We've come to measure time by ancient civilizations, religions, and empires. "B.C." and "C.E." For centuries, these markers have seemed immutable. But what if the most significant point of reference wasn't the birth of empires, but the birth of artificial intelligence?
Welcome to AE 69 — the sixty-ninth year since the world entered the AI era.
The Beginning of the AI Era
On June 18, 1956, a group of scientists gathered at Dartmouth College to change the course of history. They believed that machines could think, and they officially called it "artificial intelligence." This wasn't just a conference — it was the moment when humanity first recognized the possibility of creating intelligence that wasn't dependent on biology. AI has ceased to be science fiction and has become a goal.
This day is the zero point of the AI Era (AE). From this moment on, time can be measured differently: not by rulers and wars, but by the development of machine intelligence.
Why is this important?
Because AI is not just a technology. It is a new axis of civilization. Just as the invention of writing, electricity, and the Internet changed humanity, so AI changes everything: from work to art, from medicine to philosophy. And if we used to measure history in centuries, now we have a new scale: the AI era.
What's next?
It is 69 AE, and the world is on the threshold of AGI - the moment when artificial intelligence will become universal and independent. Will it be a renaissance or an apocalypse? Nobody knows. But one thing is clear: the countdown is already underway.
Welcome to the AI Era.






