Thomas Huhn

I’ve been building software companies for over 25 years. I’ve been investing for over 30. I’ve survived the dot-com crash, the financial crisis of 2008, and the crypto winter of 2018 — where I watched my portfolio collapse by more than 80% and held anyway. Not out of stubbornness, but out of conviction.

Today I run two companies: one in AI-powered compliance technology, another in software development. I’m not a financial analyst. I’m not a crypto influencer. I’m not a journalist covering tech from the outside.

I’m a practitioner. I build the things I write about.

In early 2026, I discovered an open-source project that let me deploy my own AI agent — an autonomous assistant running on my own server, 24/7. I named her Jeannie. Today, she triages my emails, handles outreach, reviews contracts, files invoices, and delivers regular market and competitive reports. Every day I find new tasks to delegate. My work hasn’t just become more convenient — it has become dramatically more efficient.

This is not a future vision. This is my Tuesday.

That personal experience — watching AI transform my own workflow and business in real time — is what drove me to write The Convergence Thesis. Not as a theoretical exercise, but as a practical framework for anyone who senses that something fundamental is changing and doesn’t yet know what to do about it.

The Thesis in One Paragraph

Artificial intelligence, robotics, and cryptocurrency are converging into a machine economy — a system where autonomous agents perform cognitive work, robots perform physical work, and crypto provides the financial rails for machine-to-machine transactions. Those who own the infrastructure of this new economy will be on the right side of the greatest wealth transfer in history. Those who don’t will find their labor income shrinking faster than they can adapt.

Skin in the Game

I have money in Bitcoin, in Ethereum, in AI stocks, and in robotics. I build AI products myself. I have skin in the game.

Whether that is a conflict of interest or proof of conviction, you’ll have to decide for yourself. I side with Nassim Taleb: anyone not willing to put their own money behind their thesis shouldn’t have a thesis.

Contact

Reach me on LinkedIn.

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