We want you to become superhuman.
In 2008, a fictional billionaire, Tony Stark, talked to an AI that talked back.
It managed his calendar. Drafted his emails. Ran his lab. Remembered everything. Anticipated what he needed before he knew he needed it.
The whole world watched and thought the same thing: I want that.
Then they gave us Siri.
Siri could set a timer. Sometimes. She couldn't remember your name without being reminded. Couldn't send an email on your behalf. Couldn't connect two things you'd said and arrive at something useful.
Apple promised Jarvis. They shipped a search bar wearing a voice.
Meanwhile, the world moved on without you.
Every enterprise with a budget built an AI army. Custom automation that costs six figures to implement. Workflows that triage inboxes, write follow-ups, schedule meetings, and close loops. Running 24/7. Never dropping a ball.
They have engineering teams building this. They have budgets you'll never see.
And you? You're still copying the same status update into three channels. Still writing follow-up emails at 11pm that should have gone out at noon. Still walking into meetings unprepared because the day ate you alive.
The enterprises didn't build their AI to help you. They built it to need fewer of you.
Here's what nobody says out loud:
AI isn't coming. It's here. And you're not the only one who has it.
Every month, the tools get smarter. Every quarter, another job description gets shorter. The companies that have AI are pulling ahead. The people who don't are falling behind.
If you don't have your own AI, you're the one getting replaced.
But what if you had your own?
Not a chatbot that forgets you when you close the tab. Not a drag-and-drop automation builder you have to configure yourself. Not another tool that drafts things and leaves you to send them.
An AI that lives in your glasses. That hears every conversation. That sees what you see. That acts on a single sentence from you.
Walk past a restaurant. “Aldric, book that place Thursday with Sarah.” Done.
Late to a meeting. “Tell them I'm five minutes out.” Sent.
Staring at a whiteboard. “What does this say?” He reads it to you.
No phone. No typing. No switching apps. Just speak.
That's not a feature list. That's what it feels like when the friction between you and your life disappears.
Meet Aldric.
He sees through your glasses. He hears through your earpiece. He executes across every tool you use. He never forgets.
Glasses. Voice. Execution. Memory. Nobody has all four.
Talk to him like Jarvis. Unlike Siri, he actually does things.
He reads your email, drafts replies, and sends them when you approve. He writes the follow-up you forgot about. He preps your meetings before you walk in. He tracks every promise you've made and surfaces it before you're late.
After a week, Aldric knows your world. After a month, he thinks like you. After a year, you stop managing things and start commanding them.
You're not getting replaced. You're becoming someone different.
Monday morning. Inbox: 47 emails. Three meeting conflicts. A follow-up you forgot about on Friday. By 9:01, Aldric has triaged all 47, resolved the conflicts, and sent the follow-up. You open your laptop to zero.
That feeling. That's the shift.
You stop drowning in operations and start leading. You stop reacting and start deciding. You stop being the person who can't keep up and become the person nobody can keep up with.
One person, competing like fifty.
Not because you work more. Because you only do the work that matters. Everything else, Aldric handles. The busywork, the coordination, the things that eat your day and leave you wondering where it went.
You get your time back. You get your clarity back. You become the version of yourself you knew was in there but couldn't reach because the day kept getting in the way.
That's not a productivity hack. That's a new category of human.
The enterprises built their AI army. This is yours.
Everyone deserves someone in their corner who makes them better.