From a short essay written by programmer Greg Knauss:

People will argue that speaking English to LLMs is just another level of abstraction away from the physics of how the machine actually works. And while that’s technically true — the worst kind of true — it also misses the point. Industrialization fundamentally changes things, by quantum degrees. A Ding Dong from a factory is not the same thing as a gâteau au chocolat et crème chantilly from a baker which is not the same thing as cramming chunks of chocolate and scoops of whipped cream directly into your mouth while standing in front of the fridge at 2:00am. The level of care, of personalization, of intimacy — both given and taken — changes its nature. Digging a trench is a very different thing than telling someone to dig a trench. Assembling a clock is a very different thing than asking Siri for the time.

// 02.27.26

Jony Ive, in a 2025 fireside chat at Stripe:

I think the spiritual thing is that I believe that when somebody unwrapped that box, and took out that cable and they thought somebody gave a shit about me. I think that’s a spiritual thing.

What used to depress me was this sense that solving a functional imperative then we’re done. But of course, that’s not enough. That’s not the characteristic of an evolved society.

Sir Jony argues even the packaging should reflect consideration. I’ve always thought the tight physical tolerance of Apple’s packaging was fantastic (and subsequently industry-changing, now ubiquitous). If only software would follow suit. I would say it is, on the whole, getting worse (Apple included).

// 02.24.26

From writer George Saunders’ recent interview in the NYT Magazine:

[Chekhov] says a work of art doesn’t have to solve a problem — it just has to formulate it correctly… My job, rather than answering your question, is to allow [the characters] to make the best possible case for their view…I wrote myself into a place where the question got more and more profound, and I found myself less and less capable of giving a definitive answer. That’s not for an artist to do. You ratchet the question up, and you go, “Yeah, that’s a tough one.”

See also: his advice for graduates.

 

// 02.13.26