About the author

Jason Troxel


Jason Troxel is a technology strategist, product thinker, educator, and writer trying to make sense of the AI era without putting everyone into a keynote-induced coma.

His work sits at the messy intersection of infrastructure, product strategy, enterprise technology, AI systems, finance, and human decision-making. He has spent much of his career translating technical complexity into usable language for people who have to make real decisions before the future politely finishes introducing itself.

Jason holds a Master of Science in Finance from Johns Hopkins University and a Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering from Saint Martin’s University. That combination matters here: nOS is not written from a single disciplinary perch, but from the tension between systems, markets, technology, and human consequence.


The nOS Project

The nOS Project began as a response to AI exhaustion.

Not because AI is boring. It is not. Because too much of the public conversation has been flattened into benchmark theater, vendor promises, labor panic, and executive word clouds that smell faintly of recycled conference coffee.

Jason built nOS as a public-intelligence project for people who know AI matters but want something better than hype, fear, or another “top ten trends” article. The goal is to ask better questions about human capability, institutional trust, governance, faith, ethics, and what happens when machine intelligence becomes part of the operating layer of everyday life.

There is nothing to buy here. No hidden sales funnel. No consultancy brochure in a trench coat.

Just a serious attempt to think clearly in public while the floor is still moving.


How to engage

  • Read the manifesto. That is where the argument lives.
  • Explore The Human Question. Start with the domain most relevant to your work or concern.
  • Sign, if you agree. The signatory list is public.
  • Share. The platform is freely accessible. No paywall.

Contact

A dedicated contact address is coming. In the meantime, the manifesto speaks for itself — and the signatory list is open.