No part of this article was written by an AI, just a flawed human…

This is the first year I’ve worried I will lose my job to a machine. My solution? Work while you can. I know that sounds kind of obvious, but it’s really the only thing I can think to do.

In 2022 we witnessed assistive AIs become more competent at performing tasks like drawing, compiling research or even writing code. As a result, I predict that the things we do uniquely well as humans won’t be our technical skills but our ability to think creatively, grapple with philosophical and ethical questions, and simplify complex ideas.

Hopefully, we will live in future where these smart machines remove our daily drudgery and simply help us rediscover what makes us uniquely great. Perhaps we will start working and thinking less like automatons and more like … well … people.

In an attempt to hedge my bets against AI, many of my insights this year focus on the types of human vocation I believe an AI will always struggle with.

From being more creative, managing information overload, the dangers of programming fairness into systems, finding purpose in one’s work, and how to stop the grand innovation slowdown we have been experiencing since 1970.

I hope you find something inspiring here today, and remember to enjoy your work while you can … because change is a comin’.

Building a system that generates ideas

“You have to keep a dozen of your favorite problems constantly present in your mind, although by and large they will lay in a dormant state. Every time you hear or read a new trick or a new result, test it against each of your twelve problems to see whether it helps. Every once in a while there will be a hit, and people will say, “How did he do it? He must be a genius!” — Richard Feynman, the theoretical physicist and all-around genius

Reading List

The Myth of the Myth of the Lone Genius (Roger’s Bacon)
Create your legacy through work
Why Aren’t Smart People Happier (Adam Mastroianni)
The Intelligence Trap Revolutionise your Thinking and Make Wiser Decisions(Book)

Using notes to better organise my thoughts for work happiness

Reading List

Day in the life of an obsessive note taker
Discussion on productivity and second brain (Zain, LinkedIn)
Sometimes, paying attention means we see the world less clearly (psyche.co)
Building a Second Brain (Tiago Forte)

It's futile building things that are completely fair

Reading List

Escaping the Impossibility of Fairness From Formal to Substantive Algorithmic Fairness (Green, Ben)
The dangers of Product Longtermism
A Theory of Justice — John Rawls
How the EU’s Flawed Artificial Intelligence Regulation Endangers the Social Safety Net Questions and Answers (Human Rights Watch)

Overcoming the overwhelming amount of information we consume

Reading List

Day in the life of an obsessive note taker
The Collector’s Fallacy (zettelkasten.de)
What is this? The case for continually questioning our online experience (systems-souls-society.com)
Your Attention Didn’t Collapse. It Was Stolen (Johann Hari)

Mortality should be our great motivator

“Remembering that I’ll be dead soon is the most important tool I’ve ever encountered to help me make the big choices in life.” — Steve Jobs

“Accepting the absurdity of everything around us is one step, a necessary experience. It should not become a dead end. It arouses a revolt that can become fruitful.” — Albert Camus

Reading List

The Creation of Meaning — Escape From 163 (Philosophize This!)
Create your legacy through work
A Philosopher’s Case Against Death (The MIT Press Reader)

Soft skills are essential for navigating ambiguity

Reading List

So you want to build a search engine
What I’ve Learned in 45 Years in the Software Industry

We need to get better at recognising truly complex problems

“Nothing important comes with instructions. Those who cannot change their minds cannot change anything” — George Bernard Shaw

Reading List

So you want to build a search engine
The Use of Knowledge in Society
The dangers of Product Longtermism
Inspired How To Create Products Customers Love (Marty Cagan)

Small things matter, but don’t take your eye off the bigger picture

“Your life is the sum of what you focus on. “It’s not what you look at that matters, it’s what you see. ” Henry David Thoreau.

Reading List

4D Roadmaps (reforge.com)

The dangers of Product Longtermism
So you want to build a search engine

We are not innovating fast enough

Reading List

Science Is Getting Less Bang for Its Buck (Patrick Collison and Michael Nielsen)

The dangers of Product Longtermism

How to Analyze Progress, Stagnation, and Low-Hanging Fruit (The Roots of Progress)
Artificial Intelligence (Melanie Mitchell)

AI will become super memory companions

Reading List

If We Succeed (American Academy of Arts & Sciences)
AI Has Become a Design Problem
Artificial Time (fortelabs.co)

Search changes the way we think and see the world

Reading List

So you want to build a search engine
How Scholars Once Feared That the Book Index Would Destroy Reading (Dennis Duncan)

We need to start prioritising individual creativity over groups

“invention occurs at the level of the individual, and we should address the factors that determine individual creativity.” — Joel Mokyr

“Most geniuses especially those who lead others prosper not by deconstructing intricate complexities, but by exploiting unrecognized simplicities.” — Andy Benoit

Reading List

Groupthink (newyorker.com)
The Myth of the Myth of the Lone Genius (Roger’s Bacon)
The dangers of Product Longtermism
Why Brainstorming Doesn’t Work (inc.com)
The Ingredients For Innovation


Happy new year EVERYONE!