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Don't Let Fear of Layoff Blind You
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In This Newsletter
Forget layoffs, AI is changing the basis of Work
Another Chance to win $200-worth Perplexity Pro by pressing a few keys 🎉
Elon Musk’s head-scratching merger game, OpenAI remembers what is in its name and more of what’s going on
Now you can bark back at your dog!!
I know the word layoff is on the mind of a majority of corporate workers right now and it is no joke.
This job market is brutal and the number of texts I get from talented, highly-skilled people unable to find a job is revolting.
We are told we must adjust to a new reality where AI would steal most jobs, leaving us with “nothing” and have no economic prospects to sustain our lives.
But is this fear really about AI? Or is it about how short-lived our certainties have always been.
AI may ironically free us from the very system we fear losing.
There are many things that become so ominous to our life that we don’t realize how short a time they have been around.
Landline phones, televisions, facebook — all came into our life as disruptive technologies and stopped being the center of our lives before we realized it.
Same is going to happen to the conventional 9-to-5-workday. While so deeply ingrained in our modern consciousness, it represents a surprisingly brief experiment in the long arc of human labor history.
As AI reshapes how things get done, we stand to witness another transformation — one that is seeing us return to more goal-oriented rather than time-oriented work patterns.

“We are gonna see 10-person billion dollar company pretty soon:” Sam Altman
Final Nail In Coffin Of Industrial Revolution Labor Patterns
A world of year-end reviews, clocking 40 hours a week, and more corporate shenanigans that people who have held real jobs unlike me tell me about have brought comfort to people they are realizing is being pulled from under them.
Yet, this wasn’t the case for like 95% of human history. We organized our labor around immediate needs and natural cycles.
The strict delineation of work time versus personal time would have seemed peculiar to our ancestors until the 18th century.
You all think a 4-day work week is a new progressive, modern way of working that we are experimenting with. Blah! Hunter-gatherers in Stone Age worked just three to five hours daily.

The radical transformation of work schedules came with the Industrial Revolution, when labor became increasingly detached from natural rhythms and human needs.
By 1817, people were working unprecedented 80-100 hour weeks. Factory workers in mid-19th century England endured punishing 16-hour days, 311 days annually.
Workers lost control, prompting organized resistance to excessive work hours.
The breakthrough in the struggle came in the early 20th century.
In 1926, Henry Ford implemented the 40-hour workweek after discovering diminishing returns from longer hours.
In 1940, the 40-hour workweek became U.S. law, establishing what we now know as the standard schedule.
The term "9-to-5" became so emblematic of standardized work schedules that it entered popular culture.
In historical context, this rigid time-based approach to work has existed for less than a century — a mere blip in humanity's 300,000-year history.
I think, substantial progress in AI would put the final nail in the coffin of everything that was wrong with Industrial Revolution and the exploitation of labor that came with it.
While we put machines to work as manufacturing takes a more important role than ever before.
The Bigger Picture To AI-Driven Layoffs
Corporates exist for a single reasons — fetch returns for shareholders. It doesn’t matter how many times your manager says you’re like a family.
So, there are two things that are set to pan out. Either a company optimizes its workflow, doing more with a less headcount, or see its business collapse.
In the next decade, it may become more financially safe decision to be an entrepreneur or independent creator than being a 9-to-5er.
The jobs that remain relevant in the AI era will likely emphasize what humans accomplish rather than simply how long they work — a change that, viewed historically, represents less a revolution than a homecoming to more natural patterns of human productivity.

Estimated work hours falling post-AGI, continuing the trend from the peak of early industrial age in the 18th century.
A recent Pew study found 52% of Americans are worried about how AI is used in the workplace, yet only 16% incorporate it in any way in their work. I think, there lies the crux of the issue.

Data, courtesy of Pew Research Center.
If you’re more worried about keeping your job than swinging the hammer, you’ll miss the nail entirely, in my humble view.
If you think this is some hypothetical novelty of the future — just look at the past couple of years.
Companies like Cursor, Midjourney and ElvenLabs are launching path-breaking products with a team of 10 people or so. Meanwhile, remind me, what is IBM doing?
AI is going to take down more inefficiently-run large corporations than it does talented people.
It is going to play a role in balancing out the scales in power in favor of the passionate, hard-working, obsesses little guy, take my word for it.
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Best From Around The Web
Okay, this one isn’t about AI but from the founder of an AI company. Really resonated with me on entrepreneurship, startups and why jobs and getting laid-off means so much to so many people — sometimes, in a very unfair way.
When my startup was struggling, I moved back into my parents’ house, and they financially supported me
Every once in a while, we'd have family gatherings, and I was the only 'young' person there because my cousins were busy earning degrees or working
There was one humiliating
— David Park (@Davidjpark96)
8:05 PM • Mar 25, 2025
Latest Happenings
Elon’s Merger
Elon rebranded Twitter to X with the intention of making it “the everything app” similar to ones popular in Asia like AliPay and Grab.
Now, looks like he has had a bit of a change of heart with xAI acquiring the social media company in an all-stock transaction that values X at $33 billion and the resultant entity at $80 billion.
This is a major digression from Musk earlier pitching xAI being 25% owned by X investors and saying the whole acquisition would help Tesla in the long-run, which is his only publicly-listed company and now down 31% year-to-date.
I don’t have a specific reading into the intention behind the merger but it makes sense on a first look with xAI valuation rising amid the AI boom to surpass that of X, the social media.
OpenAI suddenly remembers its name
Sam Altman surprised us with the launch of an open-weight model on Monday, OpenAI’s first since GPT-2!
The model is being released to select developers approved by OpenAI! While launching, Sam also took a dig at Meta over their limit on commercial use for products above 700 million monthly active users.
we will not do anything silly like saying that you cant use our open model if your service has more than 700 million monthly active users.
we want everyone to use it!
— Sam Altman (@sama)
11:06 PM • Mar 31, 2025
I think it’s pretty funny that Sam would take a stab at Meta, while Mark Zuckerberg’s company has been unexpectedly holding-up the open-source torch while OpenAI sorted out other “priorities.”
Other Happenings
In what is my most favorite AI prank so far, Eleven Labs launched a “text to bark” model on April 1 to let you talk to your dog better.
OpenAI is truly getting unprecedented demand for ChatGPT plus subscriptions right now thanks to Ghibli art. But I think beside that, the company really aced text in images unlike anyone else and that is translating well.
Amazon has unveiled an OpenAI Operator like AI agent that can control your web browser.
I take my words back. Google’s Gemini 2.5 Pro excels at coding! Maybe my third favorite model now after Claude Sonnet line and DeepSeek v3 for the task.
Google is exploring Model Context Protocol (MCP), one of the hottest trends in the AI space recently, which seeks to make uniform how different apps to LLMs.
Apple’s bad days in AI aren’t ending.
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