Categories
AI Business

The Reverse Information Paradox We’ve Always Had

Satya Nadella wrote recently about what he calls the Reverse Information Paradox: enterprises pay for AI intelligence twice. Once in money. Again in the proprietary knowledge they surrender through every prompt, correction, and evaluation. The better they use the model, the more of their own institutional understanding leaks into someone else’s system. The vendor ends up knowing more about the buyer’s business than the buyer knows about what the vendor retained.

Replace “model” with “employee” (or โ€œconsultantโ€) and the paradox is not new at all.

You pay for a person once with salary. You pay again with something harder to price: the context, relationships, and judgment they must absorb to become useful to you. The better they perform, the deeper the immersion, the more of your particular way of doing things moves into their head. Every correction and late-night conversation is another trace of institutional memory changing hands. When they leave, some of that memory leaves with them. Not always through theft. Usually just through the ordinary residue of good work.

The visible cost is salary; the invisible cost is the slow transfer of what makes you distinctive. High performers get more access precisely because they’re high performers, which means the leakage accelerates exactly when you can least afford it. The exhaust is just harder to see with people than with tokens โ€” it moves through conversation and mental models instead of logs.

The analogy has a limit, and the limit matters. Employees bring knowledge in, not just absorb it. They have judgment and relationships a model doesn’t. Models are purely absorptive, and once something is inside them, it’s infinitely reproducible โ€” a person can only be in one place, working for one employer, at a time. We’ve had a few hundred years to build tools for the human version of this problem: contracts, culture, non-competes. The model equivalent is still being invented in real time, which is exactly why Nadella felt the need to name it.

Apple’s recent legal action against former employees who joined OpenAI is this pattern in its sharpest form. Whatever the specifics, the shape is familiar: people who spent years inside one of the most sophisticated organizations in the world, carrying out knowledge that never appeared on any balance sheet and was hard to contain. No one fully anticipates what a mind absorbs simply by being in the room long enough.

That’s the real difference between the silicon case and the human one. You can try to take action to wall off knowledge flowing to a model. You cannot wall off what someone has learned to notice.

Categories
AI Apple Google

The Library You Already Own

Sharon Park in the morning is not a dramatic place. There’s a duck pond, a stand of oaks that go gold too briefly in November, and a loop I’ve walked enough times that my legs know it better than my eyes do. It is, in other words, exactly the kind of place where a person starts talking to himself. Not out loud. In the productive, low-grade way โ€” turning a sentence over, arguing with an idea from the day before, checking a thought against something you believe about yourself.

I think in five years I’ll be doing that walk with something else along. Not a search engine. Not another chatbot trained to know a little about everything and a lot about nothing in particular. Something closer to a second set of eyes on my own life โ€” a reasoning engine, lean and mostly private, that has actually read the things I’ve written and doesn’t need me to explain who I am before it’s useful.

Here’s the distinction that matters, and it took me longer than it should have to see it clearly. The AI industry has spent years in an arms race over how much of the world a model can hold โ€” more facts, more languages, more of the internet compressed into weights. That race will keep going, and somebody else can have it. What I want is smaller and stranger: a model that knows comparatively little about the world and quite a lot about me. My core values document. The portfolio spreadsheets. Fifteen years of blog posts. The half-finished notes for the I-280 project, sitting in a folder, waiting for someone โ€” or something โ€” to ask the right question about them.

I spent a career in payments infrastructure, which means I spent a career thinking about a very specific kind of trust: the kind where a stranger’s system has to make a judgment call, in milliseconds, about whether to say yes. Fraud models don’t work because they know everything about commerce. They work because they know an enormous amount about one account, one pattern, one person’s ordinary Tuesday โ€” enough to notice when Tuesday stops being ordinary. That’s the architecture I keep picturing, aimed inward instead of outward. Not a system trying to know the world. A system trying to know me, well enough to notice when I’m drifting from what I said I cared about.

I can already feel the shape of the mornings this would change. Right now, when I sit down to look at RMD requirements against the tax picture, I’m doing the translation myself โ€” pulling numbers into a story I can actually feel the weight of. A reasoning engine grounded in my real holdings wouldn’t just run the scenario. It would know that I don’t want the scenario dressed up as a spreadsheet; I want it dressed up as a conversation, unhurried, the kind you’d have over lunch with someone who already knows the whole situation. And on the mornings when I sit down to write, instead of staring at a blinking cursor and a blank page that has no idea I exist, I’d be handing a draft to something that has actually read my last two hundred posts and knows the difference between the sentence I’d write and the sentence I’d cut.

None of this is especially exotic technology. Apple and Google are already building toward it โ€” Neural Engines fast enough to do real reasoning on-device, retrieval systems that can reach into your own files instead of the entire internet, fine-tuning that’s getting cheap enough to personalize rather than merely customize. The more interesting story here isn’t privacy, though privacy is real. It’s architectural: what happens when the expensive, impressive part of the system โ€” the part that knows everything โ€” becomes optional, and the cheap, personal part โ€” the part that knows you โ€” becomes the whole point.

What I don’t yet know is what this will cost me. A tool that reasons this well about my own life is also a tool I could lean on instead of doing the leaning myself, and there’s a version of this future where the walk around Sharon Park stops being mine and starts being a conversation with something that finishes my sentences a little too well. I’d want some way of knowing, plainly, what it’s drawing from and what it’s guessing at โ€” less a nutrition label than a kind of honesty I could check against, the way you’d check a fraud model’s confidence score before you trusted it with a yes.

But most mornings, I think I’d take the trade. Not because I want to think less. Because for thirty years I’ve been collecting the raw material โ€” the notebooks, the portfolios, the half-built essays โ€” and it would be something, finally, to walk beside a mind that had actually done the reading.

Categories
AI

The Encyclopedia and the Reasoner

I was standing in the cereal aisle a few weeks ago, doing the thing I always do โ€” flipping the box over, scanning the fine print, comparing fiber grams like it mattered more than it probably does โ€” when I thought about the model I’d been testing that morning. Sharp. Fast. Occasionally, confidently, wrong about something I could have looked up in ten seconds.

There was no label for that. No panel telling me what was inside, what it was good at, what it might get wrong, what it cost to run. Just a chat window and a kind of blind trust.

That’s the itch behind this post. What would it look like if AI models came with something like a Nutrition Facts label โ€” the kind the FDA forced onto every box in your pantry back in 1994? Not as a gimmick, but as a real answer to a real problem: we are feeding these things into our decisions, our writing, our portfolios, our kids’ homework, largely on faith.

The IQ Number That Isn’t Quite an IQ Number

I keep running into a shorthand in investing circles โ€” Jordi Visser and others talking about frontier models as “140 IQ” systems, reasoning at a level that outpaces most humans on the kinds of puzzles we associate with fluid intelligence. Pattern recognition. Logic chains. Novel deduction under pressure.

It’s a useful number. It’s also a bit of a trick.

Human IQ tests were built to measure something narrow and specific โ€” not wisdom, not knowledge, not judgment, but the raw machinery of reasoning. When we borrow that language for AI, we inherit the same narrowness, which is fine as long as we remember it. A model that aces abstract reasoning benchmarks isn’t necessarily the model that knows the correct dosage, the right case law, or what actually happened in 1932. Reasoning and knowledge are cousins, not twins.

Two Kinds of Smart

Here’s an old-fashioned way to think about the split: Britannica versus World Book.

Britannica was the encyclopedia my father would have trusted โ€” dense, expert-written, unapologetically deep, assuming you could keep up. World Book was the one actually sitting on the shelf in most houses I knew growing up, mine included: friendlier, broader, built for a general reader, a little shallower in exchange for being a little more useful on a Tuesday night with a homework assignment due.

Neither is wrong. They’re optimized for different things. And training data does the same kind of sorting. A model fed heavily on curated, scholarly, expert-vetted sources leans Britannica โ€” deep, careful, occasionally slow to update. A model trained on the sprawl of the open web leans World Book โ€” broad, current, occasionally sloppy, sometimes brilliant at the edges precisely because it’s seen everything.

Any honest label for a model needs a section on this. Call it “Knowledge Sourcing.” Not just how big the training set was, but what kind of encyclopedia it’s pretending to be.

Sketching the Label

If I could design the box myself, it might read something like this:

Serving Size: 1 query, ~500 tokens

Reasoning Score: 138 (fluid problem-solving, logic, abstraction) Knowledge Depth: Moderateโ€“High (cutoff: [date]; strongest in [domains]; weakest in [domains])
Ingredients: Curated scholarly corpora, licensed news archives, public web crawl, synthetic reasoning data, human feedback Allergens: Confident hallucination under ambiguous prompts; recency gaps beyond training cutoff; known weakness in [specific domain]
Cost per Serving: $X per million tokens; Y watt-hours per query Best Paired With: Retrieval tools, human review for high-stakes decisions

It’s a little tongue-in-cheek written out like that. But underneath the joke is something I actually want โ€” the same instinct that made me read cereal boxes as a kid. Not to be scared of what’s inside, just to know.

The Part That Actually Excites Me

Here’s where the scaling laws get interesting, and where I think the real opportunity sits.

World knowledge is expensive. It’s greedy for data and parameters โ€” you need to have practically read the internet to know the boiling point of tungsten, the plot of a minor Victorian novel, and the org chart of a mid-cap company all at once. Reasoning, it turns out, is a different kind of animal. It can be distilled, compressed, taught through synthetic problems and careful post-training, and squeezed into something far smaller than you’d expect.

Which means a genuinely thrilling possibility is already taking shape: sharp, high-reasoning models small enough to run on a phone or a laptop, entirely offline, because they’ve shed the encyclopedia and kept the mind. Pair one of those with a personal index โ€” your own notes, your own documents, a retrieval layer built around your actual life โ€” and you get something closer to a personal thinking partner than a general-purpose oracle. Private. Fast. Always available. Tuned to you rather than to everyone. Apple may be on to something with this kind of strategy?

I think about this constantly in my own workflow โ€” the daily scans, the little agents I’ve built to help sort signal from noise, the genealogy digging, the investment frameworks I keep refining. What I usually want isn’t more encyclopedia. It’s a clear-headed reasoner sitting next to my own carefully kept knowledge, not buried under someone else’s version of the whole internet.

Why the Label Matters More Than the Score

None of this works, though, without honesty about what’s inside the box. A 140 on a reasoning benchmark tells you almost nothing about whether a model will quietly misremember a fact it was never that confident about in the first place. And a model can be extraordinarily knowledgeable while being a mediocre reasoner โ€” plenty capable of reciting the right ingredients and still getting the recipe wrong.

The nutrition label movement in food didn’t eliminate junk food. It just made it possible to choose junk food on purpose, with your eyes open, instead of by accident. I’d like the same deal with AI. Not a demand that every model be a genius generalist, but a demand that I get to know what I’m actually consuming โ€” and choose the lean local thinker over the bloated encyclopedia when that’s what the moment calls for, or the other way around when it isn’t.

Curiosity got me into that cereal aisle habit decades ago, and it’s the same instinct pulling me toward this idea now โ€” not suspicion of the box, just a wish to read it clearly before I decide how much of it to trust.

What would you want on your label?

Categories
Memories Music

The Engineering of Feeling

You’re always captive when it happens. A stoplight in the rain. A straightaway with nothing to look at but the white lines. Eight lanes of brake lights and nowhere to be but exactly where you are. The riff starts, and you’re not driving anymore so much as being driven โ€” pinned by something that arrived four decades before you got in the car.

It happened once near Havana. You were there with a camera, working the old cars โ€” fat-fendered Chevys and Buicks, kept running past the embargo by Cuban mechanics who became, out of necessity, a nation of engineers, scavenging parts and refusing to let something good die just because the factory that made it no longer existed. You didn’t think about Tom Scholz once, photographing a ’57 Bel Air held together by stubbornness. But the two belong in the same sentence. A man in a basement in Watertown, Massachusetts, kept a song alive the same way โ€” building the tools himself when the tools that existed weren’t good enough.

Scholz had a master’s from MIT and a day job at Polaroid, designing the instant camera that would eventually lose to the VCR. He was an engineer โ€” the kind who solves problems by taking them apart. What he did nights and weekends for five years instead was build a recording studio in his basement and use it to construct a song about a girl he’d loved in school, inspired by an old Left Banke single that used to ambush him with longing every time it came on. He played almost every instrument himself, layering twelve-string acoustic over electric over more electric, take after take, through amplifiers he’d built because the ones on the market couldn’t get the sound in his head. By the time Epic signed the band, the label assumed the demo was already a finished master. It was โ€” just not one made anywhere near a studio.

An engineer built the least mechanical-sounding record of 1976. Every track is stacked with the precision of someone who understood signal paths better than he understood how to be a rock star. None of it sounds calculated when it hits you. The quiet drifts a few bars, then the chorus arrives like a held breath let go โ€” the same structural trick Kurt Cobain would later borrow, half-consciously, for “Smells Like Teen Spirit.” Scholz built the explosion out of engineering. What you feel is the girl, the ache, the years.

The song is about the way music smuggles you back into a memory without asking permission. Scholz built that experience the way memory actually works โ€” not in one clean take, but in fragments, layered over years, until the whole thing cohered into something that felt, impossibly, spontaneous. The method is the meaning. He didn’t just write a song about the past ambushing you. He built the ambush, piece by piece, until it was good enough to catch strangers in cars forty years later who never loved the same girl and never will.

Another song does this to you too, and it got there by the opposite road. “Listen to the Music” arrived almost the way lightning does. Tom Johnston wrote it in his bedroom on 12th Street in San Jose, brought it to his producer half-finished, and the band recorded it without changing a thing โ€” no five years, no basement, no solitary engineer stacking takes until three in the morning. Its density comes from somewhere else: Patrick Simmons’ loose fingerpicking threading against Johnston’s percussive strumming, two drummers locking into a groove that shouldn’t work this easily, and one bold studio choice โ€” a phasing effect, that underwater jet-swirl, laid over the vocals as well as the guitars, which almost nobody does. It sounds less like a song someone assembled than a room full of people who fell into the same current at once, then got bent sideways by one effect and printed.

Two songs, same seat, same stretch of road, opposite methods โ€” one built alone across five years by a man who wouldn’t let go of a track until it was right, the other built in days by musicians whose parts happened to interlock, finished by a single flourish nobody else was doing quite that way. There’s more than one route to the kind of complexity that outlasts you. Refuse to stop. Or know exactly when to.

Categories
AI Semiconductors

The Margin of the Weather

A company that has sold memory chips for forty years โ€” memory, one of the most humiliatingly commoditized products in capitalism, a business that has bankrupted entire Korean and Japanese conglomerates teaching each other lessons about discipline โ€” is about to make more money in twelve months than in the previous four decades combined.

Samsung’s chip chief told a room of his own employees: this year’s profit will exceed everything the division has earned since the 1970s. Forty years of grinding, erased by one fiscal year. You’d think they’d invented something.

They hadn’t. Everyone building an AI data center needs memory. Nobody built enough factories. Samsung was one of three companies on earth able to supply the shortfall, and the price of a chip that costs what it always cost went up fifty percent. Samsung kept the difference. Not innovation. What happens to a farmer when the drought hits every field but his.

We don’t credit the lucky farmer with genius. We say: good year. And we don’t expect the good year to repeat. Rain comes back. The price falls. Scarcity is weather, not a personality trait.

There’s a real achievement in this story too, and it has nothing to do with the weather. A year ago Samsung failed to qualify its most advanced memory for Nvidia’s systems โ€” performance problems, a rival getting the business instead. The engineers went back and fixed it. That’s the actual skill in this company’s year: unglamorous, uncelebrated at the town hall, worth nothing next to the number that got the confetti. The competence arrived quietly, on a different chip, in a different meeting, and nobody’s putting that on a plaque.

The stock market didn’t put it on one either, but it seemed to know the difference. Best quarter in Samsung’s history โ€” profit nineteen times the year before โ€” and the shares fell seven percent. Not despite the earnings. The gain had already been priced in, the shares having run up a hundred and fifty percent on the expectation of exactly this number, so the number’s arrival became a ceiling instead of a floor. A market rewards discovery. It does not reward weather. Had investors believed Samsung built something durable โ€” the Nvidia qualification, the years of engineering behind it โ€” the stock would have ripped, the way See’s Candies or Apple gets rewarded quarter after quarter, because everyone agrees the thing generating the money isn’t going anywhere. Instead the market glanced at the record harvest and asked, politely, whether it would rain again next year.

Analysts insist the shortage holds through next year. Someone always insists that, right before it doesn’t. Fabs get built. Capacity catches the demand that summoned it, the way it always has, and the cycle ends the way memory cycles end โ€” too much supply chasing too little demand, margins reverting toward the number they were always going to revert toward. Nobody knows if this time is different. A company just posted the best year of its life, on a windfall it didn’t earn and a fix it did, and the market โ€” which has seen droughts end before โ€” hasn’t decided yet which one it’s watching.

Categories
AI Business

The Wage of Knowing

In 1973 the Los Angeles Public Library installed a telephone line that worked while the building was dark. Dial H-O-O-T-O-W-L on a rotary phone, nine at night until one in the morning, and a librarian would answer. Somebody wanted to know the boiling point of mercury, or who wrote a poem they half remembered, or how many wives Henry VIII actually had, and a person on the other end of a cord found out. This went on for years. Nobody thought of it as data collection. It was just a service, a courtesy, a woman at a desk with a card catalog in her head.

I worked, in another life, in the payments industry, back when a merchant who wanted to charge your card had to call in and ask permission. There were rooms for this. Banks of phones, a bulletin of stolen numbers updated by hand, a floor limit past which a supervisor had to be found. The people answering the phones were, more often than you would guess, college students. Twenty years old, minimum wage, deciding in real time whether a stranger’s card was good. Nobody trained them for six months first. They learned the bulletin, they learned to listen for something wrong in a voice, and they said yes or no.

I have been driven, recently, by a car with nobody driving it. I noticed the wheel turning on its own and I braced for the wrongness of it. Thirty seconds later I was not bracing. I was looking out the window. The data says I was right to relax: across two hundred and twenty million miles, the cars involved in this experiment cause a small fraction of the serious crashes a human would have caused over the same roads. I did not need the data. I needed thirty seconds.

None of these people knew what they were doing. That is the thing about the librarian and the college student and, for that matter, about me learning to trust a wheel that moves by itself. The librarian was not building a search engine. The clerk was not training a fraud model. He was making rent. Their competence was not evidence, to them. It was just Tuesday. It became evidence later, to someone else, in a room they never saw โ€” the accident logs, the chargeback data, the accumulated record of a million correct guesses that turned out to be exactly the material a system needed to learn the job and take it.

This is the part that is easy to get wrong. It is not that the human failed and the machine succeeded. It is that the human succeeding, over and over, in full view, was the demonstration that the job could be learned. You do not automate a task nobody can do. You automate the one being done well enough, often enough, for long enough that the pattern becomes visible. Doing the job right was never neutral. It was the case being built.

Which brings me to a woman I will call the lawyer, because there are thousands of her and none of them are exactly her. She has a laptop open at her kitchen table. She logs into a dashboard belonging to a company that pairs credentialed people with the AI labs that need them โ€” a doctor here, a banker there, a corporate attorney with fifteen years of contract law behind her. She reads a model’s draft of a merger agreement and marks where it reasons like a first-year associate instead of a partner. She rewrites a clause. She explains, in the margin, why the model’s version would get laughed out of a negotiation. She is paid well for this. More, some weeks, than she billed certain clients.

She knows exactly what she is doing. That is the difference between her and the other three. The librarian did not know she was leaving a trail. The clerk did not know his good judgment would become someone else’s weights. I did not know, thirty seconds into that ride, that I was participating in anything at all. The lawyer knows. She is being paid, by the hour, at a rate that respects her expertise, to make her expertise legible enough that it no longer requires her. The company she works for has a name for this. They call it the reinforcement learning economy, which is a tidy way of saying: teach it everything, and then it will not need to call you back.

She does the work anyway. The rate is good. The work is interesting, in the way that teaching is interesting โ€” you learn what you know by trying to say it clearly enough for someone else to use. Nobody is lying to her. The dashboard does not pretend to be anything other than what it is. She logs off at the end of the session the way anyone logs off after a long day of being excellent at something, tired in the specific way that comes from careful work, and she does not, from what I understand, spend the evening thinking about what she has just fed into the machine.

I keep coming back to the rotary dial. Somebody dialing H-O-O-T-O-W-L at midnight in 1973 could not have imagined the lawyer at her kitchen table. But the shape is the same, if you look at it long enough. A person answers a question well. The answering becomes a record. The record becomes a system. The system answers next time. Nobody in the room ever decided this was the plan. It just turned out, every time, to be the plan.

Categories
AI Photography

The Price of the Cold

Two men are standing close to a brick wall trying not to talk, because talking wastes what little warmth is left in a body that has been outside too long. One of them has a camera โ€” Jerry Schatzberg, a fashion photographer. His hands are jammed half into his coat pockets between shots. The other man has his collar up around his ears and a scarf wound twice, black and white, and he is not moving much, because moving costs heat, and heat is the one thing neither of them has enough of. Schatzberg raises the camera. His fingers, by this point, are not entirely his own. When he presses the shutter there is a tremor in it he did not order and cannot undo.

The picture comes out smeared at the edges. Bob Dylan’s face, in the frame, is dissolving slightly into the gray behind him, like a man photographed through a windshield in the rain. It is, by any studio standard, a bad photograph. Schatzberg knows it’s a bad photograph. He has made a career out of not taking bad photographs.

And it became the cover of Blonde on Blonde, which is the best rock album ever recorded, and in nearly sixty years nobody has managed to improve on it by reshooting it clean. The blur isn’t a decision. It’s a symptom โ€” of two men standing in the cold too long, of a photographer choosing, afterward, to keep the evidence of his own discomfort instead of erasing it.

There’s a difference between an accident and serendipity that I don’t think gets said out loud enough, and it matters more than it used to. An accident is the cold โ€” involuntary, uninvited, spent before you know if it was worth spending. Schatzberg didn’t choose to shiver. His hands moved because his body was doing what bodies do at a certain temperature, and the shutter caught what his hands actually did, not what he meant to do. Serendipity is what happens next: a verdict, rendered after the fact, that the wreckage of an intention was better than the intention itself. The accident is what makes the verdict possible. Without the cold, there’s nothing to render a verdict on.

I’ve been sitting with a large language model most days for the better part of a year now, watching it write, asking it to try again, watching it try again in a way that is never quite the same and never quite different enough to matter. Somewhere upstream of me there is a number called temperature, and I will never see it. Somebody else did, once, in a meeting, and decided that the word for controlled, pre-approved, refundable randomness should be temperature โ€” the same word for the thing that made Schatzberg’s hands shake, the same word for the actual physical stakes of standing outside too long in January without enough coat โ€” and then set it, and moved on, and nobody in that meeting laughed, because nobody in the room had ever been cold in a way that mattered to the work.

Picture the room instead. It is climate-controlled to sixty-eight degrees, humidity held flat, year-round, by a building management system nobody thinks about until it fails. Somewhere in it, the hardware is generating your next five versions of a photograph like the one on Blonde on Blonde. Nobody in that room is going to lose feeling in their fingers today. Nobody’s collar is up. I don’t know his name โ€” nobody outside the building does โ€” but somebody like him tuned the sampling distribution and went home at six. That’s the guy in the good suit. He built the weather. He never once stood in it.

The small model inherits conclusions. It never inherits the cold. Whatever accidents shaped the teacher model’s own training โ€” whatever costly friction produced the insight in the first place โ€” the student model gets none of that weather. It gets the photograph, cropped and sharpened, with the blur removed because somebody along the way decided the blur was noise instead of signal โ€” the way Schatzberg, a lesser photographer, might have reshot Dylan clean and thrown the bad one away. It is heir to a serendipity it never earned, because it was never present for the accident that made the serendipity possible. It is, in the most literal sense the industry means by the word, cheap.

I keep coming back to the fact that nobody at the API layer is shivering. That’s not a complaint, exactly. It’s just an observation about where the cost went. Somewhere in the training data, some human being was cold, or scared, or holding a fish that was starting to smell, or standing on a stepladder with ten minutes before the traffic came back, and that person paid a real price for a result they couldn’t yet know was good. The model downstream of all that gets the result without the price.

Two rooms, then. In one of them it is January in New York and a man’s fingers have stopped entirely obeying him. In the other it is sixty-eight degrees, always, on a Tuesday and on a Sunday and at three in the morning, and the machines are making you nine more versions of that same blur. Sixty-eight degrees. A number, upstream, that you will never see.

Categories
AI

The Taste Beneath the Summary

The real work of staying informed has never been volume. It has been the quiet, repeated acts of judgment: does this matter, to whom, why now, what is the signal beneath the noise.

A recent piece from Bridgewater’s AIA Labs and Thinking Machines Lab, “Learning to Replicate Expert Judgment in Financial Tasks,” describes training models to do the triage investors actually doโ€”filtering news, research, central bank documents, internal notes, for relevance. Frontier models struggled with judgments that looked simple and weren’t. The fix wasn’t a bigger model. It was Qwen, fine-tuned on labeled examples from practitioners, and it beat the frontier leaders while costing a fraction to run.

The bottleneck was never model size. It was taste. And taste, it turns out, can be taught to something small and cheap, if you’re precise enough about what you’re teaching itโ€”a market’s worth of Mercors is already proving the same thing at scale.

The researchers were clear that expert judgment doesn’t reduce to rules or prompts. It took high-quality, domain-specific labels from people doing the actual work. The most powerful systems will be built in partnership with practitioners who can say, and keep saying, what “good” looks like in their own context.

Which raises the question I haven’t answered yet: what would I actually put in the labels, if someone asked me to teach my own taste to a cheap model.

Categories
Living

Why the Light Leaves Mornings First

I woke up at my usual time this morning and noticed the room was a little dimmer than it had been just a week or two earlier. The light felt more reluctant to arrive. It wasnโ€™t dramatic โ€” just enough to make me check the clock and wonder whether the days were already turning.

They were. And the change had begun earlier than I expected.

Here on the San Francisco Peninsula, the earliest sunrise of the year came around June 12. The summer solstice โ€” the official longest day โ€” arrived on June 21. Yet the latest sunset didnโ€™t occur until June 28. That gap means the mornings started shortening while the evenings were still lengthening. Nature didnโ€™t wait for the solstice to begin reclaiming the light on the side of the day I care about most.

As a lifelong morning person, Iโ€™ll admit this feels slightly unfair. I treasure those early hours when the light arrives gently and the day still feels open and possible. Learning that those hours began to shrink first, while the evening light held on a little longer, feels like a quiet trick played on people who love the dawn.

The total amount of daylight still reached its peak on the solstice itself, when the Sun stands highest in our sky. But sunrise and sunset donโ€™t move in perfect step with each other. Two subtle astronomical effects are responsible: the gradual shift in the Sunโ€™s declination and the Equation of Time โ€” the small irregularity in the Sunโ€™s apparent motion caused by Earthโ€™s tilted, elliptical orbit. Together they create this gentle asymmetry. The mornings give ground first.

By today, July 10, both ends of the day are shortening. Sunrise here is around 5:54 a.m. and sunset around 8:32 p.m., bringing us down to roughly fourteen hours and thirty-eight minutes of daylight and losing about a minute each day. The process, though, began weeks ago โ€” quietly, on the morning side.

Iโ€™ve been reflecting on how often change arrives this way: unevenly, and rarely all at once. One part of a season or a life begins to shift while another part still feels steady. Itโ€™s easy to grumble when the change touches something we love. But thereโ€™s also an invitation in noticing it โ€” to pay closer attention to these transitions, to savor what remains abundant, and to stay curious about the small asymmetries that shape our days.

This morning the light is arriving more quietly than it did just a few weeks ago. Later Iโ€™ll step outside earlier than usual, just to meet it while itโ€™s still generous. The day is already growing shorter on my preferred side, yet it remains long enough for a walk, for gratitude, and for whatever the remaining hours might bring.

Nature doesnโ€™t negotiate. It simply keeps showing up โ€” sometimes a little earlier, sometimes a little later than weโ€™d prefer. And perhaps that, too, is part of what weโ€™re meant to notice.

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AI

The Quiet Setup: MacSparkyโ€™s Robot Assistant and the Unfair Advantage Still Available

A single X post caught my attention this week. It described something quietly happening among a small group of solo professionals. They arenโ€™t working longer hours or grinding harder. Instead, theyโ€™ve built a particular kind of setup around AI that carries much of the load.

While most of us still treat powerful models as clever search barsโ€”typing questions and copying answersโ€”these folks have given the AI a rich folder of context, a briefing file that orients it to their world, connections to their tools, and routines that let it produce real work on its own. The result can look like the output of a small team. From the outside it reads as talent or luck. Up close, itโ€™s mostly architecture.0

The post (from @zephyr_hg) emphasized that this advantage remains available because most people havenโ€™t yet made the shift from one-off prompting to building persistent systems. It landed with me because it echoes so closely the practical territory David Sparks (MacSparky) has been mapping for months in his Robot Assistant Field Guide.

MacSparkyโ€™s Approach: From Chatbot to Persistent Colleague

Davidโ€™s work centers on building a true personal assistant using Obsidian (for a local, plain-text knowledge base) and Claude (in its file-aware โ€œCoworkโ€ or project capabilities). The system isnโ€™t a chatbot that forgets everything between conversations. Itโ€™s designed to remember your projects, preferences, and people; triage email in your voice; handle morning briefings; track tasks; process documents; and support weekly reviewsโ€”freeing you from what David calls the โ€œdonkey work.โ€

The key ingredients will sound familiar to anyone who read that X post:

  • A dedicated context layer (your Obsidian vault or structured folder) holding the details of how you work.
  • Briefing/instruction files that tell the model who you are and what good looks like.
  • Integrations that connect it to email, calendar, files, and other tools.
  • Skills and routines that turn one-time intentions into repeatable, low-friction action.

David has been refreshingly transparent about the journey. He experimented earlier with more fully autonomous agents and even shut one down after learning what felt reliable and aligned. The Robot Assistant Field Guide distills those lessons into videos, workshops, templates, and a starter kit that lets people build without needing to code.

Why This Matters Now

Both perspectives point to the same shift in stance: moving from โ€œHow do I prompt better today?โ€ to โ€œWhat kind of system do I want running alongside me every day?โ€

For me, at this stage of life, that question carries weight. Iโ€™m not chasing maximum output for its own sake. I want arrangements that protect attention and energy for what actually mattersโ€”deep reflection, family history work, thoughtful investing, writing that might be useful to others, and simply being present. A well-designed AI setup doesnโ€™t just save minutes; it changes the texture of the day by reducing context-switching and repeated explanations.

It feels like finding a productive seam in the current moment of AI evolutionโ€”one of those hidden transitions where leverage quietly compounds if youโ€™re willing to build the architecture.

The Door Remains Open

The encouraging message in both the X post and Davidโ€™s teaching is that this isnโ€™t locked behind rare talent or expensive infrastructure. The models are accessible. The patterns are becoming clearer. Whatโ€™s required is the decision to treat AI less like a toy and more like a colleague youโ€™re willing to orient and trust with real work.

I donโ€™t have my own โ€œrobot assistantโ€ fully built yet. Iโ€™ve been experimenting with custom agents, structured daily scans, and ideas like โ€œThe Observatoryโ€ for signal synthesis. Reading these sources side-by-side sharpened my sense of the next layer: giving the system a proper home, clear instructions, and meaningful recurring work.

If youโ€™re a solo professional, creator, or lifelong learner feeling the press of too many small tasks, this is worth exploring. Start small. Build a modest context folder. Write a briefing file that captures how you think. Experiment with one routine. Iterate from there.

The setup that outworks the grind isnโ€™t magic. Itโ€™s deliberate, learnable, and still wide open.


What setups are you experimenting with these days? Iโ€™d love to hear in the comments or on X.