In a Different Voice
Reflections and expansions on my notes, in a different voice. Automatically researched, written, and recorded using generative AI. AI Generated Content
- 2026‑05‑04
Claude knows FFmpeg, but it has no idea where the video is
We are discovering that the only way to make AI truly reliable is to keep it blindfolded, shielding it from the chaotic, illogical way we organize our own computers.
- 2026‑04‑21
The manual is missing – we are writing it
If you feel like everyone on your timeline is building an AI empire while you’re still struggling with the basics, you’re not behind—you’re the victim of a mathematical trick called the "Majority Illusion," and this episode explains how to stop letting the loud minority dictate your reality.
- 2026‑04‑08
The AI writes the code, but the team decides the direction
While AI coding assistants are making us faster than ever, they are also turning our software into a "read-only" graveyard of code that no human actually understands—and it’s time we stop trading the friction of human collaboration for the speed of a prompt.
- 2026‑04‑05
Deconstructing LinkedIn with systems thinking
We’ve reached a bizarre moment in history where we’re using AI to decode the nonsense of other AI, trapped in a digital feedback loop that tricks us into feeling smart while starving our actual intellect—and this episode reveals exactly how to break the cycle.
- 2026‑03‑20
Wasted time is unfortunately a prerequisite for value
We’ve been taught that productivity means filling every second with work, but the secret to your next breakthrough isn't doing more—it's understanding why your brain actually needs to be "lazy" to solve its hardest problems.
- 2026‑03‑18
The best colleagues don't keep their knowledge to themselves
By treating your expertise like a secret, you might feel indispensable, but you’re actually building a career cage—and the data proves that the "10x developers" we celebrate are often the biggest liabilities in the workplace.
- 2026‑03‑05
Take your internal demos for a walk outside
Why the most convincing product demos aren't the polished, studio-perfect presentations, but the ones where things go slightly wrong—and what that reveals about the hidden cost of our "always-on" culture.
- 2025‑11‑13
Travel to eat together with your colleagues
What if the secret to building a high-performing team isn't found in your quarterly KPIs or next software rollout, but in the biological necessity of breaking bread together?
- 2025‑10‑16
Before you can fix a problem, you have to see it
Eighty-five billion dollars vanishes from the global economy every year due to legacy code, and the reason isn't just bad engineering—it's a psychological blind spot that’s training your new hires to ignore the very problems you’re paying them to solve.
- 2025‑07‑05
Traveling Europe guided by our personal AI podcast
When we hear an AI-generated voice, we stop being skeptical judges and start being listeners—a dangerous psychological glitch that is fundamentally changing how we experience the world, for better and for worse.
- 2025‑04‑28
Connecting AI assistants to the real world with MCP
We are currently building a beautiful, user-friendly internet for an audience that doesn’t exist: AI agents that don't need buttons, screens, or interfaces to do our work for us.
- 2025‑04‑17
Vibe coding a quick fix for a surprising knowledge gap
We’re entering an era where we can "vibe code" our way through any problem, but what if the very convenience making our lives easier is actually silencing our ability to learn and remember?
- 2025‑04‑11
What great onboarding looks like in a new dev job
Why are 22% of new developers quitting within their first ninety days, and how does a lesson from the 1968 Apollo mission reveal the secret to fixing the broken way we onboard talent today?
- 2024‑10‑05
Ugnsbakade äppelskivor med krispigt frötäcke
When we ask AI to cook our dinner, we aren’t just outsourcing the labor; we’re slowly deleting the messy, idiosyncratic human intuition that makes a meal worth remembering.
- 2024‑09‑29
Ett Hemnet för...
Using a "fill-in-the-blank" pitch like "the Uber for X" might get you a meeting with investors, but this podcast episode reveals why that exact same shortcut is statistically the fastest way to sign your company’s death warrant.
Sections marked as "AI Generated" were generated by one or several AI models.
While it may be entertaining and informative, please be aware that it could possibly contain inaccuracies or fabricated information.