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A discussion about introverts using automation to reduce interpersonal tasks and streamline their own work processes.
Discussion on how remote work contributes to increased social isolation.
Meta CTO Andrew Bosworth admitted the company's AI reorganization was poorly executed, causing employee dissatisfaction, and outlined plans to improve communication and career growth.
This article argues that software engineers should work fewer hours and maintain slack time to be available for high-impact opportunities, rather than constantly grinding low-priority tickets.
A tweet from GergelyOrosz highlights a critique of the startup culture of performative overwork, quoting Karri Saarinen on how successful people rarely need to publicly display intensity.
In this 2008 essay, Paul Graham argues that the hierarchical structure of large companies is unnatural for humans, comparing it to the difference between zoo animals and wild ones, and suggests that working in small groups (like startups) is more aligned with human nature.
Silicon Valley VC godfather Marc Andreessen comments that the work atmosphere inside SpaceX is extremely brutal. Musk personally goes to the front line to eliminate underperformers, which paradoxically attracts the world's top engineers to join.
Anthropic employee Fiona shares the company's way of working: code is no longer the bottleneck, processes are simplified, teams are flat, and product managers first act as individual contributors. The article also compares the software delivery approach of early Microsoft, which relied on CDs.
Social commentary arguing that the workplace historically provided low-stakes adult friendship and belonging, and questioning what will replace that dynamic as work evolves.
The author highlights a coder friend in Chiang Mai who remote-works for a US AI-coding firm, pockets ¥50k after tax, and enjoys ample free time—then contrasts this with how conventional jobs squeeze people on rent, relationships, diet, autonomy and savings.