I wake up in 2035 in a world where artificial intelligence has taken over virtually every task we once called “work.” Since that pivotal year of 2026, when AI became a globally recognized tool (and almost a family member), things have only gone up—exponentially up. The result? Today, I have more time as an editor than ever before, as journalism and digital media have changed beyond recognition, and in many places, have simply disappeared into oblivion. My role as an editor has gone from “the one who works late into the night on deadlines” to “the one who gets up in the morning in his pajamas and directs robots and thinks about the meaning of life over coffee.”
artificial intelligence
In February, I'm going to Zagreb to test Tesla's FSD (Full Self-Driving) - what I've been waiting for since the legendary Knight Rider series. A car that finally drives itself. Remember when I wrote a few days ago that Porsche is dead? Many of you jumped into the air, saying that I have no idea about "driving pleasure" and "the smell of gasoline". Let me explain why the reason for the death of this icon is not that they don't know how to build a good chassis. The reason is that their business model has become irrelevant - completely overrun. Porsche sells you the illusion that you are a racer. Tesla sells you the truth: that you are completely unnecessary as a driver. Let me explain. Why your grandchildren will view driving as horse riding.
Get ready. Something is coming that will forever change the way we perceive the world around us. I'm talking about the silent but brutal death of a concept we've taken for granted for the last 150 years: "Seeing is believing." It's the death of truth on the internet.
If you thought autonomous driving was the pinnacle of technology, you were asleep at the wheel. The new neuromorphic e-skin (NRE-Skin) doesn't just deliver touch, it delivers real, authentic pain. And trust me, it's the best safety feature since the airbag. We tested how the "chassis" that senses every scratch performs.
The irony of the coming era is complete: the more digital and AI we become, the more expensive it will be to pay those who can remain brutally analog. Artificial intelligence will make mediocrity free, and genuine human contact will become the most expensive luxury on the market. The algorithm will not replace you because it is smarter than you, but because you have become boring. Let me explain!
My dears, I have bad news for all of you who think that security is about being hardworking, quiet, and going to work. Homer Simpson is dead. Not the yellow one from the cartoon, but the economic model that has been sold to us for 50 years. The model where you are average, you do an average job, you have an average salary, but you still afford a house, two cars, and a dog. This world has disappeared faster than the integrity of our politicians. And it's AI's fault.
If you still think of marketing as putting up posters on digital walls, you're in trouble. The year 2026 brings a complete turnaround: algorithms have become jealous lovers, search engines are everywhere, and artificial intelligence reads minds. Only those who understand that adaptability is the new horsepower will survive.
We used to own things. We had shelves of CDs, garages of tools, and disks of data. Today? Today we are digital subtenants. We pay for music, for movies, for photo storage, and now even for intelligence. But a metal box called the Olares One has just entered the scene, and with its RTX 5090 brutality, it says, "Enough is enough." This isn't just a computer, it's a rebellion against the feudalism of Silicon Valley.
Let's face it, your personal doctor doesn't have time. He has seven minutes for you, five of which he spends typing on a computer that's still running Windows XP, and the other two minutes pretending to be interested in why your lower back hurts. What if you had a doctor who had all the time in the world, had read all the medical literature since Hippocrates, and didn't play golf on Wednesdays? Today, we're going to turn ChatGPT or Gemini into your personal medical advisor - Doctor ChatGPT.
My dear petrol romantics, manual transmission lovers and those who still claim that "electronics in a car just die" - I have bad news. While you were still debating in 2025 whether diesel has a future (spoiler: it doesn't), the world moved forward. And not just moved - it jumped. Reports coming out of the US about the latest Tesla FSD v14 (Supervised) update are not just technical news. They are an obituary of driving as we knew it. And if you think I'm exaggerating, you're probably still using a Nokia 3310.
Have you ever wondered why your doctor spends most of his time looking at a screen and not at your eyes? Because he's become an overpaid secretary. But Microsoft and Google have just entered the office with tools that promise to change that - or send doctors to the unemployment office. Is this the solution to healthcare or the beginning of the end of the white coat? Is the profession of a GP dead?
2026 won't be just another year on the calendar. It's the year when technology finally stops being a toy for generating images of dogs in spacesuits and becomes a serious, brutal productivity machine. Forget your fear of robots; here come the partners who will twist your brain to the point where you've only dreamed of it before. These are the 7 AI tech trends of 2026.











