Ultimately, I want to give something back to the world in the next 10 years. I've benefited from so much open source and public domain stuff, I'd like to create something of use for others. Right now I'm really interested in AI assisted language learning pedagogy, and I'm working on an essay about how I use an ancient text editor, GNU Emacs, along with gptel and some other tools to help me me study an ancient language.
For me the next 10 years will be consolidating my kids development as they'll both be working or at finishing uni by then.
For the past 10 years, I’ve worked as a web dev and SEO analyst. My next 10 years will be defined by tackling the "Complexity Ceiling" that used to stop solo founders in their tracks.
Here is what AI has changed for my decade-long roadmap:
From "Information" to "Efficiency Engines": Previously, building a high-quality strategy engine for a complex game (like genetics/breeding simulators or deck-building logic) required a team or months of manual balancing. Now, I can use LLMs to stress-test game theory logic and edge cases in days. My goal is to build a fleet of "Decision Engines" rather than just content wikis.
Hyper-Localizing the Web: Scaling a niche tool into 5-10 languages used to be a nightmare of maintenance and translation costs. AI now handles the "native gamer" nuance in localization perfectly. I’m spending my next decade building programmatic platforms that are globally accessible from day one.
The "Tool-Led" pSEO Pivot: The era of basic content clusters is dying. I’m moving toward "Programmatic SEO + Interactive Tools." If a user needs a specific calculator or a specialized PFP resizer, I can now scaffold, debug, and deploy that specific utility in a fraction of the time, allowing me to manage a portfolio of 20+ high-traffic niche sites solo.
The "Impossible" part: Ten years ago, I thought I’d always be a cog in a larger dev team to build anything "heavy." Today, my 10-year outlook is being a "One-Man Studio" managing complex, data-heavy systems that serve millions of users.
The next decade isn't about AI writing my code; it's about AI allowing me to think at a 10x larger architectural scale.
7h3P146u3•11h ago