In the inaugural episode of the Trajectory Podcast, hosts and A.I. Business Consultants Jay Kitamura and Scotty Carlisle discuss the profound impacts of artificial intelligence (AI) on business, education, and daily life. They explore the rapid advancements in AI technology, including the introduction of powerful chips that could revolutionize processing capabilities. The conversation delves into the ethical implications of AI, particularly regarding job displacement and the necessity for individuals and businesses to adapt to these changes. They emphasize the importance of custom AI solutions for maintaining a competitive edge and the potential for AI to enhance human interaction rather than replace it. The episode concludes with an invitation for audience engagement and feedback on future topics
AI is rapidly evolving and will disrupt various industries.
The introduction of powerful AI chips will change processing capabilities.
AI can level the playing field for beginners in various fields.
Education systems are struggling to adapt to AI's presence.
Ethical concerns arise regarding job displacement due to AI.
Custom AI solutions can provide a competitive advantage for businesses.
AI can enhance efficiency and productivity in various tasks.
Human interaction remains crucial in an increasingly digital world.
The future of work will require adaptation to AI technologies.
Engagement with the audience is essential for meaningful discussions.
00:00 The Inaugural Trajectory Podcast
02:47 The Impact of AI on Business and Life
06:11 AI's Role in Education and Job Market
11:01 Ethics of AI: Job Displacement vs. Efficiency
15:27 Custom AI Solutions for Competitive Advantage
20:34 The Future of AI and Human Interaction
Jason Kitamura (00:03.684)
All right.
Scotty (00:03.902)
Hello everybody and Jason and I guess, don't know, let's get this, like you said, let's get this party started. What exactly party is this?
Jason Kitamura (00:14.062)
This is a trajectory party.
Scotty (00:17.041)
Trajectory party. Okay, so this is the inaugural podcast for Trajectory and I guess you got to start somewhere,
Jason Kitamura (00:27.352)
We do. So I guess today we will be talking about artificial intelligence, the impacts that it's having because it's a big topic and especially for for business and I guess for life in general. All right.
Scotty (00:42.121)
Yeah, yeah, everybody knows about our artificial intelligence and most people use it in some way, but there are still those laggers that really have no idea about chat GPT, what to do, how it works and all that stuff. I feel like we're in the forefront, but we've used it for a lot of different things. So I think this should be a good conversation for the the lagger and the innovator and everybody in between.
Jason Kitamura (01:12.332)
Absolutely. Absolutely. So I mean, what kind of prompted this topic was, you know, yesterday's news of that new super chip, the Willow chip that was coming out with Google that I think it said something takes minutes that would take 10 septillion years for a supercomputer to do. And it's specifically positioned for AI. So our future is pretty going to be pretty interesting. I mean,
Scotty (01:23.957)
can't believe that.
Jason Kitamura (01:42.688)
It's gonna disrupt everything.
Scotty (01:46.559)
Yeah, I don't even know how to wrap my brain around that because you figure, you know, normally like I think we look Moore's laws, like you're doubling your capability every 18 months, but this just blew everything out of the water because if that chip can process that fast and those many are in that many algorithms or that many calculations, I mean, it's going to be able to do every, I don't even know how to wrap my head around.
Jason Kitamura (02:17.56)
Well, the thing is what's crazy about it is they're actually using AI to improve itself, right? So the more powerful the AI is, the faster it's going to improve. So once they kind of implement this kind of stuff, then who knows what it's going to be able to do in the next year, two years, 10 years, right? So that's why we really need to have these conversations because especially if you're a business or you're in the workforce or just, you know, a citizen living your life, it's going to be part of your life regardless.
You
Scotty (02:48.391)
Yeah. Well, and the thing is, is that we do need to talk about this because it is in our face every day. so, so normal people need to understand what this is and be able to at least, you know, use it as a beginner because I feel like what this technology does is it allows a beginner to operate like somebody who's advanced basically, but you just got to know where to go.
Jason Kitamura (03:19.32)
That's definitely the case. It's leveling the playing field, but almost to the point where even people who have never played the game now can act like professionals. You know what mean? It's a completely different game. It all started with just content writing, people writing articles. What's funny is actually originally when people were talking about AI not taking jobs.
Everyone was afraid that I was going to take jobs, but they said, no, creative jobs, things like that will never be touched. But literally the first application for AI was creative. Creating pictures, creating content, stories, songs, that was the first thing that I was able to do. So that just kind of opens your eyes that it really has a capability to disrupt everybody. It's any type of job. And then when you tie it in with
Robotics and automation. mean literally almost anything has a chance to be disruptive
Scotty (04:26.436)
Yeah, I mean, I picture a computer or a robot planning a garden, harvesting the garden, cooking the vegetables, serving us dinner, cleaning the plates, know, tucking us into bed at night. Like we're really on the verge of all the futuristic movies that we see.
Jason Kitamura (04:49.124)
It's gonna be crazy. You know, mean, that's not that far out. Because when we talk about that kind of stuff, we're thinking, 20 years, 30 years, but we're probably gonna see that in the next few years, which is insanity when you think about it.
Scotty (05:04.384)
And Elon Musk's robot, what is it? Optimus or Prime or something like that? What's it called? Optimus. Okay. then didn't you have a number, how many, he's gonna, he's planning on manufacturing a whole bunch of those.
Jason Kitamura (05:09.016)
Yeah, the optimus. Yeah, the optimus, yeah.
Jason Kitamura (05:17.484)
Well, it was was crazy numbers. Like he said initially that the goal was to make 100 million robots. And that was what they were planning on doing. And well, first off, the that type of technology, like when we looked at it like a decade ago, it was that type of thing would cost you like a million dollars per robot. They're so advanced. But he's making it so there will be cheaper than the cars that he sells. So which means anybody can afford it. You know, I mean, I'm sure they'll have some
Scotty (05:42.88)
Bye bye.
Jason Kitamura (05:46.072)
Financing plan where you could pay like 300 bucks a month and have your own? Robotic slave at your house basically you know but his new number he's he's he just you know He's kind of spouts out these things once a while, but he was talking about billion now a billion robots Like that's that's a major impact major disruption, right?
Scotty (05:53.056)
Yeah.
Scotty (06:05.078)
Dude, that's crazy. Our whole life is gonna be completely different.
Jason Kitamura (06:11.78)
Yeah. And so, I mean, the big thing to realize, and I was just telling you the story about my son, you know, he's very good at following rules. for his English paper, he's a high school student. He was told not to use chat GPT. know, all schools, you know, they're having a problem with AI, right? So...
He followed the rules and it takes him hours and hours and hours to do the assignments that he's given. And I say, can't you chat GPT that part? He's like, no, like adamant. I have never used chat GPT. He's very stubborn like that. Well, which is good because that's the rules, right? Except the fact that all his friends are using it. Everybody else is using it. They're getting stuff done in five minutes, which takes him five hours. You know, they're out playing basketball, hanging out, and he can't because he's doing the work. When they're in the same class,
because they're using ChatGPT. Yes, they're breaking the rules, but what's crazy is there's all these tools out there to detect AI. But if you know how to prompt it properly, can make it, hey, write it in the form of a ninth grader and add a few grammatical errors. And once you do that, now it's kind of undetectable, right? So they're getting smart on how to do this, and then they're getting stuff done really quickly. So the point being is that
If we don't learn to integrate this in our life, even though we may be totally against it. And that's, that's another thing that we could talk about is like the ethics of it. Right. But regardless, there's. Regardless in the game of life, especially if you're in business, there are your competitors or other people out there who are fighting for the same jobs as you that are utilizing AI.
Scotty (07:49.545)
Mm-hmm. Slippery slope.
Jason Kitamura (08:06.466)
And it's almost inevitable. It's almost going to be to the point where if you're not using AI, then you're kind of antiquated. know, they're going to be searching, like even right now in the job market, I see posts where people are saying, especially in development, like in software development, people are saying, well, it makes it so much faster to use AI to code some stuff. So we want to make sure all the new developers use
Scotty (08:15.02)
Mm-hmm.
Jason Kitamura (08:33.632)
AI to help them so they can produce things faster. So it's almost a requirement in some, in some jobs. so yeah, that's kind of the ethical question. I mean, what, where's the value of skill versus the value of, know, what you've been educated on and learn versus somebody who's never done it now using chat GPT and being in the same level as you like, is that ethical or is that just evolution?
Scotty (08:39.402)
Hmm.
Jason Kitamura (09:03.097)
You know?
Scotty (09:04.947)
Or is it practical?
Jason Kitamura (09:06.978)
Or is it practical? I mean, every business owner is going to want you to be more efficient and more productive, right? So if you're able to use a tool, then that's kind of the way that you have to go, you know?
Scotty (09:14.643)
Mm-hmm.
Scotty (09:21.118)
Yeah, it's like, you know, we've been working with Hammer and Nails and now to build a house, right? And now there's a 3D printer that you just push a button. You know, it's literally that far advanced compared to us. Like earlier today, there was a thousand page contract that somebody sent me that would normally take me a long time to read, right? Because I read, I gotta take notes, I gotta make sure that I get the...
the gist of what it's all about. I uploaded it to ChatGPT. I said, give me some of these parameters, summarize it, list these particular items, and let me know if X, Y, and Z. And literally, just like that, here comes the report. And instead of a thousand pages, it broke it down to basically a page, said these are the things to be aware of, and here's the synopsis. And it was done in seconds, in seconds. And now,
You know, I had time to go get a coffee and get my feet rubbed. Not really, but that'd have been nice. But I would have had the time to, right? And all this other stuff, whereas it is that, it is a huge help in efficiency, yes, but time, time management. If you have a lot of reading that you have to do, or you have a lot of, of laborious, whether it's reading, writing, or
Jason Kitamura (10:24.453)
Hahaha.
Scotty (10:49.051)
you know, researching or something like that, it literally takes seconds to do something that would take you hours. So why would anyone not want to utilize that?
Jason Kitamura (11:01.796)
Absolutely. Now, I mean, the ethical side, I mean, what do you, how do you feel about that? Knowing that, you know, what you basically did is you replaced somebody with legal experience, somebody that probably went to school for 12 years to figure out how to do all this stuff. And you within two minutes basically replaced them, right? And not only that replaced his, you know, $400 an hour retainer, you know, which is
That's very disruptive, right? But I guess, because there's a lot of people out there that are against AI. They don't want to use it because of the principle, because it's replacing jobs and displacing people. I mean, what's your thoughts on that?
Scotty (11:40.283)
Well, not only that though, well, but it's not only that, think the idea that everything that's ever been input, right, into whether it's, I don't know if it's, basically it's on the internet, right? It can go out, and this is how I understand it, it can go out and basically gather up all that information it has access to right now. It already knows, like it's that fast.
How could we possibly compete against that? It's like having an Einstein but in every single topic out there. So are you still there?
Scotty (12:36.113)
technical difficulties.
Scotty (12:43.249)
So we're having technical difficulties. There he is. Yep.
Jason Kitamura (12:45.196)
Alright, can you hear me? Yeah, no, I have no idea why it just cut out, but yeah, well, we'll have that out.
Scotty (12:52.133)
Maybe we're getting a little too sensitive area of AI it doesn't want us talking about.
Jason Kitamura (13:00.362)
I guess. Yeah, it's a, we love AI guys. Well, I mean, that being said, and you know, we, you know, our, our, business has, has, I guess evolved into AI. So, you know, I've been, I've been doing software development, digital marketing for 20 years. And you know, the reason why I felt it important
Scotty (13:05.721)
Yeah.
Jason Kitamura (13:28.214)
to focus on AI, of the feelings of what this is gonna do to the world, is essentially, I honestly believe in the next five, 10 years that my industry is not really gonna exist without AI. AI will have the ability to do software development. AI will have the ability to market everything that you need to market. It really is gonna disrupt my industry.
And I love what I do. So really in order to be able to be relevant, in order to be able to help the clients to the max potential, you have to integrate AI. So that's why, you know, I kind of dove into AI and wanted to provide a service as far as helping businesses figure out how to integrate AI. Because a lot of people, aside from chat GPT, they don't really understand like what it could do for their business because
Yes, you can save time by having somebody type in, if you're doing marketing, create your marketing emails with AI, look up stuff. But the power really comes is when you create some sort of custom process or software that utilizes AI, that's tailored for your business. A lot of times, just a client of ours, just down the hall, he's saving.
probably six figures just because an AI system is now doing the work of somebody that you hired before. And that's the ethical part, right? Is that it's replacing jobs, it is. But if you don't, how do you compete and how do you stay relevant as a business or how do you make sure that you're still gonna be around? Because if all your competitors are utilizing AI, then they could cut down the costs. And then now you have a disadvantage, right?
Really, I mean, it's we have to get over that hump of the ethical side because it's it's inevitable. know, Elon talked about a long time ago about limiting AI, stopping the progress of AI. But the process, the problem is it will never happen because the fear is for our safety, because if we stop developing AI. So we say we signed the petition like you wanted to, and everybody puts a stop on AI.
Jason Kitamura (15:57.216)
But then there's somebody in another country that is going against that. And we don't know that's in the shadows that it's developing the AI for years after we said to stop the advantage that they have, the power that they have is, is so, I guess, out of this world that we have no choice but to continue it. So it's unfortunate, but it's, it's going to be.
something that we're going to have to live with. There's no stopping at this point. And because of that, in business, there's going to be no stopping your competitors and the people that you're competing with to get jobs from using AI. It's not going to be a fair playing field. The only fair playing field that will exist is if everybody is utilizing AI. And the ones who can do it best, the ones who know how to integrate it, the ones who are integrating it
Like for business, the more specific you integrate it for your business, which means you're developing something custom utilizing AI, versus somebody who's using ChatGPT, now you have that advantage. And that's really the only way to kind of, to win at the game these days.
Scotty (17:12.234)
So, okay, for example, there's a couple of things that come to mind, but one thing, if everybody has access to the internet and they're using ChatGPT and it has access to everything, are there ways where maybe I develop a strategy, I develop protocols, I develop something that is specific to my business that is beneficial to the industry, but
I don't want my competitors to know about it. So is there a way I can build something, utilize the technology of AI to help cut down costs, make it more efficient and all that, but then guard it so that my competitors aren't able to plug into what I've built? Can you do stuff like that?
Jason Kitamura (18:02.966)
So realistically, mean, the AI component itself is especially because, know, like ChatGPT OpenAI, it's an open platform that everybody can access, right? And the more that that develops over time, the more robust it's going to be and everybody has access to that feature. Really, the only thing that you can do to protect your business is the actual process of what you're using it for. And the way, the only way you can do that is to have a custom
like software solution that's doing things on the backend that's not just typing a bunch of stuff on chat GPT because anybody could do that. But if you have a software that's close ended, nobody has access to the code of your software, nobody has access to the algorithms and what you are actually putting together, then the process of how you're using the AI, what type of things that you're actually doing with it can be secure. Not to say that if somebody doesn't discover it that they wouldn't be able to
figure out some sort of way, the more unique the approach, the more, just like anything, it's almost like if you had a patent on something, if something's more original, the more original the idea, the more complex it could be, and the more proprietary it is, and it's the more impossible it will be to replicate that process. You're still gonna be integrated with AI, but that whole process is gonna be something that people don't have access to.
And that's really, yeah, I mean, so that's really the only way to make something unique because, know, in the past, software not only is something that makes a business more efficient, but it makes a business more valuable. You know, if you're, say, for instance, using like a third party app or website that everybody has access to, to manage like your day or manage your operations, it really doesn't affect the evaluation of your company.
But now if you have a software that's built specifically for you, that's built to run your organization, when you evaluate a company on how much it's worth, it's multiples because of the technology stack that's behind it, just because you have that custom application. So it's going to be the same thing with AI. Everybody has access to AI. Everybody can use ChatGBT, but using ChatGBT is not going to improve the worth of your business. Having a proprietary software that's utilizing AI, but that software is yours,
Jason Kitamura (20:31.478)
that's going to increase the value of your company.
Scotty (20:34.904)
Got it. Yeah. And that's what my next question was going to be is like, you know, when you talk about AI leveling the playing field, you know, why, and we're into AI, you know, developing AI solutions. Well, why would you use somebody like us if he can use whatever it is straight chat GBT, cause it's leveling the playing field. Why would they come to, you know, somebody like us? But yeah. So one of those answers, just,
you just gave us and that is it increases the value if you have specific software for your company. Is there any other reason why somebody would come to a company like ours to help them with AI solutions instead of just typing it up on chat GBT? Hey, chat GBT, help me with this. Design this, create that.
Jason Kitamura (21:23.254)
So the biggest part is, you know, I think we kind of pride ourselves on the ability to problem solve, right? And that's where we, you know, kind of thrive and shine is that we're able to solve problems with AI that a lot of other people or a lot of other companies probably wouldn't even see the potential. So the first off is we can tailor something that will help them that maybe they didn't even know.
AI can help them with. You know, we have, there's a lot of things that will allow them to save money, allow them to save time, make more money, get more clients. And thinking outside the box and finding solutions is, the number one reason why I think people should work with us. But, but not only that is that it's sometimes it's not even. Yeah. Maybe you're saving it. You're cutting half the time by using ChatGPT, but it's possible if we create a custom solution.
it'll cut in time by 90%. You can automate a lot of these things instead of having somebody type it in in ChatGPT and run it. So even if it is something that you can do with ChatGPT, you could probably save even more time, make it more organized, make it more streamlined if you develop something custom around that. But most likely, it's going to be something that you haven't thought of or something that ChatGPT can't do on its own. Even though it could do a lot of stuff, can spill out a lot of information.
It's limited by a lot of things. It doesn't do automations. Like it can't send out emails. can't like dial the phone. It can't do all these things on its own. Right? So, and that's things that we can help it do. We can use AI to figure out stuff, but integrate it in a way that it's actually going to execute on something and do it on its own instead of waiting for somebody to type it in and chat to you.
Scotty (23:15.664)
So automation, automation is a huge thing.
Jason Kitamura (23:17.982)
automation and yeah, and just seeing how it can help. mean, that's the first thing that we want to do is just, you know, just talk with our potential clients, just have a short conversation, see what they're, where their bottlenecks are, where their pain points are. And, and we can figure out where AI can fit into that, into that, that basically in their business and see what is going to really make an impact. You know?
Sometimes, chat GPT may 20 % cut down the time. It could be 90%. So it's really depending on what it is. And a custom AI solution could be a lot more. Yeah.
Scotty (23:49.074)
Yeah.
Scotty (23:59.729)
Well, I see what-
Yeah, that makes sense. Where I see it is, could actually, yes, we could improve their efficiency. could do it, improve it by 50%. Maybe we can improve it by 90 % because of the other things that we've experienced and we can apply those things to this company. But the other thing is, not only would it make it more efficient, but the processes that they do could improve.
So it's not only being more efficient at those processes, but it's being more effective. you're creating processes that are more relevant, that are more time-based, that are more effective in the end. So now you're having more effective and more efficiency, like compounding each other. So I do feel like, you know, any business, if I had any other business out there, I would
for sure be looking at this as a tool to help me make more money and spend less time. How I see it, most people's dream, they wanna be sitting on a beach with their laptop maybe if they have to. They don't even want a laptop. They wanna be sitting at the beach drinking a margarita or whatever it is that you drink, whiskey, rum and coke, I don't know, whatever. You can have whatever you want, right? But not worrying about the business because it is...
making money and it's working itself. And I feel like right now we're really on the cusp for a lot of people to be able to create that for themselves.
Jason Kitamura (25:40.31)
Yeah. And I think going back to the other question of why work with us, I mean, that's really the advantage that we have is, you know, we have a background, not only in the technology side, but a lot in the business operations side. Right. So it's you, you need to have that business acumen to be able to recognize where AI could be used, not just the knowledge of being able to code software and know what the technology is. It's a, it's a full package and.
Even if it's segmented, if you have somebody that's really good at business and another person is really good at technology, it doesn't always translate to be able to see those patterns. They almost have to be in one. I think that's an advantage that we have for sure. going back to the original question, because a lot of the backlash that AI is getting is that this is really just going to ruin
companies because it's going to take away jobs, take away company culture, right? But I mean, even if you don't own a company, if you're just in the workforce trying to apply for a job, I think almost everybody is using ChatGPT to write their resumes right now to make it sound 10 times better and make it sound like they're a Nobel laureate when you meet them, they like, did you pass the sixth grade?
Scotty (26:59.457)
Yeah, no doubt.
Jason Kitamura (27:08.598)
But why does it sound like you're a rocket scientist in your resume? know what mean? But is that a bad thing or a good thing? Because yes, they didn't write it on their own, but does that really matter anymore? Well, I mean, what do you think? Yeah.
Scotty (27:12.705)
Hahaha
Scotty (27:26.953)
Yeah, you know, it's it becomes an ethical thing, right? Also, because if you are, it's like catfishing, right? People that are trying to look a lot more sexy or they take a picture of someone else and they act like that to them. Like, yes, they're going to get more attention. But then at the end of the day, when the rubber meets the road, it's not actually them. They were trying to be somebody else. And in, you know, a lot of our trajectory meetings, we've talked about the
the power of authenticity, right? So yes, you can imitate and duplicate other things, and it will give you attention, it will get you across some gates, but the power of authenticity, I think, is more powerful in that if you have somebody that is authentic, right? But again, now where's the line? What is authentic? What is authenticity?
You know, because where does the, yeah, and that's a whole nother, I think that's a whole nother conversation.
Jason Kitamura (28:29.236)
Well, this is the thing. Right now it's like if you're calf fishing someone. So just imagine this. You're calf fishing someone, you're a solid three and you have a picture of 10. But say there's some sort of technology that you could put a suit on and push a button and you look like, so you look like that in your pictures online, you meet somebody in person and you actually look like that. And you just.
Scotty (28:39.633)
Mm-hmm
Jason Kitamura (28:55.434)
It's a, but I mean, it's the same thing with like plastic surgery and stuff, right? It's the same idea, but the concept of using AI is that it's not that, they're lying on their resume or not lying, but they're making it seem like they're smarter than they are. But the thing is they can continuously use the AI. So technically they can fulfill the promise of doing that because they'll continuously use the AI to do their jobs. You know what I mean? Because it's not only for like writing papers like,
I told you about the experiment I did. So what I did was I created these avatars in AI. One was a CEO, one was a chief marketing officer, one was a chief financial officer, one was a chief revenue officer. And I had them all talk to each other, like a board meeting. And I gave them basically the framework of what the company was and just had them go and talk to each other and respond.
And I had to turn the thing off because it went so crazy because it gave like, was creating these like hundreds of pages of like, of like plans and how to execute and all this. So, but that's, that's, that's next level stuff because it's imitating not only a CEO or a CMO or a CFO, it's imitating the world's best that it could find. So like you can, you can tell it to mimic the style of like Steve Jobs.
Scotty (29:56.43)
you
Scotty (30:16.922)
Mm-hmm.
Jason Kitamura (30:20.606)
and then integrate his creativity in a meeting, right? So it's also explaining how to do things. So even if you have no experience and you're basically put all this experience on your resume, you literally could push a button and it'll give you this step-by-step of how to do what you need to do. And if you don't understand it, you say, hey, write it in sixth grade vernacular. And now it's gonna explain it to you.
Scotty (30:48.675)
Yeah.
Jason Kitamura (30:49.832)
as a sixth grader and you're like, now I get it. Right. So it's so like the catfishing, if you showed up and you actually look like that, but it was fake, but you show up and you actually could do this job because you're using AI. And I don't know where you draw the line. It doesn't matter if what you produce is that level. Right.
Scotty (31:05.804)
Yeah. Well, then you're authentically, yeah. Well, then you're authentically inauthentic. So you still have authenticity.
Jason Kitamura (31:12.428)
Exactly. You're authentically inauthentic. And that's probably the world that we're going to live in, is everybody's authentically inauthentic, right? And it's a horrible thing, but we need to prepare.
Scotty (31:28.108)
Yeah, and I think that's where, you know, also trajectory comes in is that when we meet in person and I feel like, you know, with new technology and, you know, new ways of doing things, there are going to be new problems. But, but one of the problems that is out there is, is isolation, right? Because if you're behind a computer and it's doing everything, you don't get
that human interaction, I feel like it's such an important part of our life, of our human experience, is that we need interaction. And if you don't get interaction, you are very susceptible for depression, for anxiety, for all kinds of just horrible things. And then once you get like that, then you start having health issues and then it all compounds on each other. So I feel like another aspect of this technology of AI, of the whole
landscape and ecosystem of what we're doing and what we're part of, we need to be aware that human interaction is an integral part of the human condition and that we need to develop things to continue to connect with each other and help each other and call each other out or whatever it is. So I don't know how we're going to facilitate that, but I mean,
I guess we're going to try tonight, right? Every Wednesday we have our trajectory meeting. So that's, that's one way.
Jason Kitamura (32:56.724)
Absolutely. It's going to be interesting. Our future is going to be interesting. mean, I think if you want to invest in something right now, you want to invest in disconnected retreats. You know, basically create a retreat with zero technology and all the millionaires and billionaires are going to want to go there because to get that connection back. You know, initially like Facebook and, you know, Facebook's the idea was to connect more people and it did at the beginning.
You know, it was all about like, I can connect even more because now that I re got myself connected with my old classmates, now we could go hang out in person, but it's evolved eventually to the opposite where it's like, we're so connected. We're disconnected. We just see everything on a screen and we never do anything in person, you know? So that I think AI might have that same potential, especially with VR and the power of virtual reality and AI. It's people are just going to.
be able to lie down and put something on their head and think that they're in Bali and have a vacation and be completely content with that. And that's going to be sad, you know? But yeah, mean, yeah, the whole idea for this is to kind of create the awareness, you know, let people know like our views on it. But we really want to hear your guys' views too. So, you know, if you check out trajectoryglobal.com,
Scotty (34:03.193)
You
Jason Kitamura (34:24.396)
You can add yourself into this conversation. We want to hear your feedback your views. This is a pretty controversial topic We both ways, you know both ways there's no right or wrong or maybe there is but we want we want to hear which what you think
Scotty (34:32.795)
Yeah.
Scotty (34:40.259)
Yeah, we're only scratching the surface for sure.
Jason Kitamura (34:45.9)
All right, yeah, I think that was a lot of AI for today, but I think that was good.
Scotty (34:50.744)
I agree. All right. Well, I guess until next time then and then like Jason said if you got something to say we want to hear it. This is not only an AB conversation. We want you to see your way into it.
Jason Kitamura (35:07.98)
Yeah, that's one thing we're hoping with this podcast is we want to make it more interactive. So trajectoryglobal.com. We've got a way to make it interactive and you can participate in it. But yeah, keep checking back to see more episodes. We'll have guests, we'll have topics that really we think are going to be relevant. That's going to impact your life. And that's what it's all about.
Scotty (35:32.64)
Improve the trajectory of your or someone else's life. That is what we're about. So right now we're talking about AI. It could be, I mean, God only knows what, there's so many different things and paths that we can run. So we need your help.
Jason Kitamura (35:48.584)
Absolutely. the whole idea and even the book that we put out, bestseller by the way, Trajectory Volume One, is that it's collection of stories, knowledge or experiences that can improve the trajectory of someone's life. So if you think you have something, you think you have something that could do that, please reach out. We want to talk to you. We want to share your story, get you on the podcast, introduce you to the community. yeah, there's a lot of things we could do from there.
Scotty (36:18.362)
Awesome. Well, good job, Jason, for our first official Trajectory Podcast.
Jason Kitamura (36:24.972)
All right, Scotty. Yeah, thanks. That was fun. All right. Yep.
Scotty (36:28.052)
Alright man, I'll see you in a few minutes. Later.