Categories
Just a reminder: no one likes software
Most people don’t actually like using software. Every extra click adds frustration, and no one wants to spend their day configuring digital assistants or building logic trees. That’s why I started Kaamfu: to create a system that automates everything so I don’t have to keep using more software. Technology should fade into the background and just work. This is my reminder of why I’m building all of this in the first place.

Every few days, I am reminded of something that keeps me grounded in my mission: no one actually likes using software.
The tech industry pretends otherwise. Every startup pitch deck is filled with screenshots of cheerful dashboards and customizable workflows. But the truth is, every extra click during your workday adds a small dose of frustration. By the end of the day, you are not digitally empowered, you are furious and ready to throw your computer into a river.
And yet, everywhere you look, there are companies selling the dream of “building your own AI employee.” Really? I do not even want to build my own bookshelf, let alone an army of digital interns that I have to train, configure, and manage. Somehow the industry forgot that most people do not wake up thinking, “I wish I had more systems to explain things to.”
No one wants to spend their day building triggers, loops, and conditional logic trees for bots that are supposed to save them time. The only people who seem excited about it are the ones building and selling the tools.
This is why I started Kaamfu: because I genuinely dislike using software. Not technology itself, but the endless panels, the popups, the ten-step workflows, and the dashboards full of reminders you will never look at. My goal is simple: build the smartest machine that can do everything for me so I never have to touch it again.
Every feature we build, every automation we create, and every AI assistant we train comes from one truth: I do not want to do this anymore. And I think most normal people feel the same way. Technology should fade into the background. It should work so smoothly that you forget it is even there. That is the goal. Not hundreds of AI employees and endless configuration menus; just work that gets done quietly, efficiently, without clicks, confirmations, or explanations.
Okay, I just needed to vent a bit and remind myself why I am doing all this.
…
Every organization is in the race to autonomy
Autonomization is not a distant future. The race is on, and the organizations preparing today will be the ones that win tomorrow.