmpzhlzeex6y85c2pnt45r5zhxhtx73a2twt77fyjwequ4l4jsp5xd49">Fervid Fables</a> for great short stories and serialized fiction. </p>
<p>More articles you might like from Beneath The Ink: </p>
<p><np-embed nostr="naddr1qvzqqqr4gupzp3padh3au336rew4pzfx78s050p3dw7pmhurgr2ktdcwwxn9svtfqq2n23zrgg68x5rw2pg477t6fezks36z940kcth39v6"><a href="/post/5dcb4spnpq_yznehgb-_l/">Dearly Departed- The People Left Behind</a></np-embed></p>
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      <item>
      <title><![CDATA[The Edge of Industry]]></title>
      <description><![CDATA[A Case For Decentralized Industry]]></description>
             <itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[A Case For Decentralized Industry]]></itunes:subtitle>
      <pubDate>Thu, 27 Jun 2024 11:18:11 GMT</pubDate>
      <link>https://john-martinez.npub.pro/post/8fsojzae0t8d90iakr6vn/</link>
      <comments>https://john-martinez.npub.pro/post/8fsojzae0t8d90iakr6vn/</comments>
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      <category>Decentralization</category>
      
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      <dc:creator><![CDATA[Beneath The Ink]]></dc:creator>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<blockquote>
<p>"3D printing will massively reduce the cost of certain products as it democratizes manufacturing and enables people to print what they need at home." - Chris&nbsp;Anderson</p>
</blockquote>
<p>In the 1980's, companies started outsourcing and focused on their core competencies. The world became smaller, shipping faster and bigger. In the 1990's companies started off-shoring. In 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic revealed serious shortcomings to off-shoring. Companies started reshoring or nearshoring.</p>
<p>The pandemic revealed things to the average person too. People re-discovered the internet and began leveraging the power of presence.</p>
<p>Technology continues to improve the way people exchange value among themselves. The next big shift in industrialization will be "in-housing". A decentralization of Industry. Manufacturing will move closer to the end user until it resides in their house. In the future, most manufacturing will take place inside the domicile. The time between purchase and delivery will vanish.</p>
<p>Why do I believe this is the natural progression for Industry? The answer lies in the Value Equation so eloquently presented by Alex Hormozi in his book, "100M Offers".</p>
<p><img src="https://yakihonne.s3.ap-east-1.amazonaws.com/c43d6de3de463a1e5d508926f1e0fa3c316bbc1ddf8340d565b70e71a6583169/files/1719486415315-YAKIHONNES3.png" alt="image"></p>
<blockquote>
<p>Alex Hormozi's Value Equation- 100M Offers</p>
</blockquote>
<p>End users of durable goods who have manufacturing capability within reach will essentially have the lowest time delay possible putting the time delay factor of the equation as close to zero as possible. This renders the equation closer to infinite value than ever before.</p>
<p>If that's the case, why hasn't it happened already?</p>
<p><img src="https://yakihonne.s3.ap-east-1.amazonaws.com/c43d6de3de463a1e5d508926f1e0fa3c316bbc1ddf8340d565b70e71a6583169/files/1719486447189-YAKIHONNES3.png" alt="image"></p>
<blockquote>
<p>Image from Getty&nbsp;Images</p>
</blockquote>
<h2>Big Business</h2>
<p>You might be surprised to read that 99.9% of all businesses in the United States are small businesses. With so much brand recognition pulling our mass consumer confidence towards big business that statistics seems to be misrepresented.</p>
<p>Things start to make more sense when you notice that big business represents 52.9% of the private workforce and purportedly 56% of the total GDP.</p>
<p>It stands to reason that big business influences the trajectory of industry. A world of inhousing where the majority of manufacturing is decentralized and spread out would remove big business dominance as the barrier to entry and product sales would rely on the design of products.</p>
<p>The kind of big business matters a ton here. There is big business that sells direct to consumers and there is big business that sells to other businesses. Its the relationship between the business to business (B2B) corporations that keep things going the way they are. These big businesses want to keep the barrier to entry so high that other entrepreneurs need massive war chests to even think about competing.</p>
<p>The COVID-19 pandemic changed this.</p>
<p>With storefronts shut down, businesses were forced to change their models and business to consumer was the only way to stay alive. Once companies got a hit of sales direct to consumers, many never came back.</p>
<p><img src="https://yakihonne.s3.ap-east-1.amazonaws.com/c43d6de3de463a1e5d508926f1e0fa3c316bbc1ddf8340d565b70e71a6583169/files/1719486504638-YAKIHONNES3.png" alt="image"></p>
<blockquote>
<p>Image from article- <np-embed url="https://medium.com/@saeid_90285/the-missing-piece-solving-the-fragmentation-puzzle-in-aec-industry-c03d52152c66Fragmenting"><a href="https://medium.com/@saeid_90285/the-missing-piece-solving-the-fragmentation-puzzle-in-aec-industry-c03d52152c66Fragmenting">https://medium.com/@saeid_90285/the-missing-piece-solving-the-fragmentation-puzzle-in-aec-industry-c03d52152c66Fragmenting</a></np-embed> Industry</p>
</blockquote>
<p>COVID shook the world.</p>
<p>Companies shuttered, people were laid off; the market was in shambles. The world came crumbling down. Of course, people thought everyone was going to die.</p>
<p>The big shakeup turned everyone's attention to the internet. Individuals realized how lucrative it was to start their own online business. People launched podcasts, started online courses, released writing subscriptions, uploaded video on YouTube, artists sold their work as NFTs. There was a world of possibilities and with nowhere else to go even if they wanted to, people dove deeper into the internet.</p>
<p>Podcasts based on niche subjects sky-rocketed. Personal blogs and subscription services propped up thousands of writers. The world was in shambles but technology made it easier for individuals to pivot and start their own businesses with less capital than ever before.</p>
<p>In the midst of this newfound growth of industry a few corporations grew bigger still. With everyone wading in the deep waters of the internet, online purchases grew. These were goods only one company was positioned well enough to deliver on, Amazon.</p>
<p>Depending on where you live today you can place an order on Amazon in the morning and have that item delivered to you early that afternoon. It's bonkers. That level of immediacy of receipt coupled with the ever growing horde of online designers only prove the innate desire for in-housing.</p>
<p><img src="https://yakihonne.s3.ap-east-1.amazonaws.com/c43d6de3de463a1e5d508926f1e0fa3c316bbc1ddf8340d565b70e71a6583169/files/1719486537514-YAKIHONNES3.png" alt="image"></p>
<blockquote>
<p>Image from article- <np-embed url="https://bettermode.com/blog/community-led-growthDistributed"><a href="https://bettermode.com/blog/community-led-growthDistributed">https://bettermode.com/blog/community-led-growthDistributed</a></np-embed></p>
</blockquote>
<h2>Market&nbsp;Share</h2>
<p>With more people flocking to solo-prenuership and tools such as the NOSTR protocol, where content creators can receive instant payment based on the quality of their online posts, you can see the semblance of a world where big business is reserved only for what big business is good for. (Yes, there will always be a place for big business. I'll get to that in the next section.)</p>
<p>The world would be a very different place when statistics reveal over 80% of the GDP produced by solo-prenuers and small business. In this possible future, small businesses selling consumable goods such as food would aggregate in "farmers market" style venues as opposed to flushing a ton of their revenues down the toilet on pricey commercial real-estate. Designers would sell durable goods as rendered 3D files sold in online market places (this is already happening and growing) and consumers would use those files to print goods somewhere close to home, if not directly inside their home.</p>
<p>In this world, there would be less reliance on intricate road systems. Large trucks would become obsolete. There would no longer be a need to tote truckloads of product across town and country. As the streets dwindle away, distances between homes will shrink. Our heavy reliance on personal vehicles will minimize. High speed rail can connect communities in lieu of massive and costly highway systems.</p>
<p>This will drive away the massive profits funneling into big business and help disperse market share more evenly across communities. Decentralization will stymie the reliance we have on big business to conduct research and development. Meta's AI, Llama, is a good example of this already happening. Many more things that were once reserved for big business will democratize, but even then, there will still be a place for mass money aggregation.<br>Image from ShutterstockNever the End of the Big&nbsp;Guys</p>
<p>I don't believe big industry will ever completely disappear.</p>
<p>There are benefits to economies of scale when producing large industrial products such as heavy equipment for construction, raw materials shipping and storage, and to name a few. In this world of industry on the edge, you have to ask yourself, "Who will bring the raw materials needed as inputs for 3D printers?" Bulk store facilities for thermoplastics, resins, metals, ceramics, and other composites will still be required and someone will have to ship it to those facilities.</p>
<p>Even then, big business will rely on small business for the 'final mile' bringing raw materials to the end consumers.</p>
<p><img src="https://yakihonne.s3.ap-east-1.amazonaws.com/c43d6de3de463a1e5d508926f1e0fa3c316bbc1ddf8340d565b70e71a6583169/files/1719486598781-YAKIHONNES3.png" alt="image"></p>
<blockquote>
<p>image from article- <np-embed url="https://vux.world/the-future-of-ai-and-humanity-insights-from-a-conversation-with-byron-reese/"><a href="https://vux.world/the-future-of-ai-and-humanity-insights-from-a-conversation-with-byron-reese/">https://vux.world/the-future-of-ai-and-humanity-insights-from-a-conversation-with-byron-reese/</a></np-embed></p>
</blockquote>
<h2>When Could This Future&nbsp;Happen?</h2>
<p>We are living in an era with a confluence of different technologies coming to a head at the same time. AI technology is making it easier for people to get more done at an individual level. Blockchain technology is showing the world that what was traditionally centralized no longer has to be. Bio-medicine is allowing people to live longer and healthier at a fraction of the cost. With people living longer, feeling more empowered, and given tools like AI to interact you can see the fragments of reality taking form.</p>
<p>The only thing that might hold communities back is the existing infrastructure made to serve economies run by big business.</p>
<p>The United States is in a prime time to make this transition as most of our infrastructure systems have aged to the point of needing a serious overhaul. Rather than spending excessive time and money we don't have on refurbishing the existing system, we could let the private market absorb it. Just imagine all of new real estate in prime locations that will become available once highways can be built on.</p>
<p>With everything primed and ready to make this future a reality the only barrier is inaction. You can take it to the internet. You have the power to bring industry to the edge. You just have to do it.</p>
<hr>
<p>I want to show the world that life is a scroll riddled with ink. The marks will only ever be simple blots on the parchment unless you pause and perceive them for the characters they are.</p>
<p>I’m constantly thinking about what the future could look like if we just take action.</p>
<p>More of my thoughts about the future and the world around us are coming soon....</p>
<p>Thank you for Reading this article. If you enjoyed it and would love to see more articles like it on NOSTR consider sending me some zaps doing so supports me and motivates me to continue writing!</p>
<p>If you are interested in Fiction writing, visit my NOSTR page Fervid Fables:</p>
<p>npub1j9cmpzhlzeex6y85c2pnt45r5zhxhtx73a2twt77fyjwequ4l4jsp5xd49</p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <itunes:author><![CDATA[Beneath The Ink]]></itunes:author>
      <itunes:summary><![CDATA[<blockquote>
<p>"3D printing will massively reduce the cost of certain products as it democratizes manufacturing and enables people to print what they need at home." - Chris&nbsp;Anderson</p>
</blockquote>
<p>In the 1980's, companies started outsourcing and focused on their core competencies. The world became smaller, shipping faster and bigger. In the 1990's companies started off-shoring. In 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic revealed serious shortcomings to off-shoring. Companies started reshoring or nearshoring.</p>
<p>The pandemic revealed things to the average person too. People re-discovered the internet and began leveraging the power of presence.</p>
<p>Technology continues to improve the way people exchange value among themselves. The next big shift in industrialization will be "in-housing". A decentralization of Industry. Manufacturing will move closer to the end user until it resides in their house. In the future, most manufacturing will take place inside the domicile. The time between purchase and delivery will vanish.</p>
<p>Why do I believe this is the natural progression for Industry? The answer lies in the Value Equation so eloquently presented by Alex Hormozi in his book, "100M Offers".</p>
<p><img src="https://yakihonne.s3.ap-east-1.amazonaws.com/c43d6de3de463a1e5d508926f1e0fa3c316bbc1ddf8340d565b70e71a6583169/files/1719486415315-YAKIHONNES3.png" alt="image"></p>
<blockquote>
<p>Alex Hormozi's Value Equation- 100M Offers</p>
</blockquote>
<p>End users of durable goods who have manufacturing capability within reach will essentially have the lowest time delay possible putting the time delay factor of the equation as close to zero as possible. This renders the equation closer to infinite value than ever before.</p>
<p>If that's the case, why hasn't it happened already?</p>
<p><img src="https://yakihonne.s3.ap-east-1.amazonaws.com/c43d6de3de463a1e5d508926f1e0fa3c316bbc1ddf8340d565b70e71a6583169/files/1719486447189-YAKIHONNES3.png" alt="image"></p>
<blockquote>
<p>Image from Getty&nbsp;Images</p>
</blockquote>
<h2>Big Business</h2>
<p>You might be surprised to read that 99.9% of all businesses in the United States are small businesses. With so much brand recognition pulling our mass consumer confidence towards big business that statistics seems to be misrepresented.</p>
<p>Things start to make more sense when you notice that big business represents 52.9% of the private workforce and purportedly 56% of the total GDP.</p>
<p>It stands to reason that big business influences the trajectory of industry. A world of inhousing where the majority of manufacturing is decentralized and spread out would remove big business dominance as the barrier to entry and product sales would rely on the design of products.</p>
<p>The kind of big business matters a ton here. There is big business that sells direct to consumers and there is big business that sells to other businesses. Its the relationship between the business to business (B2B) corporations that keep things going the way they are. These big businesses want to keep the barrier to entry so high that other entrepreneurs need massive war chests to even think about competing.</p>
<p>The COVID-19 pandemic changed this.</p>
<p>With storefronts shut down, businesses were forced to change their models and business to consumer was the only way to stay alive. Once companies got a hit of sales direct to consumers, many never came back.</p>
<p><img src="https://yakihonne.s3.ap-east-1.amazonaws.com/c43d6de3de463a1e5d508926f1e0fa3c316bbc1ddf8340d565b70e71a6583169/files/1719486504638-YAKIHONNES3.png" alt="image"></p>
<blockquote>
<p>Image from article- <np-embed url="https://medium.com/@saeid_90285/the-missing-piece-solving-the-fragmentation-puzzle-in-aec-industry-c03d52152c66Fragmenting"><a href="https://medium.com/@saeid_90285/the-missing-piece-solving-the-fragmentation-puzzle-in-aec-industry-c03d52152c66Fragmenting">https://medium.com/@saeid_90285/the-missing-piece-solving-the-fragmentation-puzzle-in-aec-industry-c03d52152c66Fragmenting</a></np-embed> Industry</p>
</blockquote>
<p>COVID shook the world.</p>
<p>Companies shuttered, people were laid off; the market was in shambles. The world came crumbling down. Of course, people thought everyone was going to die.</p>
<p>The big shakeup turned everyone's attention to the internet. Individuals realized how lucrative it was to start their own online business. People launched podcasts, started online courses, released writing subscriptions, uploaded video on YouTube, artists sold their work as NFTs. There was a world of possibilities and with nowhere else to go even if they wanted to, people dove deeper into the internet.</p>
<p>Podcasts based on niche subjects sky-rocketed. Personal blogs and subscription services propped up thousands of writers. The world was in shambles but technology made it easier for individuals to pivot and start their own businesses with less capital than ever before.</p>
<p>In the midst of this newfound growth of industry a few corporations grew bigger still. With everyone wading in the deep waters of the internet, online purchases grew. These were goods only one company was positioned well enough to deliver on, Amazon.</p>
<p>Depending on where you live today you can place an order on Amazon in the morning and have that item delivered to you early that afternoon. It's bonkers. That level of immediacy of receipt coupled with the ever growing horde of online designers only prove the innate desire for in-housing.</p>
<p><img src="https://yakihonne.s3.ap-east-1.amazonaws.com/c43d6de3de463a1e5d508926f1e0fa3c316bbc1ddf8340d565b70e71a6583169/files/1719486537514-YAKIHONNES3.png" alt="image"></p>
<blockquote>
<p>Image from article- <np-embed url="https://bettermode.com/blog/community-led-growthDistributed"><a href="https://bettermode.com/blog/community-led-growthDistributed">https://bettermode.com/blog/community-led-growthDistributed</a></np-embed></p>
</blockquote>
<h2>Market&nbsp;Share</h2>
<p>With more people flocking to solo-prenuership and tools such as the NOSTR protocol, where content creators can receive instant payment based on the quality of their online posts, you can see the semblance of a world where big business is reserved only for what big business is good for. (Yes, there will always be a place for big business. I'll get to that in the next section.)</p>
<p>The world would be a very different place when statistics reveal over 80% of the GDP produced by solo-prenuers and small business. In this possible future, small businesses selling consumable goods such as food would aggregate in "farmers market" style venues as opposed to flushing a ton of their revenues down the toilet on pricey commercial real-estate. Designers would sell durable goods as rendered 3D files sold in online market places (this is already happening and growing) and consumers would use those files to print goods somewhere close to home, if not directly inside their home.</p>
<p>In this world, there would be less reliance on intricate road systems. Large trucks would become obsolete. There would no longer be a need to tote truckloads of product across town and country. As the streets dwindle away, distances between homes will shrink. Our heavy reliance on personal vehicles will minimize. High speed rail can connect communities in lieu of massive and costly highway systems.</p>
<p>This will drive away the massive profits funneling into big business and help disperse market share more evenly across communities. Decentralization will stymie the reliance we have on big business to conduct research and development. Meta's AI, Llama, is a good example of this already happening. Many more things that were once reserved for big business will democratize, but even then, there will still be a place for mass money aggregation.<br>Image from ShutterstockNever the End of the Big&nbsp;Guys</p>
<p>I don't believe big industry will ever completely disappear.</p>
<p>There are benefits to economies of scale when producing large industrial products such as heavy equipment for construction, raw materials shipping and storage, and to name a few. In this world of industry on the edge, you have to ask yourself, "Who will bring the raw materials needed as inputs for 3D printers?" Bulk store facilities for thermoplastics, resins, metals, ceramics, and other composites will still be required and someone will have to ship it to those facilities.</p>
<p>Even then, big business will rely on small business for the 'final mile' bringing raw materials to the end consumers.</p>
<p><img src="https://yakihonne.s3.ap-east-1.amazonaws.com/c43d6de3de463a1e5d508926f1e0fa3c316bbc1ddf8340d565b70e71a6583169/files/1719486598781-YAKIHONNES3.png" alt="image"></p>
<blockquote>
<p>image from article- <np-embed url="https://vux.world/the-future-of-ai-and-humanity-insights-from-a-conversation-with-byron-reese/"><a href="https://vux.world/the-future-of-ai-and-humanity-insights-from-a-conversation-with-byron-reese/">https://vux.world/the-future-of-ai-and-humanity-insights-from-a-conversation-with-byron-reese/</a></np-embed></p>
</blockquote>
<h2>When Could This Future&nbsp;Happen?</h2>
<p>We are living in an era with a confluence of different technologies coming to a head at the same time. AI technology is making it easier for people to get more done at an individual level. Blockchain technology is showing the world that what was traditionally centralized no longer has to be. Bio-medicine is allowing people to live longer and healthier at a fraction of the cost. With people living longer, feeling more empowered, and given tools like AI to interact you can see the fragments of reality taking form.</p>
<p>The only thing that might hold communities back is the existing infrastructure made to serve economies run by big business.</p>
<p>The United States is in a prime time to make this transition as most of our infrastructure systems have aged to the point of needing a serious overhaul. Rather than spending excessive time and money we don't have on refurbishing the existing system, we could let the private market absorb it. Just imagine all of new real estate in prime locations that will become available once highways can be built on.</p>
<p>With everything primed and ready to make this future a reality the only barrier is inaction. You can take it to the internet. You have the power to bring industry to the edge. You just have to do it.</p>
<hr>
<p>I want to show the world that life is a scroll riddled with ink. The marks will only ever be simple blots on the parchment unless you pause and perceive them for the characters they are.</p>
<p>I’m constantly thinking about what the future could look like if we just take action.</p>
<p>More of my thoughts about the future and the world around us are coming soon....</p>
<p>Thank you for Reading this article. If you enjoyed it and would love to see more articles like it on NOSTR consider sending me some zaps doing so supports me and motivates me to continue writing!</p>
<p>If you are interested in Fiction writing, visit my NOSTR page Fervid Fables:</p>
<p>npub1j9cmpzhlzeex6y85c2pnt45r5zhxhtx73a2twt77fyjwequ4l4jsp5xd49</p>
]]></itunes:summary>
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