Learn AI With me
Welcome to “Learn AI with Me”—a space where curiosity meets courage.
I’m starting my journey into the world of Artificial Intelligence from the ground up, and I’m inviting you to walk this path with me. No prior expertise. No complicated jargon. Just honest learning, real experimentation, and consistent progress.
From Ancient Dreamsto Thinking Machines
A non-technical journey through the growth of Artificial Intelligence From Ancient Dreams to Thinking Machines — AI for Non-CS Students Long Read · AI History · For Curious Minds From Ancient Dreamsto Thinking Machines A non-technical journey through the growth of...
The Memory Wall
The Chef Who Had to Wait Imagine a world-class chef who can prepare 100 dishes per hour. The kitchen is state-of-the-art, the chef is lightning fast — and completely idle most of the day. The problem? The pantry is slow. Ingredients arrive at a rate that supports only...
Why Do Data Centres Need So Much Power?And How India Is Rising to Meet the Challenge
The hidden physics behind AI, cloud computing, and the massive energy infrastructure that powers them — explained for everyone In October 2025, Google announced a $15 billion investment to build Asia's first gigawatt-scale AI hub in Visakhapatnam, Andhra Pradesh — a...
Two Laws That Silently Shape Your Digital Life
Moore's Law and Amdahl's Law — explained without a single equation, and why one of them matters far more for humanity's future. Technology & Society Two Laws That Silently Shape Your Digital Life Moore's Law and Amdahl's Law — explained without a single equation,...
AI’s Secret Weapon: Why India needs more Compute Power
AI's Secret Weapon: Why India Needs More "Compute" Power Understanding The Bitter Lesson AI's Secret Weapon:Why India Needs More Power The path to true intelligence is paved with hardware, not just clever code. And India is waking up to this truth. 12 min read scroll...
Will AI Really Steal Your Job? A 160-Year-Old Paradox Has Some Surprising Answers
Ever wonder why cheaper, smarter AI might actually end up creating way more jobs than it wipes out? And more importantly — where those new jobs are likely to pop up? Turns out a Victorian-era economist spotted the pattern way back in 1865, and it's ringing truer than...
