January 11, 2025 4 min read

Links: Week of 12 Jan 2025

  1. We are now confident we know how to build AGI as we have traditionally understood it. We believe that, in 2025, we may see the first AI agents “join the workforce” and materially change the output of companies. We continue to believe that iteratively putting great tools in the hands of people leads to great, broadly-distributed outcomes.

    We are beginning to turn our aim beyond that, to superintelligence in the true sense of the word. We love our current products, but we are here for the glorious future. With superintelligence, we can do anything else. Superintelligent tools could massively accelerate scientific discovery and innovation well beyond what we are capable of doing on our own, and in turn massively increase abundance and prosperity.

    This sounds like science fiction right now, and somewhat crazy to even talk about it. That’s alright—we’ve been there before and we’re OK with being there again. We’re pretty confident that in the next few years, everyone will see what we see, and that the need to act with great care, while still maximizing broad benefit and empowerment, is so important. Given the possibilities of our work, OpenAI cannot be a normal company.

    Emphasis mine. Those are tall claims. More from Zvi here.

  2. Having spent more time on LinkedIn last year than anyone should ever have to, I fully endorse this advice. via Shaan Puri.

    D
    dax@thdxr · Jan 4

    the only career advice i have is make every decision that moves you closer to not having to be on linkedin

  3. Brienna Hall has the most valuable role that you’ll never see at the most vital company that you’ve never heard of.

    Until she began working at ASML last year, she didn’t know the first thing about the company. She also didn’t know what she would be doing as a customer-support engineer—a “fancy mechanic,” as she calls herself.

    It’s the machine that produces the most advanced microchips on the planet. It was built with scientific technologies that sound more like science fiction—breakthroughs so improbable that they were once dismissed as impossible. And it has transformed wafers of silicon into the engines of modern life.

    Even today, there are only a few hundred of these EUV machines in existence—and they are ludicrously expensive. The one that Hall maintains cost $170 million, while the latest models sell for roughly $370 million.

    But maybe the most remarkable thing about these invaluable machines is that they’re all made by the same company: ASML.

    ASML is the glue holding the chip business together. That’s because this one Dutch company is responsible for all of the EUV lithography systems that help make the chips in so many of your devices. Like your phone. And your computer. And your tablet. And your TV. Maybe even your car, too.

    These machines have become indispensable. And they depend on the invisible work of Brienna Hall.

    Truly a case of following the previous tweet’s advice. Brienna Hall still has a LinkedIn profile, but I give it another 18 months at most.

January 4, 2025 2 min read

Using AI to Answer Questions

The last two are a great if you are thinking about how to incorporate Generative AI in your work or life.

A hack I learned recently is anytime I have a question I am too embarrassed / worried / lazy to ask the right person or even google for, I just ask Claude or ChatGPT. Here are some examples of questions that would have gone unanswered but for the chatbots.

A piece I was reading mentioned that Starlink's low earth orbit satellites have a useful life of 5 years. I wondered what happens to them afterwards. Sure I could have googled that1 and probably found the answer somewhere in the top 3 links2. But having the bot answer your exact question has a lot less friction than doing that and I find I am asking a lot more of these questions.

I recently started reading Cloud Atlas by David Mitchell, apparently a modern classic. After the first 10 pages I was really struggling to understand what was going on and ordinarily I would have just dropped the book.

Instead, I asked Claude "I am reading the book Cloud Atlas. I am struggling to understand the theme through the first few pages." I got this response: "The book is structured in a unique way, with six nested stories that span different time periods and genres. Each story is interrupted halfway through, only to be concluded in reverse order in the second half of the book."

No risk of spoilers and I suddenly felt more comfortable navigating the book.

Claude has already changed my mind on multiple questions and I am sure will keep doing so. I hereby declare 2025 the year of asking more questions.

Did you know that (in iOS at least) this button allows you to dictate text? I used to think it was to send a voice message (don't do that) but no, this types it out and does a pretty good job of it too. This deserves to be used a lot more.

Dictate Text
January 4, 2025 1 min read

Links: Week of 05 Jan 2025

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