Sometimes I find myself pausing and asking an uncomfortable question. After twenty years of blogging and eighteen years of producing videos for YouTube, have I actually lived the life I intended to live, or have I spent an excessive part of it simply waiting for technology to function?
Waiting for applications to open.
Waiting for videos to upload.
Waiting for failed downloads to restart, again and again.
Waiting for plugins to update, break, and then require fixing once more.
What was once supposed to be a set of tools designed to support creativity has, over time, become a constant source of friction. The internet promised efficiency, reach, and freedom. In reality, it often delivers interruptions, error messages, incompatibilities, and endless troubleshooting. Hours disappear not into writing, filming, or creating, but into problem-solving issues that should not exist at all after decades of technological development.
There is a particular exhaustion that comes from technical repetition. The same problems reappear year after year, platform after platform. Uploads fail without explanation. Interfaces change overnight. Features disappear. Algorithms shift silently. Documentation is outdated before it is even read. And the responsibility to adapt always falls on the creator, never on the platform.
This raises a deeper concern about trust.
If something as basic as a social media platform cannot consistently perform its core functions, even after years of refinement, how are we supposed to place greater parts of our lives into the hands of increasingly complex systems? We are told that artificial intelligence will streamline work, optimize creativity, and remove friction. Yet the foundational digital infrastructure we already depend on still struggles with reliability.
Trust is built on predictability.
Creativity requires stability.
Life needs systems that support it rather than constantly demanding attention.
When technology fails, it does not fail quietly. It demands time, focus, emotional energy, and patience. It fragments concentration and subtly reshapes how days are spent. Over long periods, this accumulation becomes significant. A life measured not only in projects completed, but in hours lost to loading bars and error notifications.
This is not a rejection of technology itself. Blogging and video creation have enabled meaningful expression, connection, and documentation. They have allowed stories to travel across borders and years. But there is a growing realization that the cost of participation is often hidden. The cost is mental bandwidth. The cost is time. The cost is presence.
As artificial intelligence becomes more deeply integrated into creative and professional life, the question is no longer whether it is powerful, but whether it is trustworthy. Not in theory, but in practice. Not in marketing language, but in everyday use. Can it reduce friction rather than introduce new layers of dependency? Can it truly serve human intent, or will it simply become another system that requires constant supervision?
Perhaps the most honest conclusion is this. Technology should remain a tool, not a life environment. When creators spend more time maintaining systems than expressing ideas, something has gone wrong. Progress should feel like release, not like an endless queue of updates and fixes.
After decades online, the longing is simple. Fewer platforms. Fewer failures. More time actually living, observing, and creating. Because no amount of innovation can replace the value of a life that is not perpetually waiting for something to load.





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