We are living in a genuinely extraordinary moment in technology.

My colleague Nick Kavassalis told me he built an OCR feature in 3 minutes today. I had to just sit with that for a second — something that would have taken hours, maybe a full day's work, done before the coffee got cold.

And then, over the weekend, I ordered groceries from 30,000 feet and they were waiting at my door when I landed.

I don't know why that one got me. I'm watching models reason through complex problems in seconds, I've seen colleagues ship in minutes what used to take days. But sitting on a plane, ordering broccoli and Greek yogurt and knowing they'd beat me home felt like the future in a way that was impossible to ignore.

I think there's something important in that feeling. The best technology doesn't announce itself. It just quietly removes friction from your life until one day you're at altitude ordering groceries and thinking: how is this real?

We're building in an era where that question keeps coming up. I hope we never stop being a little amazed by it.