Alejandro watched the vibration travel through the glass of the window, a subtle tremor that seemed to synchronize with the hum of the RENFE train as it pulled out of Madrid-Chamartín. He wasn’t looking at the scenery. He was looking at the sitting in his immediate vicinity.
11 wrists were resting on armrests or laps, and out of those, 11 devices flickered to life simultaneously. A shared notification-perhaps a weather alert or a trending headline-sent a uniform glow across the carriage. It was a phantom chorus of silicon and light. In that moment, he felt a strange, cold alienation.
21,601
Rhythmic twitches per hour, indifferent to the cloud.
He looked down at his own wrist, where a small disc of brushed steel sat quietly. There was no glow. There was only the microscopic, rhythmic twitch of a second hand, moving , indifferent to the Wi-Fi signal or the cloud.
The Optimization Cage
He had spent the last navigating the high-velocity world of digital logistics, where everything is optimized, A/B tested, and fed through a machine learning loop. But this morning, the optimization felt like a cage.
He realized that every piece of technology he owned was trying to predict his next move, trying to “personalize” his life until there was no person left, only a data
