We read a lot of news. Specifically, we spend way too much time scrolling through tech forums, reading earnings transcripts, and trying to figure out exactly why markets react the way they do. Over the past couple of years, we realized something annoying: most of the analysis out there is either incredibly dry academic theory, or it’s sensationalized clickbait designed to sell you a trading course. There isn’t a lot of middle ground.
That’s basically why we are starting Stochastic Tale.
The name comes from the idea of a stochastic process—a fancy math term for a system that’s randomly determined but can still be analyzed statistically. To us, that perfectly describes the intersection of software, business, and finance today. It feels entirely chaotic most of the time, but there are actual, underlying patterns if you step back and look at the mechanics.
We aren’t here to pretend we have a crystal ball. We are just here to write down our thoughts as we try to make sense of the noise. One week we might be looking into how software companies are actually pricing their new AI products, and the next week we might be trying to untangle the mess of shifting global tariffs and complex supply chains. We also plan to spend a lot of time looking at structural changes happening in engineering, like the shift toward autonomous software workflows.
Our only real rule for this site is keeping things informal. We don’t care about buzzwords, and we are definitely not going to use corporate jargon if we can avoid it. If a new technology looks completely useless, we will say so. If a market shift is confusing us, we will probably just write a post trying to explain it to ourselves.
Anyway, that’s the pitch. No paywalls, no aggressive pop-ups, just a place where we can organize our thoughts and hopefully share something you find somewhat interesting. Thanks for reading.