Posts

How Can You Improve Your Memory?

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How Can You Improve Your Memory? Small daily upgrades that help your brain remember more and forget less Big-picture framing If you’ve ever walked into a room and forgotten why, you’ve probably wondered how to  improve your memory . The good news is that memory isn’t a fixed trait you’re stuck with; it’s more like a skill you can train with the right habits and techniques. In this post, we’ll zoom out on what memory really is, then zoom in on practical tools you can use today—at work, at school, or in daily life. You’ll learn how to make information “stickier,” how to space your learning so it lasts, and how to design your environment so your brain doesn’t have to work quite so hard. By the end, you’ll have a simple, repeatable playbook you can explain to others. Your Memory Isn’t a Filing Cabinet (It’s More Like a Spotlight) A lot of people think memory is a giant mental filing cabinet: if you can’t “find the file,” something is wrong with you. A better analogy is a  spotligh...

What are the risks of over-reliance on automation in 2026?

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What are the risks of over-reliance on automation in 2026? How smart systems can quietly make us more fragile than we think Framing the question The biggest risks of over-reliance on automation in 2026 aren’t just about robots “taking jobs”; they’re about what happens when we forget how to think, decide, and act without them. As AI tools, code assistants, no-code platforms, and autonomous systems spread into every corner of work, the  risks of over-reliance on automation  include skill erosion, new kinds of systemic failure, and subtle ethical blind spots. The danger isn’t automation itself, but uncritical dependence on it—treating it as infallible, invisible infrastructure. A useful way to answer this question is to ask:  Where are we trading resilience, judgment, and accountability for convenience and speed—and what happens when the system hiccups? The hidden fragility: when convenience becomes dependency One core risk of heavy automation in 2026 is  organizational...

How possible is it that everything we think we know is wrong?

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How possible is it that everything we think we know is wrong? Why “what if we’re wrong?” is a feature of thinking, not a bug Big-Picture Framing How possible is it that everything we think we know is wrong? This question sits at the heart of epistemology—the study of how we know what we know—and it quietly shapes how we learn, lead, and make decisions. Instead of treating it as a purely abstract fear, you can use it as a practical lens: our beliefs are like maps, not the territory, and every map leaves things out. In this post, we’ll explore how knowledge can be wrong yet still useful, when it’s likely to be overturned, and how to live productively with uncertainty. Along the way, you’ll get a mental toolkit for questioning assumptions without falling into paralysis or cynicism. Why this question matters more than it seems On the surface,  “What if everything we know is wrong?”  sounds like late-night dorm room philosophy. But underneath, it’s a power question: It shapes ...

What's Upstream from AI?

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What's Upstream from AI? Big-Picture Framing – Before the Algorithms We usually start thinking about AI at the moment of output: the answer on the screen, the suggestion in the product, the summary in your inbox. But the real leverage point sits  before AI  ever runs—upstream in the human choices, data, and incentives that quietly shape what these systems can and can’t do. Think of AI as the last mile of a long pipeline. Upstream are decisions about which problems deserve automation, what “good” looks like, whose data we use, and what risks we’re willing to accept. This piece gives you a simple mental model for that “before AI” layer, so you can influence outcomes long before you’re stuck arguing with a model’s answer. What does “upstream from AI” actually mean? Most AI debates start too late. A model behaves strangely, people argue about prompts, and someone suggests another safety filter. By then, the important decisions have already been made. “Upstream from AI” is everythi...