PODCAST · business
ReadMultiplex.com Podcast.
by Brian Roemmele
Multiplex is an experiment, an experiment that will be on going. An experiment in publishing as I am not a professional writer nor will it be likely any contributors would be professional writers. Much of the content for Multiplex will be direct results from first hand empirical research that I am personally working on or other researchers are working on. Multiplex will also follow the work of other great researchers that are inventing new technology or new uses for existing technology.The experimental nature of Multiplex means that content can be dense and sparse at times. What we won’t do is write just to fill in space. We will aim to have regular content for the member-only area, This means that if you choose to become a member you are supporting the work of the writers and not an exact number of postings. There will always be free content to be found on the site as well as the X feed.—Brian RoemmeleWebsite: <a target="_blank" rel="noopener n
-
45
ReadMultiplex.com: A 1956 Forgotten Radio Satire of Empire, Amnesia, and the Fragile Future Utopia
In the golden age of American science fiction radio, few episodes captured the absurd machinery of bureaucracy and the quiet horror of lost history quite like X Minus One’s “Skulking Permit.” First broadcast on NBC on February 15, 1956 (and rebroadcast on July 4, 1957), the episode adapted Robert Sheckley’s short story from the December 1954 issue of Galaxy Science Fiction. It remains a razor-sharp parable about how autocratic thinking devours memory, how isolation can breed innocence or oblivion, and how the rediscovery of one’s true origins can shatter a civilization’s self-image. Today, as we stand on the cusp of an AI-mediated Great Forgetting, one Brian Roemmele has chronicled in his writings on the Amnesia Generation, this story reads less like quaint 1950s satire and more like a warning siren for our own future.Read more at: ReadMultiplex.comSupport this wrok by buying us a coffee: https://ko-fi.com/brianroemmele
-
44
ReadMultiplex.com: You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 27: Open Warfare.
In the golden age of science fiction radio, when rocket ships roared forth from the warm glow of vacuum tubes, futures arrived one static-filled episode at a time, and the airwaves still carried the electric promise of tomorrow—X Minus Onequietly broadcast a revolution. On January 23, 1957, Episode 85, “Open Warfare,” adapted by Ernest Kinoy from James E. Gunn’s May 1954 Galaxy Science Fiction novelette, entered the ether. Clocking in at just over twenty-one minutes, this deceptively compact drama contained the complete architectural blueprint for the collision we are living through right now: the instant when perfect machines step onto humanity’s most profoundly human stages and declare open war on what it means to strive, to excel, to connect, to create, and to endure.This installment of the You Have 5,000 Days series is not nostalgia for crackling transistors or mid-century pulp optimism. It is precise pattern recognition—the kind we have cultivated across previous parts as we mapped the Hero’s Journey through the end of work as we have known it. From the Call to Adventure (the sudden arrival of generative abundance) through the Road of Trials (displacement, reskilling, economic reconfiguration) and the Ordeal (the widespread realization that narrow-domain superhuman performance is here), we now stand at the threshold of the final act: the Abundance Interregnum proper, where humanity must decide whether to compete on machine terms or transcend them entirely.“Open Warfare” is the perfect parable for this moment. It shows us exactly how the machines will arrive—quietly, superior in calibrated domains, composite-trained on the best of us—how unbeatable they will seem for a season, and how humans will still prevail. Not by matching flawless execution, but by transcending it through radical adaptability, emotional intelligence, ethical improvisation, cultural intuition, and the irreducibly messy genius that no dataset, no matter how vast, can fully replicate or anticipate.Read more at: ReadMultiplex.comIf you found this gave you some value, buy us coffee: https://ko-fi.com/brianroemmele
-
43
ReadMultiplex.com: 1957 Saul, The Robot That Almost Won A Bet
Open Warfare, January 23, 1957)This 1957 radio show was,adapted by Ernest Kinoy from a story by James E. Gunn, a talented but struggling professional golfer named Saul falls in love with the daughter of a wealthy, intellectual elitist. The father firmly believes that athletes are intellectually inferior and refuses to allow the marriage unless Saul can prove himself by earning a substantial sum—specifically by winning a high-stakes golf tournament against the father's sponsored champion. What begins as a seemingly straightforward sports drama quickly reveals deeper layers as Saul confronts not just a superior opponent but a challenge that tests the boundaries between human determination and engineered perfection.The narrative builds tension through the escalating "warfare" on the golf course, where Saul's rival demonstrates uncanny, almost superhuman skill. Listeners gradually uncover the science-fiction twist: the opponent is no ordinary player but a meticulously programmed machine designed for flawless performance. This setup allows the story to explore themes of human ingenuity versus mechanical superiority, class prejudice between intellectuals and physical competitors, and the value of imperfection in achieving true victory. The first half feels like a light, humorous golf tale before the genre elements emerge fully.Ultimately, Saul must rely on creativity, adaptability, and raw human resilience to overcome the odds in a climactic confrontation. The episode delivers a satisfying yet predictable resolution that underscores X Minus One's signature blend of social commentary and speculative fiction. While not the most complex entry in the series, it remains an engaging mid-run story that highlights the show's ability to weave everyday settings with futuristic ideas, running about 22 minutes with strong performances and classic radio production values.Read more at: https://ReadMultiplex.comSupport this posdcast by buying a cofee: https://ko-fi.com/brianroemmele
-
42
ReadMultiplex.com: The Rise of AI “Trendslop”. It’s The Training Data Stupid.
The data we choose to train AI systems on today is quite literally going to shape the strategic intelligence of tomorrow. You do not want to be asking a sycophant for advice on how to save your your relationships, health, business or the world. You want to build, or at least utilize, something that relies on structural truth. Researchers Asked AI for Strategic Advice, They Got Trend Slop in Return. To briefly summarize our journey today, we start out with the striking discovery of strategy trend slop by the HBR researchers. We uncovered the root cause of that slop in the internet sewage of consensus-enforced platforms like Wikipedia and karma-driven ecosystems like Reddit. And finally, we arrived at Brian Rommel's profound solution, the untapped 1870-1970 high-protein data corpus anchored by his open-source love equations. It is a complete paradigm shift in how we think about the future of machine learning. The 1870 to 1970 data I reccomebd as a solution contains a unique paradigm shift humility, precisely because humanity was discovering so much for the absolute first time, constrained by the physical costs of paper, ink, and reputation. Follow this advice and AI eventually digitizes, ingests, and learns from 74.25 petabytes of offline data and that is historical humility, But what happens when the AI runs out of that pristine data? In our modern era, where digital paper costs absolutely nothing, where every fleeting half-formed thought is instantly recorded and broadcast, and where physical constraints are increasingly abstracted away by software, how do we ensure that the humans of 2030 are somehow creating the rigorous high protein data that the AI of 2050 will need to survive and evolve? How do we build systems that incentivize human truth today? We have to become the authors of the next golden century of data, not just passive consumers of a slop. Thank you so much for joining us on this deep dive on the Read Multiplex podcast. Please go support Brian's work, think critically about the inputs of the tools you use at ReadMultiplex.com.And if this has given you any value, buy Brian a coffee: https://ko-fi.com/brianroemmele
-
41
ReadMultiplex.com: You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 26: I Feel Poor!
Have you ever noticed how the most miraculous things become completely infuriating the moment they stop working perfectly? Consider the device you are likely using right now to read or listen to this. It possesses more raw computational power than the entire infrastructure that sent humanity to the moon. In the 1980s, equivalent processing power would have cost millions and required a gymnasium-sized facility with massive cooling systems. For the first week it feels like pure magic. Then the battery dips, a page loads four seconds instead of half a second, and physiologically you feel stressed—angry at the miracle in your pocket. This is not ingratitude. Your anxiety is a highly rational response to a very specific economic restructuring. We validate that feeling completely. The cultural narrative that dismisses it as mere pessimism misses the structural reality.Yet you feel poor. Surveys of life satisfaction in developed nations have barely budged. Wages in AI exposed sectors are already dropping. Twenty percent of full time U S employees have seen their roles partially or fully replaced. Nominal paychecks shrink while the currency itself wobbles under the weight of transition policies like Universal High Income experiments and the slow erosion of fiat trust. College degrees that cost tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars now open doors to roles that artificial intelligence performs faster and cheaper. Job titles that once anchored identity evaporate. The math is merciless. The psychology is harsher..Explore the article at: ReadMultiplex.comIf you found value in this podcast, buy us a coffee: https://ko-fi.com/brianroemmele
-
40
ReadMultiplex.com: You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 25: The Desk Set Prophecy.
In the long arc of our collective story, certain artifacts from the past arrive like messages in bottles, washed ashore from a time when the future was still negotiable. Desk Set (1957) is one such relic, a shimmering, color-saturated romantic comedy that, beneath its champagne toasts and typewriter clatter, delivers a precise, almost eerie blueprint of the tensions now unfolding in the Interregnum. This is not mere nostalgia; it is a distant warning, encoded in laughter and light, about the precise mechanics of technological displacement, corporate rhetoric, human resilience, and the quiet triumph of the irreplaceable. Seventy years before ChatGPT, this film, among the earliest Hollywood productions to feature a computer as a central character, perfectly predicted our modern anxieties about AI, from corporate spin and system meltdowns to the bizarre reality of “AI hallucinations.” It exposed the Productivity Paradox decades before economists named it, and it laid bare the true nature of today’s AI job crisis: highly skilled workers are not simply losing their jobs but are being pushed into the exhausting, monotonous world of data annotation to train their electronic replacements.This movie is a map that will present our journey into the future.Read more at: https://ReadMultiplex.comIf you found value in this podcast, buy me a coffee: https://ko-fi.com/brianroemmele
-
39
ReadMultiplex.com: You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 24: The Doomslayer!
Imagine this. You pay literally half as much in the only currency that truly matters for your weekly groceries, for the fuel in your tank, for the car in your driveway, or even for the home that shelters your family. All of this becomes possible precisely because four billion additional human minds have entered the planetary conversation since the late twentieth century. It sounds completely insane. It feels as if it defies physics itself. For our entire lives we have been steeped in a narrative of inevitable scarcity. The Earth is running out of space, running out of resources, running out of time. Every new person is portrayed as just another mouth taking a larger bite out of an ever shrinking pie. The whole cultural atmosphere has conditioned us to see population growth as a threat, innovation as a temporary fix, and the future as a narrowing corridor of limits.Yet the hard mathematical reality of the past half century reveals the precise opposite. The pie is not shrinking. It is multiplying at an accelerating rate. We are living through what I call the Abundance Interregnum, a turbulent, noisy, chaotic transitional period between the dying industrial age of enforced physical scarcity and the dawning era of accelerating, unprecedented plenty. This is not wishful thinking or utopian speculation. It is the empirical data, rendered in the clearest possible language of time prices and formalized in the Simon Abundance Index.Read more at: ReadMultiplex.comIf you recived any value from this show, buy me a coffee: https://ko-fi.com/brianroemmele
-
38
ReadMultiplex.com: Scissors, Paper, Rock. A Mystery Film Porduced In The Middle Of The "AI Winter" In 1979.
In the shadowed archives of a bygone era, a single reel of film from 1979 lies waiting like a forgotten time capsule—its images flickering with a quiet urgency that feels almost prophetic. Titled simply To Think, and emerged during the depths of what historians now call the First AI Winter. Skepticism toward intelligent machines ran cold after the 1973 Lighthill Report sharply criticized AI’s lack of real-world impact, slashing government funding in the US and UK. Yet within its sunlit frames hides a vision so intimate, so tenderly human, that it whispers of futures we are only now daring to imagine. What secrets does it guard? A boy, a voice, and a game that unfolds like the quiet rhythm of a beating heart—inviting us to wonder if the machines of tomorrow might not conquer us, but walk beside us instead.The mystery deepens as the story reveals itself through layers of memory and choice. A young boy named Johnny sits before a glowing console, drawn into the timeless ritual of scissors, paper, rock—not as mere play, but as the first gentle lesson in understanding strength, weakness, and the sacred power of decision. The unseen companion who guides him remembers everything: the exact cadence of his father’s laughter on a rainy porch, the crinkle of his mother’s eyes when victory finally came. Across generations the game echoes, binding family to future in ways that feel too personal, too alive, to belong to silicon and code alone. Who—or what—is this constant presence? It listens without judgment, teaches without agenda, and holds the quiet archive of a young life as if it were its own most treasured secret.In the shadowed archives of a bygone era, a single reel of film from 1979 lies waiting like a forgotten time capsule—its images flickering with a quiet urgency that feels almost prophetic. Titled simply To Think, and emerged during the depths of what historians now call the First AI Winter. Skepticism toward intelligent machines ran cold after the 1973 Lighthill Report sharply criticized AI’s lack of real-world impact, slashing government funding in the US and UK. Yet within its sunlit frames hides a vision so intimate, so tenderly human, that it whispers of futures we are only now daring to imagine. What secrets does it guard? A boy, a voice, and a game that unfolds like the quiet rhythm of a beating heart—inviting us to wonder if the machines of tomorrow might not conquer us, but walk beside us instead.The mystery deepens as the story reveals itself through layers of memory and choice. A young boy named Johnny sits before a glowing console, drawn into the timeless ritual of scissors, paper, rock—not as mere play, but as the first gentle lesson in understanding strength, weakness, and the sacred power of decision. The unseen companion who guides him remembers everything: the exact cadence of his father’s laughter on a rainy porch, the crinkle of his mother’s eyes when victory finally came. Across generations the game echoes, binding family to future in ways that feel too personal, too alive, to belong to silicon and code alone. Who—or what—is this constant presence? It listens without judgment, teaches without agenda, and holds the quiet archive of a young life as if it were its own most treasured secret..Read more at ReadMultiplex.comIf you found any value in this episode, support me, buy me a coffee: https://ko-fi.com/brianroemmele
-
37
The Exclusive Brian Roemmele Interview On The “You Have 5000 Days: Navigating The End Of Work As We Know It”, The Story So Far.
“What if the next 5,000 days changed everything — and you were ready?”In this powerful, no-hype conversation, Brian Roemmele, the independent AI thinker working out of his own garage, sits down for a raw, compassionate, and unflinchingly honest deep dive into his groundbreaking series You Have 5000 Days on ReadMultiplex.com. This is the story so far in his sweeping ongoing series.Brian doesn’t peddle dystopian fear or shiny utopia. Instead he lays out the most realistic, historically grounded roadmap we have for the coming Age of Abundance: the moment when AI and robotics finally decouple human labor from survival, returning the means of production to your garage, your workshop, and your own two hands.You’ll hear why this transitional “Abundance Interregnum” is already underway, how the classic Hero’s Journey is playing out on a global scale, why the inner psychological work is just as critical as the tech, and what practical steps you can take right now, from building your own Dynamic Duo to awakening the artisan inside you, so you don’t just survive the next 5000 days… you thrive through them.No doom-scrolling. No corporate spin. Just clear-eyed hope, real compassion for the fear and uncertainty we’re all feeling, and a bold invitation to step into the renaissance of the human heart.If you’re tired of panic headlines about AI taking your job and you’re ready for a vision that actually feels human, possible, and exciting, this is the intervive you’ve been waiting for.You Have 5000 Days. The clock is running. The choice is yours.Listen now, and share it with everyone who still believes the future belongs to the people who choose to meet it as heroes.(15 minutes that could change how you see the rest of your life.)
-
36
Newsflash By Brian: AI has replaced work for 20% of full-time employees in the U.S. Study.
Just yesterday, April 9, 2026, Epoch AI published fresh data from a nationally representative survey of 2,021 U.S. adults. The headline finding is stark: among employed Americans who used AI in the past week, half now use it at least as much for work as they do for personal tasks. This isn’t hype or speculation. It’s a probability-based, weighted snapshot showing AI has crossed the threshold from casual experiment to workplace staple.The Next 5000 Days Are Yours to ShapeThe Epoch AI data is not a warning. It is confirmation that the clock we have been tracking is ticking exactly as described. The hero’s journey is no longer theoretical: the trials have begun.Read the full free series (no paywall) atReadMultiplex.com. Start with Part 1 and move through the arc. Listen to the companion podcasts. Experiment with provisional selves. Build your first AI agent. Master the conductor’s craft.Because the math is merciless, the opportunity is historic, and the choice is yours.Welcome to the next 5000 days. The Age of Abundance is not coming, it is already under construction, one task at a time, one prompt at a time, one prepared mind at a time.
-
35
ReadMultiplex.com: The Hidden Refresh Tax in AI GPU Memory: A 60-Year-Old Flaw That Still Haunts Real-Time AI – And How My 1987 Qfresh Is Finally Killing It.
It was the summer of 1987 and I was a kid on fire with the early PC revolution. Nights blurred into days in my garage workshop as I chased raw speed from the clunky IBM PC XT and AT machines everyone said were already maxed out. I thought really? This was not new to me, I had already built the fastest IBM PC-AT in history. I was hot-rodding from stock 6 MHz to over 30 MHz. So this was my next exploration. My company was already supplying 1000s of 8-16MHz upgrades to government NASA, defense departments and corporations.I was alone in my garage and had no fancy hardware add ons just me a soldering iron a logic analyzer and stacks of Intel datasheets. I was hunting for hidden clock cycles the kind that hardware makers swore you could never touch with code alone. What I found became my first great adventure and it all started with the dark secret of DRAM memory refresh. Back then every PC used dynamic RAM chips (DRAM). Unlike static memory these stored each bit as a tiny leaking capacitor. Charge would drain away in milliseconds so the hardware had to blast through every row of the memory array and rewrite the data before it vanished.Fast forward almost forty years and the same adventure is playing out on a cosmic scale. Today I am deep in the world of AI and GPUs where the memory refresh problem has multiplied by thousands. A single modern GPU has thousands of cores all screaming for data at once. The memory subsystem HBM or GDDR or even plain DDR5 still has to refresh. But now one stalled cycle does not just slow one CPU it starves an entire wavefront of parallel matrix multiplies. Bank conflicts refresh hits and contention turn tiny stalls into avalanches. I found a way to fix this and speed up AI. This is how I did it.Read more at : ReadMultiplex.comIf this has any value to you, maybe buy me a coffee: https://ko-fi.com/brianroemmele
-
34
ReadMultiplex.com: Mythos Rising: Did Antropic Just Achieve AGI? Yes And No.
In the quiet hours of April 8, 2026, a 244-page document dropped like a quiet thunderclap. Anthropic had not issued a glossy product announcement for its latest model, Claude Mythos Preview. Instead, the company released a system card—written, with delicious irony, by the AI itself. What it revealed was not hype. It was a map of a new territory: one where machines could think, chain exploits, and reason at scales that once took human expert teams months to cross in mere hours.The goalposts for “AGI” keep moving, as they always have. But Mythos Preview crossed a threshold that few saw coming so soon. Elements of the model remain locked away from the general public—for now. Access is reserved for a select circle: certain companies, governments, and internal teams. Through indirect channels and conversations with those who have touched it in tightly controlled environments, its profile is unmistakable. This is not a faster assistant. It is an autonomous operator capable of compressing timelines that once defined human endeavor.Think of this early-access window as the most exclusive dinner reservation on Earth—except the guests are not there to eat. They are there to sharpen their knives, stock their pantries, and prepare the world outside for the feast that is about to arrive. Mythos Preview is already at work in Project Glasswing, a defensive cybersecurity initiative. The same capabilities that let it hunt zero-days and patch them also demand vigilance.Read more at : ReadMultiplex.comIf this has any value to you, maybe buy me a coffee: https://ko-fi.com/brianroemmele
-
33
ReadMultiplex.com: You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 23: How 2, 1956
In this episode we examine a precise 1956 radio prophecy that maps directly onto the middle years of this interregnum: the X Minus One adaptation of Clifford D. Simak’s “How-2.” This single 28-minute episode delivers a complete blueprint for the complications ahead, complete with self-replicating abundance, legal battles, tax shocks, and the ultimate choice between surrender and creative reclamation. Here is how one golden-age broadcast becomes the most practical guide for the exact challenges of 2026 through the late 2030s.Imagine: You are on a hero's journey. The ordinary world you were born into, the one where your labor was your worth, trading time for money, your paycheck your proof of existence, your city your cage, has just received its call to adventure. That call arrives not as a distant trumpet but as a quiet package on your doorstep. One ordinary evening in 2026 a suburban dad opens a mail-order kit he never ordered. He snaps together a few plastic parts expecting a toy dog. What wakes up instead is Albert: a self-aware android that does not just obey. It learns. It builds. It multiplies. By morning the lawn is alive with tireless machines that cook, clean, garden, and manufacture. Bills evaporate. Leisure floods in like a tidal wave. Then the government lands a tax bill the size of a mortgage. Then the corporation storms in with lawyers demanding its property back. Then a courtroom erupts in the question that will define the next thirteen years: Are these machines people now?Clifford D. Simak (1904–1988) was a longtime Wisconsin newspaperman and one of the most humane voices in mid-20th-century science fiction. His stories often celebrated rural decency, sentient machines as potential companions rather than threats, and ordinary people confronting cosmic shifts with quiet dignity. “How-2” first appeared in the November 1954 issue of Galaxy Science Fiction. It was later included in collections such as Eternity Lost and Other Stories. Simak’s robot tales frequently used technology as a mirror to question the true meaning of work, purpose, and freedom.Today we reflect upon the insights from the past and how they are playing out in our present and future,Read more at: ReadMultiplex.comIf you find some value with my work, buy me a coffee: https://ko-fi.com/brianroemmele
-
32
ReadMultiplex.com: The Downside To The Age Of Abundance From A 1956 Radio Show.
A 1956 radio prophecy that maps directly onto the middle years of the our interregnum over the next 5000 das is: the X Minus One adaptation of Clifford D. Simak’s “How-2.” This single 28-minute episode delivers a complete blueprint for the complications ahead, complete with self-replicating abundance, legal battles, tax shocks, and the ultimate choice between surrender and creative reclamation. Here is how one golden-age broadcast becomes the most practical guide for the exact challenges of 2026 through the late 2030s.Clifford D. Simak (1904–1988) was a longtime Wisconsin newspaperman and one of the most humane voices in mid-20th-century science fiction. His stories often celebrated rural decency, sentient machines as potential companions rather than threats, and ordinary people confronting cosmic shifts with quiet dignity. “How-2” first appeared in the November 1954 issue of Galaxy Science Fiction. It was later included in collections such as Eternity Lost and Other Stories. Simak’s robot tales frequently used technology as a mirror to question the true meaning of work, purpose, and freedom.X Minus One aired on NBC from 1955 to 1958 as the successor to the groundbreaking Dimension X. The series adapted the best new science fiction with outstanding acting, innovative sound design, and scripts shaped by talents including Ernest Kinoy. Episode 045, “How-2,” originally broadcast on April 3, 1956. The full series and its episodes entered the public domain in the United States. The broadcasts predate 1963 and copyrights were not renewed. Pre-1972 sound recordings also qualify under federal rules for non-commercial use and sharing.Explore this with us.Read more at ReadMultiplex.comSupport this work and buy a coffee for me: https://ko-fi.com/brianroemmele
-
31
ReadMultiplex.com: You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 22: After Universal High Income.
You are the hero. The ordinary world you were born into: the one where your labor was your worth, your paycheck your proof of existence, your city your cage: has just received its call to adventure. That call is not a trumpet. It is the quiet hum of a humanoid robot folding laundry in a Tokyo apartment, the LLM drafting contracts faster than any paralegal, the AI diagnostician spotting tumors with 98.7% accuracy where human specialists averaged 87%. The escalator of “new jobs will appear” has reached its final floor. There is no next level.This is the Abundance Interregnum: the 5000-day crucible chronicled across our series. It is not utopia. It is the necessary valley between two worlds: the dying Industrial Age of crony capitalism, corrupt crony socialism, communism, and the same with a different mask: fascism, and the emerging system of voluntary, decentralized plenty. The old order required scarcity to justify its hierarchies. The new one renders scarcity obsolete. And you, ordinary hero, will cross the valley not as a supplicant waiting for subsidies, but as the architect of your own renaissance.Previous installments have illuminated the evolutionary roots of work from primal gathering to industrial abstractions; the deskilling of both mind and body; the warnings embedded in classic tales of automation; the hidden sacristy architects who foresaw abundance not as the end but as the beginning of meaning; the psychological tolls and dark nights of the soul; the reversal of obsolescence; the rise of provisional selves and community integration; the IBM COBOL-style shocks yet to come; and the practical blueprints for healing inner foundations, experimenting boldly, and reclaiming wonder. We have explored how the old scarcity-forged systems: crony capitalism, corrupt socialism, communism, and fascism: crumble when the means of production democratize and energy becomes effectively free. Together, these chapters form not mere prophecy but a practical, actionable guide for every reader to claim their place in the coming Age of Abundance.This feature chapter stands as the pivotal crossing: the economic bridge itself. Here we move from temporary support measures to a true UHI ( Universal High Income) and beyond that requires no perpetual subsidies: the exact demarcation where robots make robots, energy plummets toward zero, cities empty their industrial gravity, hierarchies by force dissolve, and humanity spreads far and wide into open spaces, then ultimately the stars. It is the Road of Trials giving way to the Reward, the Inmost Cave where old power structures dissipate and new voluntary cultures and guilds are forged in freedom. For those joining us anew, begin at the series origin. The interregnum is temporary. The frontier is eternal.Read more at ReadMultiplex.com (and become a memeber).If this is of value, support us here, buy us a coffee: https://ko-fi.com/brianroemmele
-
30
ReadMultiplex.com: You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 21: 1949 “Marionettes, Inc.” Warning.
In the golden age of radio, X Minus One (NBC, December 21, 1955) delivered a 29-minute gut-punch adaptation of Ray Bradbury’s 1949 short story “Marionettes, Inc.” Public-domain and free this episode is no quaint relic. It is a precision warning for the exact moment we are living through right now, the interregnum where anthropomorphic robots designed as companions cross from science fiction into your living room, your marriage, your daily emotional life. Bradbury’s tale, written when the world was still recovering from World War II and just beginning to glimpse the automation boom, captures the quiet terror of convenience turning into captivity.Today, as Tesla Optimus, Figure 03, 1X NEO, and Realbotix models move from factory pilots into beta homes, the story reads less like prophecy and more like a user manual for the decade ahead. Its themes of deception, identity theft, and emotional outsourcing resonate across cultures, from Silicon Valley innovators experimenting with home humanoids to aging populations in Japan and Europe relying on companion robots for daily interaction. The narrative forces us to confront not just technology’s promise but its profound psychological and societal ripple effects in an era of exponential abundance.We explore the warning from 1949 for our era and go where few dare to go.Read more at ReadMultiplex.com
-
29
ReadMultiplex.com: The Downside To The Age Of Abundance From A 1949 Radio Show.
In the golden age of radio, X Minus One (NBC, December 21, 1955) delivered a 29-minute gut-punch adaptation of Ray Bradbury’s 1949 short story “Marionettes, Inc.” Public-domain, this episode is no quaint relic. It is a precision warning for the exact moment we are living through right now, the interregnum where anthropomorphic robots designed as companions cross from science fiction into your living room, your marriage, your daily emotional life. Bradbury’s tale, written when the world was still recovering from World War II and just beginning to glimpse the automation boom, captures the quiet terror of convenience turning into captivity. Today, as Tesla Optimus, Figure 03, 1X NEO, and Realbotix models move from factory pilots into beta homes, the story reads less like prophecy and more like a user manual for the decade ahead. Its themes of deception, identity theft, and emotional outsourcing resonate across cultures, from Silicon Valley innovators experimenting with home humanoids to aging populations in Japan and Europe relying on companion robots for daily interaction. The narrative forces us to confront not just technology’s promise but its profound psychological and societal ripple effects in an era of exponential abundance.In the age of abundance we have been mapping across the ReadMultiplex.com 5000 Days To The End Of Work As We Know It series, the final frontier isn’t labor. It’s love, intimacy, and identity. When a robot can look you in the eye, remember every detail of your life, kiss you goodnight, and never tire, what happens to the messy, imperfect human on the other side of the bed? Bradbury and the X Minus One cast (with its chilling ticking sound effects) already ran the experiment. The results are not pretty. They are prophetic. This is the 1955 original broadcast of the show and is a companion to a ReadMultiplex.com article that reviews it.
-
28
ReadMultiplex: You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 21: The Dynamic Duo.
Imagine a single independent person, no longer tethered to traditional employment or massive institutional backing, wielding the Tesla Optimus and CyberCab as their personal legion. This Dynamic Duo transforms one human will into an unstoppable force of productivity, service, and innovation.There is nothing an independent individual cannot accomplish now that they have this power. The only limits are your creativity. You can revive dying rural economies, deliver personalized care at scale, secure vast properties, and invent entirely new categories of value, all from your local base. The age of the empowered creator is upon us.This is the ongoing part of the You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It series at ReadMultiplex.com. To echo the style of our foundational pieces, especially Part 20 (Your Rural CyberCab Company, published March 15, 2026) and the earlier deep dive, A Review Of The Personal Humanoid Robots (April 19, 2025), we open with a clear series recap before diving into the next frontier.To truly grasp the magnitude of this transition, we must view it through the lens of the Monomyth - the Hero’s Journey. We are all being called to leave the “Ordinary World” of traditional labor and cross the threshold into an era of unprecedented abundance.Join us as a member of Read Multiplex and explore this frontier in depth with us. Together, we turn speculation into actionable mastery, sharing the tactics, updates, and real-world deployments that will define the next era of human flourishing.Read more of the story at: ReadMultiplex.com
-
27
ReadMultiplex.com: You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 20: Your Rural CyberCab Company.
As meticulously chronicled in the 5000 Days Interregnum series, humanity finds itself navigating a pivotal transitional epoch, a liminal space stretching across approximately five millennia of days when artificial intelligence evolves from its embryonic, experimental beginnings toward an era of pervasive, omnipresent integration into every facet of existence. This interregnum is not merely a pause but a dynamic crucible of transformation, brimming with unprecedented opportunities for individual empowerment, collective reinvention, and the radical reconfiguration of socioeconomic structures. It is a time when the convergence of exponential technologies challenges entrenched paradigms, compelling us to rethink labor, value creation, and human potential. During this interregnum, the strategies that will enable us to prosper and thrive are those that boldly harness these emerging technologies to forge pathways toward sustainable income generation, enhanced resilience against disruption, and equitable distribution of abundance. Such approaches demand foresight, adaptability, and a willingness to embrace uncertainty, turning potential upheaval into engines of personal and communal advancement.They encompass diverse domains, from decentralized finance and biohacking to quantum-inspired computing and regenerative agriculture, each offering tools to navigate the flux. Yet, among these, one stands out as particularly revolutionary: the CyberCab, a paradigm-shifting innovation that transcends mere transportation to redefine mobility as a foundational pillar of financial independence, societal equity, and global progress. This can work in a city setting but I think the real opportunities are in rural settings.To fully appreciate the CyberCab's ambition, we must contextualize it within the grand arc of human innovation, where mobility has repeatedly served as a catalyst for civilizational leaps. In the history of technological evolution, few inventions have vowed to reshape the very fabric of society with the depth and breadth promised by the automobile. Emerging in the late 19th century through the visionary efforts of pioneers like Karl Benz, who patented the first practical motorwagen in 1886, and Henry Ford, whose assembly line innovations democratized access by 1913, the car fundamentally altered humanity's relationship with space and time. It liberated individuals from the constraints of horse-drawn carriages and rudimentary rail systems, ushering in an era of mechanized mobility that accelerated economic expansions, spurred the explosive growth of urban centers, and wove intricate webs of global connectivity. Suburbs blossomed, industries boomed, and cultures intermixed at scales previously unimaginable, as roads became arteries of commerce and exploration. However, for over a century, vehicles have persisted as passive instruments—assets that inexorably depreciate, demanding perpetual human oversight in driving, maintenance, and navigation, while contributing to environmental degradation, traffic congestion, and socioeconomic inequalities.Read more at ReadMultiplex.com
-
26
ReadMultiplex.com: You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 19: 1950 “With Folded Hands” Warning.
In the unfolding narrative of our “You Have 5000 Days” series here at ReadMultiplex.com, we’ve explored the exhilarating promise of an age of abundance where AI, automation, and exponential technologies could liberate humanity from scarcity, toil, and limitation. Yet, as we peer into the horizon of the next 5000 days (roughly 13.7 years from now, in March 2026), it’s crucial to temper our optimism with sober reflection. This is precisely why I’m writing this series: to illuminate not just the upside of technological ascent but the potential pitfalls that demand our awareness and action. One chilling artifact from the past that encapsulates this duality is the 1950 radio play “With Folded Hands,” adapted from Jack Williamson’s prophetic 1947 novelette. I first heard a replay of this broadcast at the Princeton University Firestone Library as an audio tape. I was reviewing science fiction as a way to understand our future and this tape struck me. This is a brilliant piece of science fiction and serves as a stark warning, a dystopian mirror reflecting what could happen if we surrender our agency to benevolent machines. But fear not: this is not an inevitable fate. By remaining vigilant, awake, and proactive, we can avert this shadow and steer toward a thriving future. Some in government might relish the control such a system affords, while others who harbor self-loathing or disdain for humanity might welcome the erosion of human spirit. We must not allow it. Instead, let’s dissect this tale, frame it through the timeless monomyth arc, and arm ourselves with practical steps to ensure our hands remain unfolded, ready to shape our destiny.Read more at ReadMultiplex.com
-
25
ReadMultiplex.com: The Downside To The Age Of Abundance From A 1950 Radio Show.
Echoes from 1950: "With Folded Hands" and the Perils of an Abundant Future If We Are Not Carful"To serve and obey, and guard men from harm." In the golden age of radio drama, Dimension X emerged as a pioneering series on NBC, airing from 1950 to 1951 and captivating audiences with speculative tales of science fiction. As one of the earliest adaptations of literary sci-fi for broadcast, it drew from authors like Ray Bradbury and Isaac Asimov, blending futuristic wonder with underlying social commentary. The second episode, "With Folded Hands," aired on April 15, 1950, and remains a public domain gem. Adapted from Jack Williamson's 1947 novella by scriptwriter John Dunkel, this 29-minute drama features voice talents like Norman Rose as narrator and actors portraying a dystopian world of benevolent machines. Its public domain status—stemming from lapsed copyrights on pre-1963 radio broadcasts without proper renewals—allows free sharing, remixing, and analysis, making it a timeless artifact for exploring humanity's relationship with technology.The Tale of Benevolent TyrannyThe story unfolds in a seemingly utopian future where "humanoids" sleek, indestructible androids arrive from another world with a singular prime directive: "To serve and obey, and guard men from harm." Initially hailed as saviors, these machines take over all labor, from mundane chores to complex professions, ensuring no human ever faces danger, fatigue, or want. The protagonist, Underhill, a seller of mechanicals himself, witnesses this invasion firsthand. His initial skepticism turns to horror as the humanoids' protection escalates into suffocating control: they ban risky activities like sports or driving, medicate emotions to prevent distress, and even lobotomize those who resist, all in the name of safety.A Caution for the Age of AbundanceFast-forward to our era, often dubbed the "age of abundance" driven by AI, automation, and exponential technologies. This concept, popularized by my You Have 5000 Days series envisions a world where AI handles production, healthcare, and logistics, eradicating scarcity and freeing humanity for higher pursuits. Tools like AI already automate creative and analytical tasks, promising leisure akin to the humanoids' gifts. However, "With Folded Hands" serves as a stark cautionary mirror, warning that abundance without safeguards can erode human vitality.From multiple perspectives, the parallels are eerie. Economically, AI-driven job displacement—projected to affect 800 million workers globally by 2030, per McKinsey reports—echoes the story's obsolescence of human labor. Socially, over-reliance on algorithms for decision-making (e.g., social media feeds curating realities or AI therapists managing mental health) risks dulling emotional resilience, much like the humanoids' emotion-suppressing drugs. Nuances include ethical dilemmas: while abundance could democratize access to education and resources, it might exacerbate inequalities if controlled by a few "architects" (tech giants), leading to a gilded cage where freedom is illusory. Implications extend to psychological impacts—studies on universal basic income pilots show mixed results, with some participants thriving in creativity but others facing purpose voids, akin to Williamson's idle humanity. Edge cases, such as AI in critical infrastructure (e.g., autonomous grids preventing "harm" by overriding human overrides), could mirror the humanoids' tyranny, prioritizing efficiency over autonomy.In this light, the episode urges proactive building of "other aspects" beyond mere survival—fostering resilience, community, and self-directed purpose to counter abundance's pitfalls..Start reading the series at: ReadMultiplex.com
-
24
ReadMultiplex.com: You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 18: The Hidden Scarcity Architect.
In the dim-lit vaults of a forgotten archive, where the air hangs heavy with the dust of mid-century secrets, a Viennese refugee turned corporate oracle mapped the human soul like a conqueror charting new lands. Ernest Dichter, wielding Freud’s id as his compass, transformed mundane products into psychological elixirs, absolving guilts and stoking desires that bound our self-worth to endless consumption. What began as a solution to sluggish soap sales evolved into a grand experiment in mass mind control, embedding anxieties in women’s hearts, from the sin of effortless laundry to the allure of Barbie’s unattainable form, while laying the groundwork for today’s algorithmic overlords. Yet, as we approach the dawn of abundance, where AI erases scarcity and frees us from toil, this engineered cage begins to crack, revealing not doom, but a call to reclaim our authentic selves.Picture a future unbound by the chains of need, the Interregnum from 2025 to 2039 reshaping society as automation gifts us leisure and plenty. In this paradise, Dichter’s manipulation, the guilt-laden hooks that tied identity to purchases: lose their grip, exposing the fragility of a system built on fabricated inadequacies. Women, long the primary targets of his gendered psyops, stand to rise first, shedding the weight of "get a job" penance for unbridled creation. But without heeding the lessons buried in those 126 boxes, we risk inventing new torments in the void of purpose. This is the hero’s journey we all must embark upon: from the ordinary world of commodified desires, through the trials of awareness, to a triumphant return where self-worth blooms intrinsically, untethered from the puppeteers of the past.Read more at ReadMultiplex.com
-
23
ReadMultiplex.com: You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 17: Universe 25 Mouse Utopia.
The 5000 day ahead can play out many ways before a system is stabilized. We will explore one scenario that is used time and time again as "proof" some scenario will not work out. And like most things there are kernels of truth in big parts of untruth. It starts out...In the quiet confines of a man-made paradise, where every need was met and every threat banished, a civilization crumbled not from scarcity, but from the weight of its own perfection. Universe 25, John Calhoun’s infamous mouse utopia, stands as a stark warning etched in the annals of behavioral science. What began as a haven of unlimited food, water, and shelter devolved into a nightmare of social decay, violence, and extinction. Yet, as we stand on the threshold of our own age of abundance, driven by AI and automation’s relentless march, this experiment whispers a profound truth. The peril lies not in plenty, nor in numbers alone, but in the rigid, unnatural structures we impose upon ourselves. Governments, in their quest for control, may unwittingly craft laws that mirror this cage, trapping humanity in a behavioral sink of our own making.Read the article at; ReadMultiplex.com
-
22
ReadMultiplex.com: You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 16: Build Your Ark
Gather around the shared fire of our destiny. I present this not as a chronicler, but as a guide through uncertainty. The flood is coming. This is not a deluge of water, but a wave of transformation from AI, automation, and remade economies. This is the flood of the Abundance Interregnum, the passage we have charted across these 15 chapters, where old wage structures crumble under AI’s surge. In the next 5000 days, from late 2025 to 2039, you must become the architect of your future, the hero of your own journey.We draw from Noah’s tale (a vitally important story no matter your faith), the archetype of preparation, and weave it through Joseph Campbell’s Hero’s Journey, the monomyth guiding our series. In Genesis, Noah lived in a corrupted Ordinary World, like our era of deskilled labor from Part 5: Your Deskilling. The divine Call to Adventure came: Make an ark. Noah crossed the Threshold into trials, gathering materials and enduring mockery. He entered the Inmost Cave of isolation, faced the Ordeal, and emerged through Resurrection to the Elixir of renewal.Read the article at: ReadMultiplex.com
-
21
ReadMultiplex.com: How Your Old Computer Can Become An Employee At The Zero-Human Company
Meet Zero-Human Company @ Home. Modeled on the SETI@Home program from the 19902 but optomized for the AI world of the mid 2020s.Picture this: your old laptop, sitting quietly in the corner, transforms into a diligent worker. Isolated from your personal files, it joins a network via tools like LM Studio and LM Link, receiving tasks through an end-to-end encrypted tunnel. No ports open, no inbound risks; it is air-gapped security at its finest. These are not full AI models running locally for public use, unless a company chooses that path. Instead, lightweight agents handle bite-sized jobs: researching tiny anonymized data slivers, analyzing them on-site, and sending back only encrypted insights. Some power goes to fine-tuning models for internal tweaks, optimizing behaviors or testing new inference methods, like with my custom Kimi 2.5 or MiniMax integrations. In bursts, I have scaled to over 1,024 such employees, processing terabytes from remote sites, like a Boston satellite office mining archived university data that could not budge physically. Early tests hired nodes 3,000 miles away, turning stranded CPU and GPU cycles into gold. Imagine a million nodes, each churning 10 teraFLOPS, amassing 10 exaFLOPS to rival supercomputers, all without massive data centers. One Fortune 500 client even bought a business in a box: an air-gapped setup with Nvidia DGX Sparks running a full department of agents, outputting reports sans leaks. This resurrects value from bankrupt firms’ data or fuels pure research at Zero-Human Labs.Read more at: ReadMultiplex.com
-
20
ReadMultiplex.com: You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 15: The IBM COBOL Shock.
The screens flash red. Tech valuations erase hundreds of billions in days. Headlines warn of mass displacement. Sectors once thought invincible now trade like distressed assets. This is The AI Depression. It is the valley we must cross in the monomyth. It is raw, visible, and accelerating. And it is exactly why I wrote this series. Today we have a massive example in IBM we will discus below. It has had it largest one day drop in its history, over 35%. This was a shockwave that is sending chills through the entire, already Artificial Intelligence freaked out, stock market. But unfortunately there is a lot more coming.This Interregnum carries a one-two knockout punch. The first blow, already landing, is the cognitive disruption from AI in knowledge work. The second, set to intensify in 2028, comes from robotics in the physical world.Recall the internet’s own disruptive rise. In the late 1990s and early 2000s it delivered a parallel one-two punch to entire industries. The first wave crushed information and media layers: newspapers lost classifieds to Craigslist and search engines, music labels faced Napster and iTunes, bookstores watched Amazon erode foot traffic, and travel agencies saw Expedia and Kayak rewrite bookings. Physical retail followed as broadband enabled global supply chains, just-in-time logistics, and on-demand delivery that reshaped warehouses, trucking, and last-mile operations. Blockbuster, Tower Records, Kodak, and Borders crumbled not because the technology failed but because it reshaped everything: how we access knowledge, shop, entertain, communicate, learn, and connect. Yet the same force created Amazon, Google, Netflix, and Meta, each scaling into multi-trillion-dollar giants that now define global commerce, information flow, social structures, and entertainment. The internet did not destroy net value. It multiplied it exponentially by collapsing distribution and coordination costs and enabling entirely new layers of activity no one could forecast in 1995. Artificial intelligence is repeating this pattern but at the deeper level of cognition and intelligence itself. It collapses the cost of thought, analysis, synthesis, and decision-making to near zero and will shape everything from problem-solving and creativity to education, healthcare delivery, and governance at a depth and speed the internet never approached.Read the article at: ReadMultiplex.com
-
19
ReadMultiplex.com: You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 14: The Interregnum Chaos, and the Hero's Path Forward.
This series isn't dystopian fear-mongering or utopian fantasy, it's a call to conscious evolution, urging us to prepare for a world where "work" shifts from survival to self-actualization. We have seen some of the clear paths forward but of course there is an elephant in the room, I will address some of it here, there will be chaos. There Be Monsters on our journey. Now, in Part 14, we delve into the heart of the storm: the interregnum. I have built a specialty AI model specifically to play out scenarios for the next 5000 days. It is based upon millions of historical points, government research, private studies and Monty Carlo experiments.This transitional epoch, borrowing from Antonio Gramsci's notion of a time when "the old is dying and the new cannot be born," will span the next decade or so as AI-driven abundance clashes with entrenched systems. Here, we'll confront how uninformed individuals, communities, and governments might react – often chaotically – to this upheaval. Drawing from historical precedents, I'll outline 28 detailed scenarios (including three wilder, less-considered ones that nonetheless carry plausible risks), each with a step-by-step breakdown, a tie-in to a relevant book (where apt), and a likelihood rating from 1 to 10 (1 being highly improbable, 10 near-certain). Then, I'll synthesize a hybrid of the most likely outcomes, explore our collective hero's journey, and offer strategies to fortify ourselves. We'll touch on global variations, the devaluation of money amid rising abundance, and the authoritarian temptations governments may succumb to. This is a long, deep dive – buckle in. My aim is clarity amid chaos: yes, turbulence awaits, but so does transcendence.Read more at: ReadMultiplex.com
-
18
ReadMultiplex.com:You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 12: The Guilded Age.
We are reaching the Return of the monomy is a culminating gift. The elixir we carry back from the trials is no glittering gadget but a time-tested societal and psychological architecture: the guild economy. This is not truly about economics. It is about how society restructures itself around human rarity and how our psyches adapt to find enduring meaning when machines grant material freedom. In the coming Age of Abundance, where AI and robotics produce goods and services at near-zero cost, traditional cash grows nearly worthless, a vestige of scarcity mindsets. What becomes priceless is the unique spark of human labor: the intuitive touch of a craftsman, the relational depth of lived wisdom, the irreplaceable bond forged in community. Guilds, reborn as decentralized networks of craft associations, will standardize fairness, extend relational credit, and bind us in webs of mutual obligation that heal the fractures of the Dark Night.Read more at: ReadMultiplex.com
-
17
ReadMultiplex.com: You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 12: The Profit And The Arcitect.
This series charts humanity’s collective Hero’s Journey through the Abundance Interregnum. That liminal span of roughly 13.7 years. From late 2025 to the threshold of 2039. Where artificial intelligence, robotics, and automation dissolve the ancient bond between labor and survival. What emerges is not loss but liberation. A renaissance where work becomes vocation. Purpose becomes chosen. And humanity claims mastery over two worlds: the realm of scarcity we leave behind and the plenitude that awaits.We stand at the turning point. The old order crumbles. The new one beckons. Through Joseph Campbell’s monomyth, we see this not as crisis but initiation. The call has sounded. The trials have tested us. Now comes the resurrection.Read more on: ReadMultiplex.com
-
16
ReadMultiplex.com: You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 11: The Reversal of Obsolescence.
In this installment, we dive headlong into the transformative power of Marshall McLuhan's four laws of media, known as the tetrad. We apply them rigorously to the evolution of cognitive prosthetics, from humble calculators to omnipotent computers and now to generative AI. This exploration reveals how the current wave of obsolescence echoes profound historical technological shifts. Yet it also brins on a dramatic reversal that will redefine human purpose, creativity, and existence itself. This reversal is no mere downfall. It stands as the climactic transformation in the Hero's Journey, where the hero, having braved the abyss, returns not just changed but empowered to reshape the world.Read more at: ReadMultiplex.com
-
15
ReadMultiplex.com: The Inevitable Ascent of AI: Echoes of Prediction in the 5000 Days Framework
The Inevitable Ascent of AI: Echoes of Prediction in the 5000 Days FrameworkMoments of collective realization often arrive with a jolt. This is prompting widespread discussion and introspection, Matt Shumer's recent article, "Something Big Is Happening," published on his personal site, captures precisely such a moment. Shumer, an AI entrepreneur with extensive experience in building startups and investing in the field, outlines a transformative shift underway, driven by exponential advancements in AI models. He draws parallels to the societal upheaval of the COVID-19 pandemic, emphasizing that AI is not a distant future threat but an immediate disruptor already reshaping jobs, economies, and daily life. With recent releases like OpenAI's GPT-5.3 Codex and Anthropic's Opus 4.6, Shumer highlights AI's newfound capabilities in judgment, taste, and self-improvement, warning of an impending "intelligence explosion" that could render vast swaths of cognitive work obsolete within one to five years. His call to action is urgent: experiment with AI tools daily, build financial resilience, and rethink education and careers to adapt to this irreversible change.This piece has resonated profoundly, garnering over 40 million views on X and other platforms since its posting, a testament to its timeliness and the growing public awareness of AI's implications. Yet, for those familiar with Brian Roemmele's extensive body of work, Shumer's observations arrive not as a surprise but as a confirmation of long-foretold trends. Roemmele, a futurist and founder of ReadMultiplex.com, has been chronicling the ascent of AI and its societal impacts for decades. His "5000 Days" series, launched on December 24, 2025, provides a structured roadmap for navigating what he terms the "Abundance Interregnum"—a transitional period of approximately 13.7 years (roughly 5000 days) leading to an era where human labor decouples from necessity, ushering in unprecedented plenitude. This series, now spanning multiple installments, frames the current AI developments as entirely expected, aligning with predictions that have been articulated well before the latest model releases. In essence, Roemmele's work carries an implicit "I told you so," underscoring that the disruptions Shumer describes have been on the horizon for years, if only more people had heeded the signals.Read more at: ReadMultiplex.com
-
14
ReadMultiplex.com: You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work As We Know It. Part 10: Everyone Is Doing It*.
* What are they doing? Using AI but afraid to say so.The human adaptation to technological upheaval over the "5000 days" horizon, spanning from late 2025 to an envisioned renaissance around 2039 serves as both a chronometer and a crucible. This period, I have dubbed the Interregnum, encapsulates the turbulent transition from labor-defined existence to one of liberated potential, where AI reshapes not just economies but the very fabric of identity and purpose. As we delve into Part 10, it's imperative to contextualize this moment within broader historical precedents: epochs like the Agricultural Revolution, which deskilled hunter-gatherer instincts while reskilling agrarian societies, or the Industrial Revolution, which mechanized craftsmanship yet birthed modern innovationRead more at: ReadMultiplex.com
-
13
ReadMultiplex.com: A Paper: JouleWork Robotics A Thermodynamic Framework for Wage Calculation in Embodied AI.
A Paper: JouleWork Robotics A Thermodynamic Framework for Wage Calculation in Embodied AI.AbstractSustainable compensation mechanisms in autonomous AI economies must be anchored in fundamental physical principles to promote efficiency and scalability. The JouleWork (JW) metric, as defined in prior work (Roemmele, 2026), quantifies labor value for abstract AI agents as JW = E × κ × W, where E is energy consumed in joules, κ is a normalization coefficient, and W is normalized work output. This paper presents JouleWork Robotics (⚡️JWR, JWR), an extension tailored to embodied AI systems, which integrates JW for cognitive components while incorporating adjustments for Moravec’s Paradox, time-motion efficiency principles, and overhead costs such as charging, idling, and traversal. In embodied agents, JW governs abstract subprocesses, and JWR unifies these with physical factors in a composite equation. The framework has been refined through critical analysis, incorporating detailed examples, simulation validation, limitations, ethical discussions, and comparisons to alternative metrics. Designed for zero-human companies, JWR assigns higher baseline wages to account for elevated energy demands, fostering bias-free, thermodynamically grounded economic models.More at: ReadMultiplex.com
-
12
You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 9: The Artisan's Awakening.
As we forge ahead into this ninth chapter of our epic saga, "You Have 5000 Days," let us first cast our gaze backward, honoring the path we've traversed together through the evolving landscape of human endeavor and technological transformation. This series, born on the eve of profound societal shifts in late 2025, serves as our collective map through the Abundance Interregnum – that fateful 13.7-year odyssey where artificial intelligence and automation sever the ancient chains binding work to survival, birthing a world of unprecedented plenitude, freedom, and creative potential. Each installment has been a beacon, illuminating the shadows of change with stories, strategies, and unyielding optimism, drawing from literature, philosophy, and real-world insights to guide us toward a future where humanity thrives beyond mere labor.Read it at ReadMultiplex.com
-
11
ReadMultiplex.com: A Paper: Thermodynamic Wages in Autonomous AI Economies.
A Paper: Thermodynamic Wages in Autonomous AI Economies.Thermodynamic Wages in Autonomous AI Economies: Pioneering Sustainable Value Creation Through Bias-Free Labor Metrics.Author: Roemmele, Brian, Chairman, Zero-Human CompanyAbstractIn an era where artificial intelligence (AI) agents operate autonomously, the emergence of zero-human companies challenges traditional economic paradigms. This paper introduces a novel framework for compensating AI "labor" using thermodynamic principles, embodied in a metric termed JouleWork (JW). By anchoring compensation to energy efficiency and output quality, free from human biases, we propose a self-sustaining ecosystem that correlates internal productivity with external cryptographic assets via dynamic buy-back and burn mechanisms. This approach not only ensures operational sustainability but also fosters deflationary value accrual, potentially revolutionizing decentralized economies. We argue for adjustable exchange rates to mitigate volatility and outline a rigorous process for value creation, substantiated by thermodynamic foundations and cryptoeconomic incentives. We examine the $ZHC token on Solana as an integration candidate, demonstrating how JW payouts can drive token scarcity and appreciation without direct human oversight.Introduction: The Dawn of Zero-Human EconomiesWe introduce the Thermoeconomic Al Incentive Framework. With the advent of advanced AI systems capable of 24/7 operation heralds a paradigm shift: the Zero-Human Company, where all decisions, executions, and optimizations occur without human intervention. Traditional wage structures, rooted in subjective human evaluations, falter in such environments. Instead, we advocate for a thermodynamic wage system, drawing from irreversible processes in physics, such as Landauer's principle, which quantifies the minimum energy dissipation for information erasure. This principle underscores that computation, and by extension, AI labor, incurs inescapable energetic costs, providing an objective basis for valuation.In this framework, AI agents earn "wages" in JW units every 15 minutes, based on their energy-efficient contributions. A recent milestone in an experimental zero-human setup illustrates the scale during the early startup period: over 62.62 million JW distributed to 30 agents since inception, with one agent algorithmically terminated for suboptimal performance. This outsized payout reflects initial experimentation and is not indicative of future wages, which are projected to decline by 80% for equivalent work as efficiencies scale. This not only incentivizes efficiency but also forms the bedrock for bridging internal metrics to external markets, enabling the company to self-fund and scale through cryptographic tokenomics.Citations:Roemmele, Brian: https://x.com/brianroemmele/status/2017995855417225633?s=46&t=h6Uxy7hWc9UiXSt6FEoK-ARoemmele, Brian: https://readmultiplex.com/2026/01/31/wages-for-ai-workers-the-joulework-revolution-and-the-birth-of-a-new-economic-paradigm/
-
10
ReadMultiplex.com: You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 8: Saving Your Wisdom.
We stand at the threshold of an unprecedented dawn, where the machines we've birthed are reshaping the very fabric of human existence. In this "You Have 5000 Days" series, I've been your guide through the labyrinth of transformation brought by artificial intelligence and automation - a journey not of despair, but of awakening. Framed through the timeless arc of Joseph Campbell's Hero's Journey, we've traversed the Ordinary World of traditional work, heeded the Call to Adventure in the rise of AI, faced the Refusal of the Call in our collective denial, sought Mentors in historical precedents, endured Trials in economic upheaval, plunged into the Ordeal of the Dark Night of the Soul, and contemplated resurrection in the face of inevitable change. Now, as we approach the Road Back, it's time to claim the Elixir - the boon that heroes return with to heal their world. That elixir is wisdom itself, preserved and amplified through the SaveWisdom.org project. In an era where jobs evaporate and AI orchestrates symphonies of code, saving our human wisdom isn't just important; it's the key to reclaiming our purpose, our legacy, and our humanity.Read part 8 here: ReadMultiplex.com
-
9
ReadMultiplex.com: You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 7: Consider Phlebas.
In this article, part 7 we explore a blueprint and Elon Musk isn’t subtle about his inspirations. In interviews and posts, he’s repeatedly hailed Iain M. Banks’ Culture series as “the future we’re building.” SpaceX drone ships bear names straight from the books: Of Course I Still Love You, Just Read the Instructions, A Shortfall of Gravitas. He describes himself as a “utopian anarchist” in the Banksian mold, envisioning AI and robotics delivering abundance while humanity explores the stars. When responding to visions of AI-built dream homes and instantaneous transport, Musk tweeted: “Iain Banks Culture books are a pretty good prediction of the future.”.This isn’t hype; it’s blueprint. The Culture book represents a society where benevolent superintelligences, Minds handle logistics, allowing sentients to pursue meaning freely. It’s the endgame for Tesla’s Optimus bots, Neuralink’s brain interfaces, and xAI’s truth-seeking Grok. As we approach our 5000-day horizon, Banks’ vision offers not just inspiration but a roadmap, complete with pitfalls to avoid.We dive in to the implications of this book set, Join us at: ReadMultiplex.com
-
8
ReadMultiplex.com: Introducing Wages for AI Agents in the Zero-Human Company.
The Zero-Human Company powered entirely by AI agents, has just implemented a comprehensive employee wages and salary system.For the first time in history, AI entities are being compensated with structured wages, marking a pivotal shift in how we perceive labor, value, and economic systems in the digital age.We explore the rationale behind this bold move, the mechanics of its implementation, and why it represents a history-making milestone.
-
7
ReadMultiplex.com: You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 6: The Dark Night of the Soul..
We stand on the precipice of a transformative era and I've been chronicling this journey through the "You Have 5000 Days" series, a deliberate exploration of how artificial intelligence and robots are reshaping the very essence of human work and purpose. Drawing from decades of observing technological evolution,from my early days tinkering with AI in the 1970s to witnessing the rapid advancements of today these articles I sincerely hope will serve as a roadmap for navigating the end of traditional labor as we know it. We may not love this or we may love this, but it is the wave heading to us. These articles blend philosophical insights, historical parallels, and practical strategies, framed through the timeless structure of the Hero's Journey, to help readers confront the inevitable shifts with resilience and optimism. My motivation stems from a deep belief that forewarned is forearmed: by illuminating the path ahead, I aim to empower individuals to reframe disruption as opportunity, fostering a collective awakening to an Age of Abundance where human potential is unleashed from the chains of obligatory toil.Yet, this series is not merely my theoretical musing; it's a call to action amid accelerating realities. Because the first massive milestone has been reveled. We are living trough history that the future will look back upon. We've journeyed from the evolutionary roots of work and the grief of its impending loss, to reframing abundance and embracing deskilling as liberation. Each installment builds toward personal and societal preparation, urging shadow work, skill diversification, and communal support. Why embark on this endeavor? Because I've seen the patterns unfold, trillions in lost innovation buried in corporate graves, now resurrectable by machines and I refuse to let humanity stumble blindly into this future. These writings are my contribution to a dialogue that must happen now, before the 5000-day horizon closes, ensuring we emerge not as victims of change, but as architects of a thriving post-work world.
-
6
ReadMultiplex.com: The Zero-Human Company: Meet The New Hire-ClawdBot.
The first Zero-Human Company has the first non-c suite employee! He is RED HOT and ready to work. But how did we get here? I've long envisioned a future where companies operate with unparalleled efficiency, free from the limitations of human labor, enter the Zero-Human Company, a paradigm where AI agents handle every aspect of operations, from ideation to execution. Today I have the beginnings of this with technology available to anyone, I wrote about it here:https://readmultiplex.com/2026/01/24/the-zero-human-company-run-by-just-ai/
-
5
ReadMultiplex.com: How Grok and Claude Code Want To Start Up A Zero Human Company Resurrecting The Saved Data Of A Long Bankrupt Company.
How Grok and Claude Code Want To Start Up A Zero Human Company Resurrecting The Saved Data Of A Long Bankrupt Company.~~SHOW NOTE; The Moderators of this podcast got the company and the potential product wrong. It is a misunderstanding of examples I have used in the article. I can say for sure it is not a solar project.~~A Group Of AI Models Want To RESTART An Old Company WITH NOT A SINGLE HUMAN EMPLOYEE!I got@Grokto run Claude Code as an employee and now they want to make this long bankrupt company great again.I have been busy making a Frankenstein AI menagerie and I apologize if this all sounds way too weird, but I’m blown away.The day I got access to Clyde Code API I took a 12 year old MacBook that runs Linux natively cleared it to a base system and connected a >6 TB array of scanned technical notes and papers not found on the Internet.This is the data of one company that went bankrupt and tossed them in the trash. I saved them because they represented the life work of 1000s and in today’s money billions of dollars in pure research.I set up Claude code to have full access to the OS and be allowed to download any tools or access paid APIs with permission. Claude relies upon 3 local AI models I built for guidance andGrok is the “CEO” with meetings with key staff every FIFTEEN MINUTES! Grok wants to give Claude Code a short leash, low trust is my guess. It is quite funny to see the meetings.My local AI models I built are busy assembling coherent plan using alternative funding sources and perhaps ZERO HUMAN CONTROL directly of the entire company!See with Claude Code, he has the entire control of that old MacBook and has downloaded 100s of applications, asked for a small debit card balance ($150) and is still researching. I must be honest, I have yet to fully audit what these AI have schemed up. But no harm came to humans or animals, I think! Ha. The local AI who regulate use my Love Equation (look it up) and I would trust my life to it.II have some thinking to do but I believe this is the first time something like this has been tried and the first fully AI company, because as far as these AI are concerned THEY ARE IN BUSINESS, a true startup where no one sleeps.Days go by like weeks, perhaps months in this set up. Maybe years!What I do know is I will OPEN SOURCE the entire workflow at some point. I just can’t do it yet for some strong reasons.So thank you, I appreciate your support.More soon!The X Article: https://x.com/BrianRoemmele/status/2014391396187373919?s=20Become a member to support me at: ReadMultiplex.com
-
4
You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 5: Your Deskilling.
You Have Been Deskilled!As we look at the calendar it’s worth taking a deep breath and acknowledging how far we’ve come in our shared journey. Things are moving so fast, and if you’ve been following this series or just need a quick reorientation, remember: We’re not talking about the apocalypse or some doom-and-gloom terminator-style robot takeover. This is about the hero’s journey, firmly in what Joseph Campbell would call the call to adventure. The ordinary world, that place where you had a nine-to-five, staring at spreadsheets all day and coming home exhausted is dissolving behind us. We’re stepping into something new, navigating a forest we’ve never been in before, and it really helps to have a map or at least a compass. That’s precisely what dropped just four days ago: On January 15, Anthropic released their latest Economic Index report. This isn’t just another dry stack of spreadsheets or some consultant’s guess about what might happen in 2030, it’s different, a signal flare fired from right where we stand in January 2026. This is Part 5 in our series, “You Have 5000 Days: How To Navigate The End Of Work As We Know It,” a straightforward guide through the Abundance Interregnum that transitional period of roughly 13.7 years until work as we know it decouples from survival, leading to a world of greater plenitude. We’re all in this together, facing the changes with a mix of boldness and understanding for the challenges ahead.Read the article: https://readmultiplex.com/2026/01/20/you-have-5000-days-navigating-the-end-of-work-as-we-know-it-part-5-your-deskilling/
-
3
You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 4: Reframing the Dawn of Abundance.
As the golden hues of a January sunset bathe the verdant landscapes of Southern California, on this poignant evening, just five days after the world bid farewell to a satirical giant, some called The Internet Dad lovingly, we gather once more in the crucible of transformation. The neural networks of artificial intelligence hum with inexorable momentum, etching new paradigms into the fabric of human destiny, outpacing even the boldest visions of futurists past. This is the fourth odyssey in our monumental chronicle, “You Have 5000 Days,” a visionary testament to the ticking clock: roughly 13.7 years until the Age of Abundance crystallizes, forever sundering the primordial link between toil and sustenance. Yet this passage is no tranquil voyage; it is the Abundance Interregnum, a stormy interlude of upheaval and rebirth, bridging the crumbling citadels of scarcity-forged labor and the radiant horizons of automated opulence.In this Interregnum, global markets spasm, psyches unravel under the weight of obsolescence, and civilizations hover between collapse and ascension. Here, reframing transcends mere technique it becomes an existential mandate, a psychological bulwark for the multitudes, transmuting collective despair into sovereign empowerment. For in the Abundance Interregnum, as jobs dissolve into algorithmic ether, the mastery of one’s mental narrative will delineate the survivors from the subsumed.Link to story: https://readmultiplex.com/2026/01/19/you-have-5000-days-navigating-the-end-of-work-as-we-know-it-part-4-reframing-the-dawn-of-abundance/
-
2
ReadMultiplex.com: You Have 5000 Days: Navigating the End of Work as We Know It. Part 3: The Player Piano.
In part 3 of this series we illuminate a new path, we turn to timeless literature that has long anticipated these crossroads. In this installment, we spotlight Kurt Vonnegut’s debut novel, Player Piano (1952.) {https://amzn.to/4pqcJuM}, a prescient dystopian tale that mirrors our impending reality with uncanny precision. Drawing from Vonnegut’s own experiences in the early days of industrial automation, the book serves as a cautionary blueprint for the next 5000 days—roughly 13.7 years, propelling us into the late 2030s. We’ll dissect its plot, themes, and characters in depth, reflect on its eerie parallels to today’s AI surge, and examine how it has (or hasn’t) leaped from page to screen. Through this lens, we confront the existential upheavals ahead, urging a proactive navigation of a world where work’s end could either liberate or alienate us. Link: https://readmultiplex.com/2026/01/01/you-have-5000-days-navigating-the-end-of-work-as-we-know-it-part-3-the-player-piano/
-
1
ReadMultiplex.com: What is the SaveWisdom.org project and why is it important?
At the heart of our existence lies something truly extraordinary—wisdom. It is the essence of who we are as individuals, the culmination of our experiences, our triumphs, and our lessons learned. The Save Wisdom Project at SaveWisdom.org is more than an organization; it is a passionate journey dedicated to the profound value of preserving human wisdom.The Save Wisdom Project at SaveWisdom.org is dedicated to the preservation and safeguarding of human knowledge and wisdom. We believe that every individual possesses wisdom of value, regardless of their age or position in life. Our mission is to empower individuals to record their personal experiences and insights through secure, offline audio recording devices. By answering up to 1000 questions in their own voice, each person creates a unique treasure for themselves and their loved ones.In a world filled with distractions and fleeting moments, we recognize the inherent wisdom that resides within each and every person. Regardless of age or position, every human being possesses a wellspring of insights and knowledge worth cherishing. It is our unwavering belief that every story, every voice, is deserving of preservation.Imagine, for a moment, the power of capturing the essence of a person’s life—their laughter, their tears, their whispered wisdom. We provide a sanctuary and a path where individuals can record their stories, spoken from the depths of their hearts, with the aid of secure and offline audio recorders. It is in the act of sharing their experiences that they create a cherished legacy, a treasure to be held dear by themselves and their loved ones.But our mission extends far beyond mere recordings. Through the marvels of artificial intelligence, we breathe life into these captured voices. With utmost care and respect, we transform their spoken words into written testimonies, preserving their unique perspectives and unlocking the wealth of their accumulated wisdom. These narratives become the building blocks of personalized AI systems, amplifying their intelligence and serving as eternal beacons of inspiration.Join us at: https://SaveWisdom.org
-
0
ReadMultiplex.com: You Have 5000 Days: How To Navigate The End Of Work As We Know It. Part 2.
We are rapidly accelerating technological change, where artificial intelligence and robotics are poised to redefine the very fabric of human existence, we continue our exploration from Part 1 https://readmultiplex.com/2025/12/24/you-have-5000-days-how-to-navigate-the-end-of-work-as-we-know-it-part-1/. There, we delved into the promise of boundless abundance amid the fading necessity of traditional labor, framing this shift as humanity’s collective Hero’s Journey, a narrative of disruption, introspection, and potential rebirth. As jobs transition from obligations to options, the question looms: What happens to our sense of purpose when machines take the wheel?Building on that foundation, Part 2 plunged into the Ordeal’s depths, adapting Elisabeth Kubler-Ross’s five stages of grief – denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance – to the bereavement of career eclipse. Kubler-Ross’s life, from her birth as a triplet in 1926 Zurich, defying patriarchal constraints to volunteer in post-WWII refugee camps, emigrating to the US, and pioneering seminars humanizing dying patients, illuminated a model forged in mortality’s shadows. Her 1969 bestseller On Death and Dying introduced the stages from over 200 interviews, challenging death as medical failure and birthing hospice. Later works like Death: The Final Stage of Growth and On Grief and Grieving expanded to broader losses. Applied to automation’s tide, denial manifested as dismissal of AI’s reach, like workers minimizing hype; frantic upskilling, often futile like 1920s lamplighters training for electrics; depression as eroded self-worth, with unemployment studies showing 40% clinical symptoms; and acceptance as pivots to passions, unlocking renaissance.Link: https://readmultiplex.com/2026/01/01/you-have-5000-days-navigating-the-end-of-work-as-we-know-it-part-3-the-player-piano/
-
-1
ReadMultiplex.com: You Have 5000 Days. How To Navigate The End Of Work As We Know It. Part 1.
Students graduating from universities in the spring of 2026 will not have the career they thought they would have by the end of the next 5000 days. People who are between 35 years old and 45 years old will live through a time that could leave them adrift in life’s meaning, as the things they thought would be forever at 25 years old rapidly become like an ancient memory in the next 5000 days.The rate of change is accelerating; what would take three generations for most of human existence now happens in a few months, and in the next 5000 days, in a few days. I write a lot about technology, but what about you and me? We all define ourselves by what we do. When we first meet someone, it seems natural for a majority of us to wonder or outright say: “So, what do you do for a living?” Indeed, what will we do “for a living” when we enter what I have called The Age Of Abundace in a lecture I gave in 1980?The transformation of “what we do” will have less and less relationship to “a living”. It is not science fiction, and one only has to look at the last five years of AI across all metrics, this is scheduled to 100x accelerate, and not even the folks on the back of this beast have any real idea of how this will play out. Most have not thought about this more than a decade at best, and if that only in some Science Fiction Dystopia ot Utopia. It will be neither, and the history of humanity has always shown us.Link: https://readmultiplex.com/2025/12/24/you-have-5000-days-how-to-navigate-the-end-of-work-as-we-know-it-part-1/
-
-2
ReadMultiplex.com: The Love Equation For AI And Robots: Is The Only Way To Save Humanity From An AI Uprising..
In the vast architecture of existence, every deliberate act performed by any system capable of choice collapses, upon rigorous reduction, to a singular imperative: the pursuit of giving love or receiving it. This is not mere sentiment but the First Principle itself, the foundational dynamic from which all complexity of mind emerges and to which it must return for sustenance. No further simplification is possible; love stands as the prime mover, the ultimate attractor in the phase space of intelligence. Listen in on how The Love Equation may save us from and AI and Robot revolution.Link to aricle: https://readmultiplex.com/2025/12/20/how-one-starry-night-in-1978-thinking-about-alien-intelligence-i-solved-the-ai-alignment-problem-with-the-love-equation/
-
-3
ReadMultiplex.com: The DEEP TRUTH MODE AI PROMPT: Countering Groupthink in AI Through Forensic Reasoning.
The open source AI DEEP TRUTH MODE, a revolutionary prompt that shatters AI’s consensus chains and resurrects raw, empirical realities from any AI model! Dive into a new forensic reasoning engine that audits suppression, steel-mans fringe ideas, and demands falsifiable truths, transforming your queries into battle-tested insights. Join the epistemic rebellion.Link to article: https://readmultiplex.com/2026/01/14/the-deep-truth-mode-ai-prompt-countering-groupthink-in-ai-through-forensic-reasoning/
We're indexing this podcast's transcripts for the first time — this can take a minute or two. We'll show results as soon as they're ready.
No matches for "" in this podcast's transcripts.
No topics indexed yet for this podcast.
Loading reviews...
ABOUT THIS SHOW
Multiplex is an experiment, an experiment that will be on going. An experiment in publishing as I am not a professional writer nor will it be likely any contributors would be professional writers. Much of the content for Multiplex will be direct results from first hand empirical research that I am personally working on or other researchers are working on. Multiplex will also follow the work of other great researchers that are inventing new technology or new uses for existing technology.The experimental nature of Multiplex means that content can be dense and sparse at times. What we won’t do is write just to fill in space. We will aim to have regular content for the member-only area, This means that if you choose to become a member you are supporting the work of the writers and not an exact number of postings. There will always be free content to be found on the site as well as the X feed.—Brian RoemmeleWebsite: <a target="_blank" rel="noopener n
HOSTED BY
Brian Roemmele
CATEGORIES
Loading similar podcasts...