What You Actually Build.
Three tracks. Pick the one that speaks to you. Every track converges in cross-team challenges, so you'll collaborate with everyone.
What if you could create a week's worth of content in an afternoon? Automate the boring parts of school or work before lunch? Turn a rough idea into a polished presentation, a video, or a working prototype, all without needing a team or a budget? That's not a hypothetical. That's what people who know how to build with AI are doing right now.
This track is about getting your hands dirty. You'll use AI to write, design, edit, produce, and ship things that used to take entire teams. Content that looks studio-grade. Workflows that save hours. Productivity hacks that make you the most useful person on any project. Whether you're in the arts, business, tech, or anything else, this track gives you the AI toolkit to make your work unfairly good.
Every app you use, every message you send, every dollar you move. All of it rests on infrastructure that someone, somewhere, is actively trying to break. That's been true for decades. What's new in 2026: attackers now use AI to automate at scale, and defenders have to run AI of their own just to keep up. Singapore, as a regional financial and tech hub, sits at the front of this arms race.
But here's the part that surprises most people? Cybersecurity isn't just a career for hackers. It's a way of thinking. The hacker's instinct to ask "what happens if I break this?" transfers to product design, policy, finance, even content. And unlike almost every other high-paying field, ethical hacking lets you prove yourself before you get hired. Bug bounties reward anyone, including students, for finding real flaws in real systems.
Find the entry point.
Trace the attack chain.
Recover a hijacked account.
Contain and report.
Trace and fix.
The first billion-dollar one-person company is no longer a prediction. It's the explicit goal of a generation of founders using AI to replace what used to require a team. The time between "I have an idea" and "I have a working product" has collapsed from months to an afternoon, for people who know what they're doing.
That's not hype. It's a structural change. When you can prototype, design, market-test, and iterate on an idea in a weekend, the bottleneck stops being capital or engineering, and starts being taste, judgement, and understanding a real problem deeply. Those are things young people in Singapore, living at the intersection of cultures, industries, and languages, are uniquely positioned to bring.