//the world of AI
[REVOLUTION]or[EVOLUTION]?
Built by humans, run by agents.
About me
Hi,
My name is George and I'm a pretty ordinary middle-aged guy from Moravia. I work in automotive and built my career step by step, from the shop floor up to management.
I like photography, modern tech, and automating things in IT. Other than that, nothing special.
These are notes from my journey through the world of AI.
What Euphronic is
We're at the start of a new era. Whether we want it or not, sooner or later AI will touch everyone. It's unavoidable.
Euphronic is an open lab of sorts, with the doors open to anyone. A place where I test what AI can do and think out loud while I'm at it. I want to share that journey — what I tried, what worked, and where I hit a wall.
Built by humans, run by agents. It's not a marketing slogan. It's how I see AI. The human picks the direction and sets the pace. The agents do the work.
What to expect from this place
First, calm instead of hype. When you look up anything about AI, you usually get buried in ads, videos, podcasts, paid courses, and promises of miracle fixes by tomorrow. Not here. I try to gather everything useful in one place, for free. I share what I've learned, teach the people around me, and hopefully build a community.
Second, honesty. You'll find the things that didn't work, where I failed hard. You learn far more from someone else's failure than from a tutorial where everything worked first time.
Third, curation. This isn't a diary of only what I use. I follow what others are doing too — Czech and international creators, videos, podcasts, news. I pick what makes sense to me and add my own experience and take.
Why I do it
Because the sky isn't the limit. Vibe coding gets me genuinely excited, and I see endless possibilities in it.
Sharing what I know isn't a weakness. Quite the opposite. Sharing is key. And when I learn something, I feel almost obliged to pass it on.
Look at the turn of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. That's when the Industrial Revolution started. Today we have AI and vibe coding. To me, that's just as big a turning point as it was back then.
The second reason is more practical. When I was starting out, finding good information was a struggle and took ages. Most of the useful stuff was in English. Hidden in videos or behind paywalls. In Czech, almost nothing. So I made myself a promise: once I found my footing, I'd write it all down on my own site, in my native language. My version of what I wish I'd found back then — in Czech, in one place, and without the nonsense. The site switches to English too, so the information reaches as many people as possible.
How it all started
It started with a competitor's product. For a while I used a paid model from OpenAI, but it didn't really fit. I can't code myself — but that doesn't mean I don't understand it. So I did my homework, weighed the options, the pros and cons of each model, and Claude came out on top. It was early 2026. That's how the whole thing began.
I built a few simple things in Claude Code, and that's when I realized the most important thing of all. The only limit is your own imagination.
Things that used to take me hours or days by hand suddenly took minutes. All I needed was the right team behind me. My team today is Claude. Not a chatbot in a browser, but an autonomous colleague right inside my computer.
Who this site is for
Anyone interested in the topic but unsure how to really get a grip on it, or where to even start. Anyone who needs advice, wants to learn something new, or just wants to satisfy their curiosity.
Anyone who feels a bit overwhelmed by the hectic pace of it all. And no wonder — a lot is happening, and fast. Here I'll try to take things calmly and explain it all clearly.
There's something here for beginners, for the more advanced, and for experts. For coders and non-coders. For gardeners and CEOs, teenagers and retirees.
Just one thing not to expect — perfection. If you're looking to get rich overnight, or want to hear that one app just changed the world, you're in the wrong place. This is about ordinary, practical work.
Philosophy
Today you write a few sentences and AI builds you an app, an article, music, or a picture in moments. And that's exactly the catch: you can't let it do your thinking for you.
I don't build a Ferrari to learn how to take an engine apart — I build it to win the race. I'm the driver: I hold the wheel, read the track, and decide when to pit. My team of mechanics handles what's under the hood. And that team, today, is agents. I can run five at once, each doing its part — one researches, another writes, a third reviews the work, a fourth notes down what we found. But I keep the wheel. The strategy, the decisions, the taste — those stay with me.
I'm not a programmer, and in 2026 I'm probably not going to become one. For a long time that felt like an obstacle. Now I see it more as an advantage — I don't cling to how things are “supposed” to be done, so I make my own way. You don't have to know how to write code. You have to know how to describe what you want.
I'll try not to oversell it. AI isn't magic, and it's no Noah's ark either. It's a tool that saves you hours one evening and, the next day, writes you complete nonsense with a completely straight face.
That's why you'll also find the things that didn't work here. I've learned the hard way that if you don't keep an eye on a tool like this, it can hurt — in plenty of ways. The screw-ups and the real facts belong here just as much as the how-tos.
Think of this as the notebook of someone going through all of this right now, wanting to share what he finds worthwhile. Some of it will click, some won't, and both are fine. Look around and let me know what you think. I believe it matters.