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Why I write
These writings are fragments of a longer journey. They explore movement, change, and direction across technology, society, and lived experience. I write not to offer answers, but to invite reflection on how we build, how we move, and what continues to matter as contexts evolve. This is not a destination. It is a path, still unfolding.
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When Life is Outsourced
We live in an age of unprecedented wealth. Multi-trillion-dollar companies are already here, and trillion-dollar individuals no longer feel implausible. This is not a critique of wealth creation or consolidation. Money itself is not the problem. Money is a social agreement based on trust. It is not tangible. It is a tool. The real question is not how much wealth exists, or who holds it, but how money is positioned in our lives, our societies, and the systems we build around i

Christos Makiyama
3 hours ago2 min read


The Future Starts Now
I’ve used the phrase “The future starts now” for years. It shaped my actions, my thinking, my attitude. I believed that what I do today shapes the outcomes of tomorrow. That is true. But I only understood the deeper meaning after a period that surprised me. After a season of momentum, I noticed something uncomfortable in myself. Confidence quietly became “rightness.” And “rightness” can easily drift into a need for attention, recognition, and control. Underneath that, there w

Christos Makiyama
5 days ago2 min read


Castles and Paths
Early in the morning, while it was still dark, I went out for my first run of the new year. I’ve run this route many times. The path doesn’t change. The scenery always does. New houses appear. Old ones disappear. The path is familiar. Everything around it keeps changing. I didn’t expect it, but once I noticed it, it felt obvious. That quiet moment stayed with me. Long before castles, we built paths. We moved, traded, explored. Paths emerged naturally. And they endured. If you

Christos Makiyama
Jan 1, 20261 min read


When AI Will Need God
This year, AI became impossible to ignore, shaping geopolitics, markets, and how we work. Whether it is a bubble or not matters less than one fact: AI is here to stay. And that is where the deeper question begins. AI will give us clarity. Unprecedented clarity. It will map the world outside us, and increasingly, the world within us. It will explain, predict, and optimize almost everything. But clarity is not direction. As answers multiply, a different gap will emerge: not how

Christos Makiyama
Dec 28, 20252 min read


What Diversity Really Enables
With a little time to spare before heading to the airport, I took a walk through central Athens this morning and found myself at Syntagma, standing in front of the Parliament, a scene I’ve seen hundreds of times. Yet this time, it made me pause. It reminded me why democracy was born in Athens and why that same reason is deeply connected to how innovation is born as well. The answer lies in proximity within diversity. Greece’s geomorphological uniqueness fragmented the land in

Christos Makiyama
Dec 13, 20251 min read


When Greece and Japan Redifined an Industry
I am waiting in the airport lounge, about to catch my flight, and a thought crossed my mind, a reflection about innovation. A story that passes unnoticed outside the shipping world, yet it captures something essential about how innovation really works. And it happens to connect my two home countries: Greece and Japan. In 1952, Greek shipowner John M. Carras ordered Tini, the first Japanese-built export ship after WWII. Japan then was far from the industrial giant it would bec

Christos Makiyama
Nov 29, 20252 min read


Chewing Gum Economy
I was recently working on a presentation I plan to give. At some point, I unconsciously reached for a piece of gum. A few minutes later, I noticed I was already wrapping it in its paper and throwing it into the litter box. And it struck me how often we treat new ideas in entrepreneurship the same way. We chase the “taste”: a hyped technology, a promising trend, a shiny partnership. The first minutes are exciting — full of flavor and confidence. But when the sweetness fades an

Christos Makiyama
Nov 22, 20251 min read


When Innovation Becomes Invisible
Over dinner this week in Tokyo, a friend visiting for business told me: “Japan is not as innovative as it used to be.” He works in AI software at a major PC company, and from that perspective he’s right: Japan never led in apps or platforms, and it lost the consumer electronics battle to South Korea and China. But here’s what most people miss: Japan didn’t lose innovation. Japan made innovation invisible. The real action isn’t in apps. It’s in the layers under the apps: mater

Christos Makiyama
Nov 17, 20251 min read


When Hustle Has No Strategy
Recently, I had a discussion with a friend, who reminded me how often great ideas lose direction under pressure, and how hustle without validation can quietly erode even the most promising ones. I’ve seen this pattern many times. Startups begin with a bold vision and strong core technology, but as pressure to generate revenue grows, resources get pulled in too many directions. Projects multiply, key people start questioning the direction, and the original mission fades into t

Christos Makiyama
Nov 3, 20251 min read
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