Covering technology isn’t just a job — it’s a lifestyle that never hits pause. Being a tech news guy means living in a world where every day brings something new, unexpected, and occasionally overwhelming. One moment you’re writing about Apple’s latest chipset, and the next, you’re deep-diving into how an AI startup from nowhere just raised $100 million overnight. The tech world moves fast — faster than most people can scroll — and my job is to keep up.
It started as a hobby. I was that kid who waited for every smartphone launch like it was a movie premiere. Over time, curiosity turned into a habit — and the habit turned into a career. Today, I spend my mornings scanning updates from X (formerly Twitter), Substacks, and Reddit threads. By noon, I’m usually knee-deep in drafts, translating complex jargon into something that makes sense to readers who just want to know what’s worth caring about.
But here’s the truth most people don’t see: behind every article, there’s a constant battle between speed and accuracy. The internet rewards whoever posts first — but credibility is what keeps you standing. One wrong claim about a leaked feature or unverified product launch can burn trust built over years. That pressure, though, is what keeps the adrenaline alive.
What I love most is the unpredictability. Some days, it’s all about gadgets and specs — the latest foldable phone, a laptop refresh, or a breakthrough in display tech. Other days, it’s about something much bigger: how technology is changing society, reshaping jobs, and even influencing the way we think.
I’ve realized that being a tech news guy isn’t just about reporting updates — it’s about decoding the future for people who don’t have time to chase it themselves. Every headline I write is a small attempt to make sense of the constant evolution around us.
In a world that upgrades faster than we can blink, my role is simple yet exciting — to stand at the intersection of curiosity and change, and tell the story of tomorrow, one headline at a time.