I am just so tired, and so bad at crafts. I dream of the day we can all take it down a notch without shame: skipping an event here, ignoring a made-up holiday there. What I need is a quorum. Without it, my kids will continue to feel neglected — all their friends went to the world fair, and they said the food at Venezuela was incredible — and I will continue to feel guilty, pretty much all the time, but especially when I’m staring at my ceiling at 3 a.m.
This conversation will be one of the single most important ones of the decade—maybe the rest of our lives.
All hail the personal website! Henry’s is an extraordinary example of one.
Good friend of mine just started working at Meter. Fascinating company.
Can’t overstate how big this all feels.
Long, great post. One I suspect I'll come back to many, many times over the years, highlighting different parts each and every time.
Thinking about this a lot lately and how so much of my life is and has been on a "manager's schedule" for quite some time, even when not working full-time. Claude Code, going deep on tinkering and building, has aggressively put me back in a "maker's schedule" mindset.
It's hard not to highlight this entire memo. Truly remarkable candor (which I appreciate). And while there are two sides to every story—in this case, maybe three or four sides—it's hard not to side with Dario on this one.
Interesting read—so much so that the stock market tanked the day it came out. Some leaps in here for sure, but feels more realistic today than a year ago, that’s for sure.
This might low-key be one of the most consequential stories of the year. Not only because of the stakes, but because of how it has so effectively pushed Anthropic to the front page of the news day in and day out. They are taking the moral high ground, have the superior product, and are on a truly monumental run as a company. Good for them.