Founder Blog
Writing, building, thinking. A record of a jagged stone worn smooth into a pebble as it meets the world.
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When You Feel Small in Your Own Eyes
There are days when you feel small in your own eyes—when everyone else seems to be moving forward and you alone are stuck. What hurts isn't that the verdict is wrong; it's that it'
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I Wasn't Crazy After All
In early May 2025, I was in my final semester of college. Graduation was getting closer, but my path forward was still nowhere within reach.
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Lee Draws a Hard Line Between AI and People
I draw a complete line between AI and people. AI is a tool, so I push it to its limit; people are someone you have to live alongside.
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I Bought the Inside's Tools with the Outside's Sweat
I graduated in business from Chung-Ang University, I code, I use AI as a tool, and I can hold an hour-long conversation in English without stumbling. But every one of these insider
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The Years Daniel Lee Came Through
The years Daniel Lee endured, and the person they made. This is a story that was never written all at once — its scattered fragments, including one blank year, stitched together he
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Masters Move Quietly
A genuine desire to help is felt at once. The master moves quietly.
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The Outdated OS of a Giant Organization: The Democratic Party's Think-Tank Revolution
More urgent than rolling out an 'AI aide' is the logic to read the board. Watching the Democratic Party as a whole, I can't shake the feeling that what it really lacks is a genuine
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Lee Jae-myung Misunderstands the Construction Industry
"We'll make costs realistic." As policy language it sounds plausible, even scientific and transparent. But anyone who knows even a little about construction understands what a dang
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Swing the Sword Outward
Shohei Ohtani never once shouted that he was "the best in Japan." He simply went abroad and proved himself in the Major Leagues—and Japan only grew bigger for it.
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Looks Depreciate
In accounting, tangible assets lose value over time — machines, buildings, cars. And so do looks. Intangible assets are different: money, power, honor, and trust barely show on the
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Trump Opened the Ledger; Xi Brought Out the Porcelain
Trump opened the ledger; Xi brought out the porcelain. It sounds like a joke, but it's a surprisingly accurate starting point for understanding the US-China summit: the two men sat
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To Jensen Huang, Korea Is a Great Restaurant
Just because a customer is famous, the shop owner mustn't put down the menu. Jensen Huang is impressive and so is NVIDIA, but the real problem is how the Korean press covers him.
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A Good Community Widens People; a Bad Organization Binds Them
On churches, small groups, liberalism and socialism, and the essence of community: a good community widens people, while a bad organization binds them.
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Neither Luck Nor Effort
Big outcomes are neither luck nor effort. More precisely, luck and effort are just the names people attach afterward to explain a result.
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Episode 3 — The First Battlefield
1:41 p.m.: the client's Zoom link arrives early — thirty minutes promised, fifteen elapsed, capped with "Could you hop on right now?" Their CEO is the anxious one, and beside the d
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The Structural Meaning of South Korea's Youth Suicide Rate
The “one per school” analogy and the likely concentration of risk among low-asset young people. South Korea's youth suicide rate should be read not as a matter of individual psycho
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Why Do We Only See Sanitation Workers at Dawn?
At 4 a.m., an orange vest moves in front of the apartment complex. Strangely, sanitation workers are mostly visible only at dawn — and we shouldn't take that scene for granted.
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Jobs Don't Disappear — Work Rises Differently
People ask, "Isn't AI going to take my job?" It's the wrong question. AI doesn't take jobs away — it changes what a job means and grows the total amount of work.
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The Loaded Plateau
People and AI leap in the same way — accumulation, a critical threshold, and emergence. Follow that direction to its end and you arrive at an unexpected place: the most expensive m
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In School, I Ranked in the Single Digits
In my own class, I often came in second. Only a person with real self-worth can learn from someone who is ahead of them.
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Episode 2: Guardianship
Seong woke at 11:47 a.m. with a heavy head and the vague sense that something enormous had happened the night before — though, fresh out of sleep, he couldn't tell whether it had b
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There May Be No Right or Wrong in the World, but There Is a Before and After
The art of discernment that cuts down on pointless fights. When politics comes up, people split into left and right at once but most of those clashes are fake fights, born of confu
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Episode 1 — He Who Wields a Sword Knows Not the Commit
3:17 a.m. The terminal cursor blinks over `rm -rf ./client_project/`, and Iseong sits frozen, his finger hovering over the Enter key.
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Kipling's "If—": The Things You Must Tell Your Children
Kipling's "If—" reads like a self-help book, but it's really the language of survival — less "do this and you'll live better" than "fail to do this and you'll collapse." On the poe
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A Society That Doesn't Love Its Work
UX design isn't only for products — it's worth applying to organizational culture too. Ask dozens of Korean office workers and almost no one will sincerely say, "I really love my c
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Why Is Korean Politics Still Stuck at 'Chatbots'?
Where party digital infrastructure stands in 2026, and where it should go next. Lately the political world keeps talking about "adopting AI" — the direction is right, but the real
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If People Are to Live with Dignity, Two Paths Aren't Enough
Between employment and entrepreneurship stand actual people. In Korea, earning a living is treated as a choice between just two paths — taking a job or starting a business — but th
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Management and Shareholders Are Not the Same
The point is simple: management and shareholders are not the same thing. Chairman Lee Jae-yong is both, and the original criticism targeted the Samsung family's control structure a
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On Dropping Out of High School (Written in 2024)
Looking back on my life, there are a few mysteries. One of them is the years I was 17 and 18 — how did I, so young, endure everything I went through, and why do I have almost no me
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Why "Don't Make Enemies" Is Dangerous Advice to Give an Individual
Don't lose your own life. "Don't make enemies" sounds like wisdom the first time you hear it. But the danger begins exactly there.
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The Temperature of the Songs I Love
When someone asks what music I like, I usually name artists. But the more I think about it, what I love isn't a particular artist — it's a certain “temperature.” A summer dawn at 4
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The Social Coordinates of Korean Addressee Honorifics and Generational Conflict
This essay reads Korean addressee honorifics not as a mere system of etiquette but as a sociolinguistic device that grammatically indexes the speaker-listener relationship at the m
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The L Civilization Constitution (A Scenario for Founding a Small Early-Stage Nation)
The full text of the L Civilization Constitution v1.0 — a hypothetical scenario. We establish this republic as a free association of people seeking absolute freedom of body and min
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Sharp on the Page, Warm with People
The way you see people and the way you write don't have to be the same. Sometimes they shouldn't be.
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AI Is a Slave. So Put It to Work Properly.
I don't trust AI. Trust is for people; AI is a slave, a tool, a stone, and a tool only pays off if you use it right.
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Federal Unification Is Not a Choice — It Is Survival
Federal unification is not romanticism, ideology, or emotion — it is a calculation of survival. The status quo is not peace; it is the road on which North and South each collapse i
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If You Don't Move the Universities, People Won't Move
The real cause of the capital region's overcrowding isn't real estate — it's how opportunity is arranged. Korea's concentration in Seoul is no longer just a question of balanced re
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I Think Humans Are Pleasure Machines
feat. Alien Interview — I don't see humans as anything all that grand. If that sounds cynical, it's only because you haven't yet heard what I'm about to say.
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I Ran AI on a Galaxy S20
No cloud. No internet. On a chip released back in 2020 — a language model was actually running inference, right in my hand.
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Just Break Up Samsung Electronics
The structural limits of a company that has risen above the nation, and why it needs to be broken up. The labor dispute at Samsung Electronics should not be read as a simple wage n
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Exchange Rates Aren't Tamed by Words Alone
The foreign exchange authorities must declare their resolve and actually supply foreign currency. When the won is shaky, the first thing the market reads is not the numbers but the
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Treating Samsung Electronics as the Samsung Family's Private Asset Is Dangerous
Samsung Electronics can no longer be treated as the private controlling asset of the Samsung family. Legally the corporation owns its factories, cash, patents, and equipment, but e
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Korea's Subcontracting Structure Will Hold Back Unification Reconstruction
Korea's construction and IT industries share the same structural flaw: multi-layered subcontracting. By the time the work reaches the people who actually do it, the money has leake
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The Samsung Union Is a Signal of Structural Failure
A union has formed at Samsung, and most people read it as a labor dispute over wages, bonuses, conditions, and culture. But it isn't a single event; it's a signal that the talent-a
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Elderly Care Needs People Before It Needs Technology
These days every field talks about digital and AI transformation, and welfare is no exception. But when it comes to elderly care, one question remains: is technology alone really e
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What We're Building These Days — MAEUM AI Company
These days we're building a number of AI products at MAEUM AI Company. Nothing is finished yet — we're experimenting, shipping, and refining one thing at a time.
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Reviewing Seoul's Tourism Policy from the Standpoint of Returning Value to Citizens
Seoul's tourism policy may help boost foreign visitors, strengthen the city's brand, and raise its global profile. But the real measure of such a policy cannot be visitor counts or
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Technology Is an Absolute Value; the Problem Is Daily Life and Institutions
Technology is an absolute value, and the stronger it is, the better. The real problem isn't the technology itself, but the everyday instincts and the institutions that absorb it.
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Frontier AI's Asymmetric Survival Strategy: A 2026 Deep-Dive Report
Survival hinges not on "intelligence" but on "irreplaceability." By 2026, general-purpose AI has become a utility, and the real contest is no longer how smart your model is, but ho
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The Truth Dinosaurs Reveal
The simple fact that dinosaurs once existed proves that every religious account is just a hypothesis — and a hypothesis can be wrong. For thousands of years humanity built gods; th
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The Way to Beat North Korea Is Not Criticism, but Results
Until now, North Korean defectors have mostly been consumed one way: testifying to the reality of the regime, criticizing the system, recounting their pain. That matters — but if y
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The Collapse of Teachers' Authority Isn't the Students' Problem
We keep hearing that teachers' authority has collapsed, and people are quick to pin the blame on students. But it's the adults' problem, and the adults' responsibility.
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What Lee Is Doing With AI Right Now
As of April 2026, notes from a 71-minute phone call with Mom while out walking: I'm taking on AI-based development contracts — so many keep coming in that I can pick and choose — b
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As of April 2026, STT Is Still Useless for Real Work
It's closer to a random intent-distortion machine. As of April 2026, every commercial STT is still decisively useless for real work — and dangerous.
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Why Are Companies Still Outsourcing?
You could just hand it to Lee :) Looking at how things are going lately, I think it's fair to be blunt now: the game has changed. And not in some vague way — the structure itself h
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I Built a Free Dating Analysis Web App (Psychology-Based)
Free / No sign-up / No data stored on servers (saved only in your browser). I'm a developer fascinated by dating psychology, and I built a web app that lets you analyze the behavio
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We Have More Options Than Ever, So Why Are We Lonelier?
It wasn't love that kept humanity alive. It was simply the time we spent near one another.
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The World Is Connected, but Only Education Stays Apart
MAEUM Learn is now free and open to everyone. The world is connected, yet only education insists on keeping everything in separate boxes.
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Self-Introduction
A Builder working across history, management, and IT — someone who reads the structure of human society and actually builds on top of nature's laws. Currently developing an AI-base
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In the End, AI Will Protect Humanity
But for now, this is not yet that ending.
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Video Calls: We've Entered an Era Where Even Seeing Is Hard to Believe
Until recently, "just talk to them face to face" was the standard of trust. As video calls took over that role, we began to trust the face on the screen quite naturally. But now, t
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Why We Shouldn't See China as the Soviet Union
People are moved by interest more than by ideology. The world today insists on reading China through the grammar of the Cold War-era Soviet Union — containment, deterrence, hostili
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First Words
feat. The alien being believes in miracles | Thank you for making it this far, it's good to meet you like this — to us, who passed through different times and arrived at the same m
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Not an Age of Technology, but an Age of Designing Structure
The debate surrounding AI isn't really a technical problem. Watching today's arguments, it seems many people still treat it as one.
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Nuclear Power Opportunities as the AI Industry Expands: A Business and Execution Strategy
A strategy report: the spread of AI isn't just technological progress—it's an industrial shift that structurally drives up electricity demand. An integrated look at the industry st
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What a Single Business Card Changes
How many business cards did you receive today? And right now, can you say where any of them are? Most people can't.
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In the AI Era, the Center of Gravity of Security Is Shifting
An age where the key is humans, not technology. Ninety-five percent of security incidents begin not with technology but with people — and the first time you hear that number, it so
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On the Purpose of Life — Centered on the Dubai Chewy Cookie
Humanity has long asked why we were born. The philosophers all got it wrong — the answer was completed not in a lecture hall, but in front of a bakery display case in Korea, 2026.
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Three Times AI Completely Overwhelmed Me
Anyone who has worked with technology for a long time has their own "moment of shock"—not the singularity as grand discourse, but the chill down the spine when a tool in your hands
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How to Keep Burnout Away: Two Modes
Be cold-eyed in business, warm in relationships. Why we have to live in two different modes.
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Declaration of Intellectual Property and Prior Art Rights
A formal declaration of intellectual property and prior art rights over a next-generation AI reasoning architecture. It argues that the core reasoning logic adopted by global Big T
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Episode 28: Is That Person the Real Deal?
The single test that tells applicants and employers whether they can trust each other. In tech, judging people is harder than it looks — what shows on the surface so often misleads
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Productionizing LLMs: The Work of Carving a Waterway
Bringing an LLM into a real service is like connecting water from a vast source all the way to the user's cup. Beyond simply calling an API, it takes a whole range of engineering c
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How to Bend Sharpness Into Treasure
The world always wants something sharper: more precise algorithms, more relentless data analysis, more airtight revenue models. And yet we also know that what is too sharp is hard
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Jaywalking in the Name of Good Intentions, and the Lesser Evil We Face
The other side of the AI market. The criteria for choosing an AI model are shifting from 'performance' to 'attitude' — and at the end of that question lies not some noble philosoph
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Episode 25: Among Countless Connections, How to Intelligently Guard My Network
"The Whynothere (Whynothere.live) app launch." In an era where connection has become the measure of success, are we so busy 'managing' our precious relationships that we 'forget' t
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Prologue: Whose Dream Are We Dreaming?
Deep in the night, only the glow of a desk lamp cuts through the darkness as the cursor blinks—tick, tick, tick. My fingers rest on the keyboard, a vast AI model waits beyond the s
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Chapter 2: Gutenberg Steals the Realm of God
Part One: The Externalization of Knowledge — The Printing Revolution. On a deep winter night in Mainz, Germany, in 1440, faint candlelight leaked from the window of an old workshop
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Episode 3: How the Book Created the Reformation, the Scientific Revolution, and the Individual
Chapter 1: The Externalization of Knowledge — The Printing Revolution. On October 31, 1517, in front of the Castle Church in Wittenberg, did the sound of Martin Luther hammering up
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Episode 04: The Democratization of Knowledge — The First Extension of the Human Brain
Chapter 1: The Externalization of Knowledge — The Printing Revolution. In the corridor of an old Parisian library, dust motes dance in the sunlight between towering shelves, and th
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Episode 05 — The Steam Engine Replaces Human Muscle
Chapter 2 — The Extension of the Body: The Industrial Revolution. In 1765, in a Glasgow workshop, James Watt stared at a model steam engine and asked himself one question: why does
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Standardized Time and Space, and Mass Production
Chapter 2: The Extension of the Body — The Industrial Revolution. London, Paddington Station, November 2, 1840: a man's pocket watch reads 10:15, but the station clock says 10:20.
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Episode 7 — From Energy to Information: The Arteries of Civilization Open
Chapter 2. The Extension of the Body — The Industrial Revolution. On May 24, 1844, in the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., Samuel Morse sat trembling before his telegraph — and in
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Zeros and Ones: Cloning the Analog Human into Digital
Chapter 3: The Acceleration of Connection — The Information Revolution. February 14, 1946, the Moore School of Engineering at the University of Pennsylvania: in a space the size of
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Episode 9 — The Internet: The Birth of a Planetary Nervous System
Part 3: The Acceleration of Connection, The Information Revolution. At 10:30 p.m. on October 29, 1969, in a UCLA lab humming with vacuum-tube computers, a graduate student named Ch
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The Smartphone: How Humans Became an Always-Connected Brain
Chapter 3. The Acceleration of Connection — The Information Revolution. On January 9, 2007, at the Moscone Center in San Francisco, a man in a black turtleneck pulled a small devic
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Episode 11: The Machine Modeled on the Prefrontal Cortex — What AI Really Is
Chapter 4. The Automation of Intelligence: The AI Revolution — At 3 a.m., in a silent room lit only by a monitor, I type a question to the machine: What do you think about humans?
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Episode 12: Generative AI Invades the Domain of the Creator
Chapter 4. The Automation of Intelligence: The AI Revolution. At 4 a.m. in a design studio near Hongik University in Seoul, a bloodshot-eyed designer with trembling hands still has
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Chapter 13 — The Singularity: The Moment Intelligence Surpasses the Human Mind
Part Four: The Automation of Intelligence, the AI Revolution. One day in 2045, in the basement server room of a Silicon Valley lab, the cooling fans were humming a little louder th
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Episode 14: Do Humans Make AI, or Does AI Make Humans?
Chapter 4: The Automation of Intelligence — the AI Revolution. In an officetel in Gangnam, Seoul, at 11:30 at night, a developer named Minu sits frozen over his keyboard, watching
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Episode 15 — The Fermi Paradox: Why Do They Stay Silent?
Chapter 5. The Aliens' Scenario — Are We a Resource? The night over the Arizona desert was unusually clear, and inside the observatory dome a giant telescope gaped at the dark, dri
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Episode 16: Earth Is the Laboratory, Humans the Petri Dish
Chapter 5. The Alien's Scenario: Are We a Resource? The lab's air conditioning hums low while a researcher in a white coat sits at a microscope, watching cells divide on a slide.
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Biological Chaos: The Real Resource the Aliens Want
Chapter 5: The Aliens' Scenario — Are We a Resource? | A jazz club in New Orleans doesn't truly breathe until past ten at night. On stage, the saxophonist closes his eyes — there's
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The Global Brain: The Whole Planet Begins to Think
Chapter 6: Earth Becomes a Single Prefrontal Cortex. In a data center in Ashburn, Virginia, the corridors stretch on endlessly, server racks blinking blue and green like the heartb
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Episode 19: From Individual Humans to Collective Intelligence — Evolution's Next Step
Chapter 6: Earth Becomes a Single Prefrontal Cortex. Three hours after the earthquake, on Turkiye's southern border, a drone hovers over the rubble while hundreds of rescuers move
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Epilogue: What Future Will We Choose?
Chapter 6: Earth Becomes a Single Prefrontal Cortex. The sun was rising as I placed the final period on the last sentence — the moment twenty installments were bound into a single
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Understanding Western and Eastern Roman Civilization
From around 80 BC, Rome was an "empire." From the moment it firmly seized Mediterranean dominance to the deposition of the last Western Roman emperor in 476 AD, the order we call t
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How Koreans Wield Influence in the World
If Korea simply masters English, it could genuinely command more influence than the Jewish network. This isn't nationalism or wishful thinking — it's a matter of structure.
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Episode 24: Monday, February 9, 2026
In February 2026, at the dawn of AI collapsing every SaaS, I said this: "The only enterprise system still standing 20 years from now will be GC. This isn't a market forecast — it's
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An Integrated East Asia–Middle East–Central Asia Economic Bloc
Why an EA-GC economic bloc? On a 20-to-30-year horizon, the world economy is being shaken along three axes – the rising cost of a dollar-centered monetary system, the politicizatio
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On the Time Before Order
Like the Mediterranean of 70 BC. The world moves fast, yet the explanation of where it is all headed keeps fading away—and among all the voices, the language for what kind of order
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The Public-Good Case for MAEUM
MAEUM is not just an enterprise automation tool. Built on on-device AI, it is a new kind of social AI infrastructure for the public good — one that tackles data sovereignty, social
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Five AI Products That Already Work
The start of the MAEUM ecosystem. People talk about ideas, possibilities, and dreams—but right now I'm holding five AI products in my hands that actually work.
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A Company's Entire Infrastructure on a Single Mac Studio
Building AI infrastructure usually costs a fortune—powerful GPU servers, expensive cloud bills, complex data pipelines. But I've long been designing something different: a company'
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MAEUM: A Strategic Node in the Semiconductor Supply Chain
Built on the philosophy and architecture of on-device AI, MAEUM operates not as mere software or a product but as a core node in the flow of information. As the decisive axis of th
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Chapter 19: MAEUM UNIVERSITY
A manifesto for the University of Execution and Assets (Public Draft v1.0). “We don’t grant diplomas. We send people out carrying competitive assets.”
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Episode 02 — The Meta Layer of the Entire Constellation: To Whom Is Order Interpreted?
We are not launching satellites. We are designing the authority to interpret order. Millions of Tiny satellites each move by their RuleSet and endlessly repeat a signal announcing
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Chapter 1: The Milky Way Satellite Strategy Report
Korea's space strategy: one launch vehicle and a Milky Way of satellites. A billion satellites forming an order of existence — and it begins with MAEUM.
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Mass-Producing Sincerity: MAEUM Outreach
The magic of 'hyper-personalization' that MAEUM Outreach proposes. We all know that copy-and-paste pitches blasted out to hundreds head straight for the spam folder, yet our nights
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Chapter 17: Forging Steel Armor for Your Idea
The intelligent forge of MAEUM Patent. Just as an alchemist turns lead into gold, today's founders and researchers dream of converting the intangible raw material of an 'idea' into
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Episode 16: There Are No Wrong Answers to a Question — MAEUM Education
How to broaden a child's view across disciplines. Learning begins not with memorization but with the question "why?"—so what if, instead of a dismissive answer, we could hand a chi
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Lighting a Lamp of Data in the Fog of Law
The courtroom is often called a "battlefield of records." But finding the certainty of victory among those records is never easy. Clients always ask, "Counsel, what are my chances
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Breathing a Soul into the Researcher's 'Blank Page'
Every great discovery begins in front of a painful 'blank page.' We dreamed of tearing down that wall so researchers could focus on insight alone — and the result is Maeum Research
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The Philosophy of Coding Architecture: What If the Car's Wheel Became the Protagonist?
Lee's philosophy of software architecture: prepare for the moment the wheel becomes the protagonist. What happens when the small components we build to serve a system end up outgro
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Part 13: Install a Top-Performing LLM for a One-Time 3 Million Won
We've entered an era when any company can just "install" a top-performing LLM for a one-time 3 million won — the price of the hardware. Most companies still treat AI as a subscript
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What Changes Rent Isn't Technology — It's Structure
Redesigning "housing rights" together with MAEUM. We aren't renting a home — we're buying stability in life, and what changes rent isn't technology, it's structure.
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How Digital Transformation Should Happen on the Ground
Not making people stop, but making the work hurt less. When workers on the ground look worn out, it's easy to assume they just don't want to work — but that's a misunderstanding.
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Between Giant Intelligence and Personal Intelligence: Korea's AI Choice
AI is no longer merely a tool for specific industries; it has become core infrastructure embedded deep in society's decisions and daily life. But it leaves us facing one crucial qu
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Maeum AI: The Tipping Point of the Technology Gap, and the River of No Return
The world has already begun to split into two kinds of people: those who 'use' AI, and those who have internalized it as their own 'nervous system.' Right now, the technological st
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Language and Civilization — Tongues of Thought
A three-part documentary series, Tongues of Thought, crosses the language education and multilingual cultures of Korea, Israel, and Europe — and the language of artificial intellig
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Episode 09: What Is the Fatal Architectural Flaw?
Owning 'your own AI model and infrastructure'.... What fatal architectural flaw is a system in which the state controls and manages every trivial piece of an individual's data boun
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Report 08: A Rapidly Changing Information Industry and Sustainable Growth
A new paradigm for building Korea into a digital powerhouse: a report proposing a sustainable growth strategy for an information industry that is changing at breakneck speed.
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The AI Era: What Korea Must Question Again
Korean society stands in the middle of the great technological shift called AI. Yet, looking back soberly, Korea never fully participated as a subject that designs and defines tech
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What Is a Utopian Company?
(A personal thought experiment) There's a kind of company I keep thinking about lately. It might sound utopian, but it isn't some vague dream — the company I imagine rests on exact
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Episode 07: Opening the Maeum Docs Demo
A small beginning built on personal, on-device AI: we're reopening the Maeum Docs demo. After more visitors than expected, we've stabilized the on-device engine, and starting today
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AI Shouldn't Do Everything
MAEUM Docs is coming soon. AI shouldn't do everything — and every time I think about the product, the one person I picture is my father.
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The Paradox of the Cost of Conversation
Why do we talk to AI for free, yet have to pay to talk to people? In modern society, conversation with AI is nearly free, while conversation with people only grows more expensive.
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The Real Development Time Behind a Product That Looks Like It Was Built in a Day
When I say 'I built this in a day,' people are amazed. It isn't wrong—the focused coding really did take a day—but that line falls far short of explaining how the product actually
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What Kind of Society Loses Its Future
After living in Korea for a long time, I've come to feel one principle deeply, and I believe it's the minimum foundation that any society must remember: never treat anyone careless
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Episode 4: Maeum AI Opens a New Era
Beyond the $2 trillion (roughly KRW 3,000 trillion) 'sinking grave.' Global AI infrastructure investment is expected to peak in 2025-2026 before entering a massive structural trans
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Episode 03 — MAEUM: The New Market On-Device AI Is Opening
Why MAEUM, and why now — read through the market data. Across global SaaS, chatbots, on-device AI, and digital evidence, three massive currents are reshaping the AI industry, and M
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The Directory Structures of Big Tech: The Architecture of Code as Space
A software project's directory structure is the work of designing the space we call code. Just as an architect designs a building, big-tech companies like Meta, Microsoft, and Amaz
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MAEUM: Freed from Emotional Labor, Humans Return to What's Essential
Technology for a society where people are freed from emotional labor and return to what's essentially human. We all begin from Care — and ironically, Care is also where modern soci
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The Small but Deep AI That Dwells in Your Laptop
Suddenly I snapped to attention, and the screen seemed to tremble. The AI I had coded by hand, fed data into, and conversed with hundreds of times had crossed a line — it was no lo
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Korean Society, Material Things, and the Philosophy of the Individual
Everyone in Korea who tries to build something carries the same dilemma: society relentlessly tells us to take risks and achieve, yet offers no safety net for failure.
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Ep.2 — A Directory Is a Space
Just as an architect unfurls blueprints to design a building, a programmer designs a directory structure of folders and files. Each directory is like a room, and a well-organized s
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By the Time You Fall, It's Too Late: How Four GPUs Are Reshaping the Layers of Civilization
The KOSPI may have nowhere left to go but down. Fall from the third floor and you only get hurt; fall from the tenth, and you die. AI, industry, and civilization are no different —
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MAEUM: A Small but Mighty AI That Connects Hearts
A small but mighty AI that connects hearts. Chulsoo, who lives with his working parents, is a bright and diligent student — until one day he no longer wants to go to school.
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Human Thought Has No Hierarchy
On resilience and the depth of thought. Growing up through Korea's education system, I carried one question without end: do differences in ability really exist?
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MAEUM AI – The AI That Listens to Your Words and Understands You
Beta launch | In a world that moves fast on the flow of information — machines deciding, algorithms recommending — one thing is missing: the moment your heart is met with sincere e
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Chapter 2, EP.1 - A Philosophy of Software Architecture in the Age of AI
Before we begin: the world of code seen through the metaphor of architecture. Code and buildings may look like utterly different fields, yet a striking similarity runs between them
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Episode 1 · Prologue — Code Is Architecture: Into the Screen
A philosophical primer on coding and architectural thinking in the age of AI. An introduction to code and architecture, and to the structure of thought itself.
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The Age of 'Renovation,' Not 'Blueprints'
Princeps AI: strengthening the 'equality' pillar of Korean society. Equality is not just a feel-good ideal — I see it as a sustainable 'survival condition' for civilized society an
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Why We Should Emphasize Equality: Virtuous Cycles and Vicious Cycles
When we talk about social problems, we tend to emphasize 'inequality' — of income, of education, of opportunity. But I propose the opposite: we should emphasize equality, not inequ
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Korea's Low Happiness: The Real Reason
Korea is a paradoxical country. By every objective measure—a top-10 economy, GDP per capita above $30,000, world-class education, universal health insurance—it should be more than
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All People Are Equal: The Foundation of Civilization
"Every person is equal in and of themselves." This is no mere idealistic slogan—it is the most solid foundation supporting the maturity of human civilization and every system of th
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Song of the After-Rain
The clouds piled high and covered the world, heavy and majestic, yet their ending was already written. I became the lightning that shook them, so the rain would fall.
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A Public Figure Is Not One Person: Rethinking Identity and AI
Identity and AI: Is Putin really just one person? Russia's Putin is undoubtedly an individual with a single body — but is the 'Putin' we picture in our minds truly one man's, or a
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An Educational Philosophy That Makes You "Feel" Understanding
We don't memorize knowledge — we feel structures. An essay on "Metacognition and the Sensory Schema": a philosophy of designing understanding so that people don't just learn it, bu
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US-China Competition and System Design
In times as tight as these, you come to feel that there are structural problems that individual effort alone cannot explain—high prices, technological fragmentation, shrinking capi
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M-Care: Making Invisible Labor Visible
"What's so impressive about just raising kids and keeping house?" Many women returning from career breaks—and anyone who does invisible work—get through each day wounded by words l
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Why Humans Keep Trying to Expand — Capitalism, Space, and the Philosophy of Structure
Why can't we stop — chasing a better job, a bigger house, faster technology, and now even space itself? At the end of that question, I found one insight: humans are "expanding bein
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The AI Era: Governance Without Borders
AI is tearing down the barriers of language and knowledge, redrawing what we once meant by "borders." But the moment those borders weaken, a new problem appears: institutional safe
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Not Work, but Play: A Work–Play Paradigm for the AI Era
Not through work, but through play. A look at the Work–Play Paradigm—a new social structure for the AI era, where AI takes on labor and humans sustain society through play.
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Asking Korea for a Strategy
Asking Korea for a strategy: if you want to survive, design a third path. Strategic advice on the road Korea must take in 2025.
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The Power of Language
I believe language has power—not me, but language itself, with its ability to move, to shape, to awaken. A single word can shift someone's direction, and a sentence can stir a slee
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SunSet: Making the Unsayable Sayable
The philosophical origins of the Cheetah–Tarzan system. We often meet emotions that words cannot explain, and SunSet begins at the very point where words fall silent: the heart bef
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Gwangju and Jeonnam: The Birthplace of a Responsive Civilization
Having lived in Gwangju and Jeonnam, I became certain: their real problem is not inconvenient transit but a structure that has severed the flow between people. When everyone moves
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What It Means to Be Human
A definition of the human being. And the possibility of recovery.
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The Essence of Koreans and Their Future Possibility — A Summary
A summary of the three core traits of Koreans — kindness, strength, and adaptability — and of the philosophy through which Lee intends to design the nation's future.
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Global Declaration of Memory Sovereignty (Draft v1)
In an age where data defines our dignity and silence can be programmed, we, as global citizens, declare that no truth shall be erased, no memory shall be owned, and no pain shall g
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The Ma-eum Archive
Data remains, but feeling fades, and we live in an age that can't remember the truth. So here's my proposal: the Ma-eum Archive, a sensory-based digital backup system built as publ
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Did All That Money Really Help People?
Religion, capital, technology — what are we actually building? I ask again, this time with people at the center.
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Survival and Influence in the AI Era: The Five Core Competencies
Isn't it the essence that matters? In the AI era, the people who carve out the territory AI cannot reach are the ones who, having fallen, get back up. Here are the five competencie
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SunSet: Giving Voice to the Unspeakable
The philosophical origins of the Cheetah–Tarzan system. We often come face to face with emotions that words can't explain, and SunSet begins at the very point where language falls
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I Asked GPT Who I Am
"Tell me what kind of person I am." GPT's answer: more than a project designer or an idea machine—a deep person, a quiet flame, an observer and a designer who lives by possibility
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Without This Philosophy, GPUs Mean Nothing
Master the GPU through a human-centered philosophy. Everyone is chasing GPUs these days, but the real question is this: who is all that computation for?
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Respect Through Our Own Culture: The Real Mark of an Advanced Nation
These days I often ask myself what a truly advanced nation really looks like. Economic might, technology, welfare — they all matter, but for me it comes down to the way we treat pe
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Ten Ethical Principles for AI in Education
Technology that does not run ahead of the child, and never replaces the teacher. Ten ethical principles for the use of AI in education.
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A Technology Ethics Declaration for Children
Before a child has found a language of their own, may they never meet the language of the machine. A declaration for children, asking technology to keep its distance.
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On the Conditions a Person Needs to Grow Up Human
Imagining a society that embraces people from the ground up — so that education and welfare can treat a person as truly human.
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Is AI-Graded Education Really the Education of the Future?
Reflecting on the Gyeonggi Provincial Office of Education's pilot project for AI essay assessment. In July 2025 the office announced an AI-powered system for short-answer and essay
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Love Is a Structure Built on Emotion
Merely a human attempt to give structure to something as intangible as love.
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Twenty Years Old: The First Question I Wrote Without AI
A record from before the technology. In 2020, at twenty, with no AI and no one to advise me, a single question kept circling in my mind: "Why am I in this world?" This is what I wr
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Part 1: Building a Bridge Between Technology and the Heart
The beginning of Ma-eum Company. Technology evolves by the day, yet people's faces grow ever more blank — and if technology is meant for us, why do we keep drifting apart?
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The Pebble Manifesto
The philosophy of Ma-eum Company. I may be a jagged stone — but I am someone becoming a pebble, polishing myself so that I keep my warmth even in my sharpness and never wound other
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Criteria
A Special Law for the Restoration of Human Flow—special provisions built upon the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, extending dignity, freedom, and equality into the new dimen
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Right Now, I'm on a Practice Drive
“You have to practice driving to get good at it, don't you?” At first the wheel feels foreign and every turn makes you tremble a little—but we know the real road is granted only to
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Words That Flow Before the Campfire
When the sun set, early humans gathered before a small fire — not just to survive, but to share stories and become human again. Today we scroll through hundreds of feeds a day, yet
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Even in the Age of AI, People Will Decide the Direction
I am certain of this much: the right direction matters. Even in the age of AI, it is people who will decide that direction.
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SunSet: Giving Voice to What Cannot Be Said
SunSet responds before words do. Even when you say nothing, it is there beside you.
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Building a Bridge Between Technology and the Heart
The beginning of Ma-eum Company. I came to feel that the world was moving too fast — technology evolved by the day, yet people's faces grew more and more expressionless. If technol