Most of my days are filled with meetings, decisions, information overload, and context switching.
I work in a large global company, managing teams, projects, and systems that move fast and rarely slow down. Over time, I realized that the hardest part of modern work is no longer access to information — it is managing attention, energy, and cognitive load.
AI changed something for me.
Not because it magically solved everything, but because it became the first technology that genuinely helped reduce mental friction in everyday work.
I started experimenting quietly:
using AI to organize fragmented notes,
reduce repetitive writing,
summarize complex information,
build lightweight knowledge systems,
and protect uninterrupted deep work time.
Some experiments failed.
Some workflows became surprisingly useful.
A few completely changed how I work.
OpenEdux is a place to document those systems.
This is not a startup announcement.
Not an AI hype blog.
Not a productivity guru project.
It is simply a long-term notebook about:
AI-assisted workflows
modern knowledge systems
learning and cognition
productivity under pressure
and building calmer ways to work in an increasingly noisy world
I believe many professionals are entering the same transition:
from manually operating tools
to designing systems that think alongside us.
The goal is not to work endlessly faster.
The goal is to build better environments for thinking, learning, and living.
If any of these topics resonate with you, welcome.
— OpenEdux