While We Debate Form 45 and Sit in Kaghan Traffic, The World Has Already Entered the Future
Imran Malik – WebDesk – MediaBites News
By the time we finally escape the endless Kaghan-Naran traffic jam, survive another round of GB elections, finish arguing over Form 45 and Form 47, and ban a few more opposition rallies for “security reasons,” the rest of the world may already be living inside computers that think faster than our politicians speak.
Ladies and gentlemen, while we remain emotionally invested in containers, dharnas, cheap political point-scoring, and television talk shows featuring five angry men shouting simultaneously, Nvidia’s chip wizard Jensen Huang has quietly arrived from the future.
And no, he is not announcing another “faster laptop.”
That era is over.
According to Nvidia, the computers we have been using for the last 30 years are basically glorified typewriters with Wi-Fi. The company is now building AI-powered machines that won’t just run software — they will understand us, assist us, predict our needs, and, soon, probably ask Pakistanis why they still print screenshots of documents.
Meanwhile, somewhere in Pakistan, a government office is still demanding photocopies attested by a Grade-17 officer.
The contrast is breathtaking.
The world’s biggest tech companies are discussing artificial intelligence agents, real-time AI companions, and chips capable of transforming human productivity forever.
We, on the other hand, are still discussing whether election results should be announced before or after midnight.
Silicon Valley is preparing for a future where computers become intelligent partners in daily life. Pakistan is preparing another committee to investigate why the internet slows down whenever “sensitive situations” arise.
NVIDIA says this AI revolution is only the “first inning.” That means the actual technological explosion hasn’t even started yet.
Imagine where the world will be by the ninth inning.
At this rate, by the time AI-powered laptops start replacing offices globally, we may still be stuck debating whether students should memorize essays or understand them.
The funniest part is that many of us still think AI means making funny photos or cheating on assignments.
No. AI is about to redesign industries, replace workflows, reshape economies, redefine warfare, revolutionize education, and completely transform how human beings interact with technology.
And what are we doing?
Fighting on Twitter over political speeches while uploading blurry screenshots from television channels that still use 2009 graphics packages.
- China is building AI cities.
- America is building AI chips.
- The Gulf is investing billions into AI infrastructure.
And we are proud to announce another underpass.
Perhaps the most tragic part is that Pakistan actually has brilliant minds capable of competing globally. Our engineers, developers, freelancers, and tech entrepreneurs are already proving themselves on the international stage.
But national conversations shape national priorities.
If the entire country remains trapped in endless political noise, reactionary outrage, and short-term chaos, we risk becoming spectators in the biggest technological revolution in human history.
The AI party has begun.
Unfortunately, many of us are still stuck outside the venue, arguing with traffic police near Balakot.


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