Written by: Will Awang
Over the past year, I've attended several AI-themed industry conferences. Guests on stage took turns demonstrating the wonders of AI, while people in the audience held up their phones to film the screen, posted on social media, and then went back to scrolling. But back in the office, it was the same weekly meetings, the same approval processes, the same status reports. Big tech companies have already written token consumption into KPIs; some become model employees by writing scripts to inflate usage. Those same people on social media—Claude revolution today, Codex amazing tomorrow, Gemini long live the day after—is this embracing revolution, or just rushing from one spectacle to another?
All of this is noise, not the answer I'm looking for.
The real question isn't whether AI is powerful enough—the steam engine has been built. The question is who will be the first to tear down the old workshop.
The day the Industrial Revolution truly began wasn't when Watt improved the steam engine; it was when the factory owners in Lancashire decided to move away from the river and rebuild their workshops around the steam engine. The most important moment for AI is the same—not the day the large language model was invented, but the day the first organization decides to dismantle its old processes and rebuild its mode of production around AI. That day hasn't arrived yet. But it's on its way.
Two people saw this early. Notion CEO Ivan Zhao wrote an article at the end of 2025 titled "Steam, Steel, and Infinite Minds", offering a cold judgment: we are still in the "replacing the waterwheel" stage—attaching AI chatbots to existing tools, but no one is redesigning the factory. Former OpenAI employee Leopold Aschenbrenner took another path: he wrote a 165-page document titled "Situational Awareness", then started a fund that grew from $225 million to $13.68 billion, all betting on AI infrastructure. One looks inward, the other bets outward.
This article is not about them. It's about us—where we stand now, and which part of history we are repeating.
( Power-loom weaving, engraving by J. Tingle after Thomas Allom, 1835 / Wikimedia Commons )
I. The Workshop Is Still Old
Most people's day goes like this: use AI to write an email in the morning, saving ten minutes; then spend two hours in an unnecessary weekly meeting; copy and paste the same set of data between three tools in the afternoon; post on social media at night saying "AI is so great." The ten minutes saved are completely eaten back by the old processes.
Similarly, when the steam engine first appeared, factory owners initially just replaced the waterwheel with the steam engine, leaving everything else unchanged—factories were still built by the river, still multi-story buildings, still with a central drive shaft powering the entire production line. We embed ChatGPT into Slack, add Copilot to Office, place AI chat windows into workflows—we're doing the same thing. The tool is upgraded, but the workshop remains the same.
But replacing the machine is not the same as replacing the workshop. As McLuhan famously said:
We look at the present through a rear-view mirror. We march backwards into the future. Using old processes to accommodate new tools is like early films being merely recorded stage plays. The real breakthrough comes when someone completely frees the steam engine from the river and redesigns the entire production system around the new power source.
Looking at the Industrial Revolution timeline and comparing it to AI, we can roughly locate where we are on the map:
Now the timeline is extremely compressed. The Industrial Revolution took 60 years from the steam engine to the railway mania; AI took only 7 years from Transformer to the data center construction boom.
Speed is not the problem; the problem is where we are stuck—the first four rows are still the stage of installing new machines in old workshops. The steam engine is installed, railways are being laid, but the mode of production remains intact. The sixth row is the real watershed. We are most likely stuck between these two steps.
The steam engine is in our hands, but the workshop is still old.
II. All the Money Is Bet on the Layer Farthest from the Factory
Infrastructure is always overbuilt. It's the investors who go bankrupt, not the infrastructure.
In 1846, the British Parliament passed 263 Railway Acts, approving the construction of 9,500 miles of new railway. At its peak, railway investment accounted for 13% of Britain's GDP. Railway shares could be bought with only a 10% down payment, and the middle class flocked to invest. The bubble burst in 1847. One-third of the approved lines were never built, and countless investors lost everything. Darwin lost 60% on railway stocks, and he was luckier than most.
But the railways remained.
Today's AI infrastructure is following the same path. Goldman Sachs' latest estimate puts global AI infrastructure capital expenditure at $765 billion in 2026, projected to reach $1.6 trillion annually by 2031. The proportion of capital expenditure to operating cash flow for hyperscale cloud providers has risen from about 40% in 2023 to nearly 70% in 2025. AI-related investments already account for about a quarter of all US investment. Aschenbrenner's $13.68 billion is betting on this layer—he's not betting on which application will win, but on the underlying compute power itself.
This capital cycle is isomorphic to real estate development. Building data centers is like building buildings: land is electricity, building materials are GPUs and storage, contractors are data center builders, developers are cloud providers, tenants are AI application companies, and rent is API revenue. The cloud providers' business model is to "rent to cover the loan"—using API revenue to cover data center capital expenditure, waiting for the valuation leap brought by the explosion of AI applications.
(Compute Power Real Estate: Each generation has its own infrastructure)
The core risk is the same: is the growth rate of API call volume offsetting the decline in API unit price? If rent falls below the loan repayment line—this is a nightmare familiar to real estate developers. The lesson of 2008 was not that too many houses were built, but that the structure of the houses built did not match the structure of real demand. The equivalent risk for AI is: an oversupply of general-purpose compute power, while specialized capabilities that can truly handle high-value scenarios like financial compliance or medical diagnosis remain scarce.
Railways, real estate, AI—infrastructure investments across three eras share the same rule: overbuilding is the norm, material suppliers always lose pricing power, and long-term returns always belong to the owners of "prime locations." Look at the Q1 fund holdings on Wall Street—probably 80% is concentrated in this infrastructure layer: NVIDIA, data centers, cloud infrastructure. But the railway mania teaches us: this is not the full picture of the AI revolution, and it's not even the layer with the highest returns.
What is the prime location for AI? It's unique industry data and deeply embedded workflows. For individuals, the real "prime location" is not the stocks you hold, but your own irreplaceable judgment and industry knowledge—provided you have already rebuilt the way you use them around AI.
The real returns are in the next layer. But between infrastructure and value creation, there is no seamless connection. There is a gap in the middle—historically, this gap has swallowed decades.
III. Who Is Tearing Down the Workshop
Those tearing down the workshop and those "using AI for efficiency" are not doing the same thing.
Notion co-founder Simon used to be a "10x programmer"; now he rarely writes code himself—he simultaneously controls three or four AI coding agents, achieving 30x to 40x efficiency. Notion now has 1,000 employees and over 700 AI agents. The gap isn't the tools; it's that Simon tore down his old workshop, while most people just replaced their waterwheel.
600 million Chinese users have used generative AI tools, a year-on-year increase of 142%—this is the world's largest pool of AI demand. But almost no Chinese company has rebuilt its core workflows around AI. The world's largest demand side, paired with a nearly stagnant supply side in terms of organizational change. This contrast itself is a signal: it's not that the tools are lacking, it's that organizations haven't kept up. The context of knowledge work is scattered across dozens of tools and dozens of minds, outputs are not verifiable, and no one knows how to judge whether a strategic memo is effective.
(Labor market impacts of AI: A new measure and early evidence)
Anthropic is already moving on a larger scale. They released an Economic Index, using real usage data to depict which tasks and industries AI is replacing first, then building according to this blueprint: forming a joint venture AI-native enterprise services company with Goldman Sachs, Blackstone, and Hellman & Friedman; establishing a global alliance with KPMG, connecting 276,000 employees to Claude; Accenture forming a business group, training 30,000 people, focusing on finance, life sciences, and healthcare.
The role these consulting firms play is not that of AI users, but AI railway engineers—they don't build steam engines or lay tracks; they help enterprises tear down old factories and rebuild production lines around the new power source. Without this role, most factory owners wouldn't know where to start.
The signals are already flashing. One of the sharpest comes from the job market.
Young people aged 22-25 entering AI-high-exposure professions are 14% less likely to find a job than their peers entering low-exposure professions. Junior positions are already being squeezed.
If I were a new graduate, this number would directly affect my job search. If I were a manager, the next batch of junior positions I hire might not be people.
Organizations are dismantling. What about individuals? My degree, my resume, the industry experience I've accumulated over the years—these are my waterwheels. They once drove my entire production line, but the steam engine has arrived. A degree from a top university is no longer a moat; it just proves I once built a decent factory by the river.
Now the question is, do we have the ability to leave that river?
Anthropic's data shows that users who have used AI tools for more than 6 months have a task success rate 10% higher than new users. Those who started half a year earlier are already leading by 10%, and this gap compounds over time.
But no company has gone bankrupt yet from not using AI, at least my law firm is still advancing full steam ahead around AI. The winners haven't been selected by the market yet. The learning curve is real—early adopters are already accumulating advantages, but most are still at the starting line.
IV. My Next Job Doesn't Have a Name Yet
Will my current job title exist ten years from now? How many of the tools I used daily five years ago are still used today? The answers are likely both negative. But I don't know what the things that replace them are called—because those things don't exist yet.
It's been this way every time in history. New things aren't planned; they grow on their own after old constraints disappear.
Before railways were built, Britain was a collection of isolated local economies. The price of cotton cloth in Manchester and London could differ by 30%. Each city had its own time standard, and no one saw a problem. In the twenty years after railways were built, everything changed. A national unified market appeared for the first time, price differences were smoothed out; standard time was forced by railways, not invented; stationmasters, telegraph operators, travel agents—these jobs didn't exist at all before railways.
No one foresaw department stores when laying railways. No one foresaw standard time when building steam engines.
(Steam, Steel, and AI Infinite Intelligence)
The history of cities tells the same story. Cities hundreds of years ago were human-scale—forty minutes to walk across Florence. Steel frames made skyscrapers possible, railways connected cities to their hinterlands, and elevators, subways, and highways followed. Tokyo, Chongqing, Dallas—these are not bigger versions of Florence; they are entirely new ways of life.
Current knowledge work is also human-scale. Teams of a few dozen people, meetings and emails set the rhythm, becoming unmanageable beyond a few hundred people. We are building Florence with stone and wood. AI makes "Tokyo" possible—organizations composed of thousands of AI agents and people, with workflows running continuously across time zones. Old weekly meetings, quarterly planning, annual reviews may no longer make sense.
Simon no longer writes code—his job has become "managing AI agents." This position didn't exist two years ago. My next job title might not have a name yet. But someone is already building that future we cannot yet name.
V. What Does the New Workshop Look Like
After tearing down the old workshop, what do you build? Y Combinator's answer is: let the company improve itself.
Their internal system now modifies its own code at night. An employee ran a query during the day that failed. A supervising agent read about this failure, deduced the cause, wrote code to fix it, submitted it for review, and deployed it. The same query ran successfully the next day. The whole thing happened while everyone was asleep.
This isn't AI helping people produce 30% more. This is the system running through an entire closed loop on its own, figuring out how to become better.
In an internal talk, YC partner Tom Blomfield called this company form a "recursive self-improving AI loop." His judgment is direct: most companies are still Roman legions—information trickles down layer by layer and aggregates up layer by layer, with people acting as conduits. What AI breaks is not the efficiency of a certain link, but the very premise of this entire hierarchical structure.
His new logic is: burn tokens, not headcount. The bottleneck is shifting from manpower to compute power. The data YC sees shows that companies reaching Demo Day have about 5 times higher revenue per capita than 18 months ago. The role of middle management is being taken over by AI—"coordination" no longer requires humans. Everyone should be an IC, a builder, an operator. Every task has a named owner, not a committee.
There's another prerequisite: the company must be "readable" to AI. Things that aren't recorded are, to AI, as if they never happened. YC now archives all partner emails, records all Slack messages and office hour recordings. One partner used 2,000 hours of recordings accumulated over three months to have AI regenerate a 150-page internal manual—much better than the old version. This manual updates automatically every month, becoming a perpetually fresh "living brain."
Tom left a question:
If you were building your company from scratch today, would you set it up in this form? If your company already has a hierarchical structure, you face a harder question—will the pain of rebuilding be less than the cost of continuing to operate as a Roman legion?
People are not at the center of the workshop; they are on the periphery—responsible for the places AI can't yet reach: on-the-ground judgment, entirely new situations, high-stakes, high-emotion moments. The center of the company is a "corporate brain" pieced together from data, records, and industry knowledge. The software running on it is consumable—if it can be generated, it can be regenerated. What's valuable resides in people's minds—how the business runs, which steps involve judgment; this understanding is the real asset.
What Ivan Zhao describes in "Steam, Steel, and Infinite Minds" is the other side of this direction—an organization of 1,000 employees and over 700 AI agents collaborating, where people are responsible for judgment, and agents are responsible for execution. Aschenbrenner bets on compute infrastructure; Zhao bets on organizational reconstruction. Both paths ultimately point to the same destination: a new mode of production rebuilt around AI.
VI. Conclusion
Between the 1840s and 1850s—the railways were laid, but the factories hadn't been rebuilt.
Where are we? Simon no longer writes code. He tore down his own waterwheel.
The question has never been whether the steam engine is good enough. The question is who will be the first to tear down the old workshop.
I don't intend to predict the future department stores. I only intend to take care of myself—ensuring I stand along the railway line, not guarding a river that is drying up.
What about you?











