About

QLegion exists to help people notice what's happening in technology — without jargon, hype, or hot takes.

Technology changes quickly, but most people don't need expert commentary or endless newsletters. They want to understand where attention is growing, where it's fading, and what that might mean for them.

This site focuses on technology conversations as they appear in U.S.-based reporting, offering a grounded view of what's getting attention across sectors that shape everyday work, study, and life.


QLegion was built for three common situations:

For students and people exploring careers

If you're trying to figure out how to get into tech in the United States, QLegion helps you see which areas are getting more attention and which ones are quiet — so you can explore paths that align with what's actually happening.

For people reconsidering their career path

If you're unhappy where you are or curious about a change, this site helps you orient yourself before making decisions. It's a way to spot areas worth learning more about before committing time or energy.

For curious, informed readers

If you follow technology casually and want context without twelve newsletters and forty open tabs, QLegion offers a simple briefing view of what's showing up more often — and what isn't.


Why It Was Built

Jimmy Stewart, founder of QLegion

QLegion was founded by Jimmy Stewart, whose journey began in a childhood marked by instability and adversity. Pushing through those early challenges shaped a resilience that carried into a career spanning the military, higher education, nonprofits, and technology leadership.

He created QLegion as a place for people who didn't start with a traditional path, but are determined to keep moving forward.

The goal isn't to tell anyone what to do — it's to offer clarity, direction, and perspective so others can navigate their own next steps with better context.

QLegion does not predict the future or offer advice.
It observes publicly available reporting and highlights shifts in attention over time.

Think of it as a way to get your bearings before a conversation, a class, an interview, or a decision.