Afleveringen

  • In this timely conversation, Conrad Bastable joins Packy to break down his epic essay Forsaking Industrialism and explore why the West has abandoned manufacturing while China built a world-beating industrial platform over decades. Read it here for the full experience: Forsaking Industrialism

    Conrad has been planning this essay for months, and he couldn't have dropped it at a better time. It's a comprehensive look at what China got right and what real reindustrialization would mean.

    We dive into how EU regulations inadvertently benefited Chinese manufacturing, why tariffs alone can't solve America's industrial challenges, and what it would take to rebuild America's manufacturing capabilities.Conrad explains the concept of "platform economies" that China has mastered, why capital markets naturally push against long-term industrial investments, and the uncomfortable trade-offs between principles and prosperity that nations must navigate.From electric dirt bikes to BMW's battery dilemma, this wide-ranging discussion offers a fresh perspective on the most urgent debate in America.

    Conrad's reading recommendations: - Alexander Hamilton's Report on ManufacturesConrad's other essays:

    - Full Stack of Society - Escalation Theory - Monetization & MonopoliesSponsored by Readwise - Visit readwise.io/hyperlegible for a free trial and get all Hyperlegible articles automatically added to your account.Big thanks to Jim Portela for editing!

  • Pseudonymous writer Parakeet joins me to discuss her viral essay "Skittle Factory Dementia Monkey Titty Monetization."

    I first heard about Parakeet a couple weeks ago when I saw half of my Twitter feed and half of my Substack Notes feed sharing her essay, including a bunch of people I wouldn't expect to share an essay with "Monkey Titty" in the title. I read it immediately, and saw why. Parakeet describes universally applicable ideas with the color turned up to 11 so they stick.

    We explore the "dementia personality" - how our core thought loops shape who we are and might one day define us. Parakeet shares insights from working at a dementia facility, explains her Skittle Factory metaphor for personality (and researching Skittle Factories), and reveals her unconventional productivity hack that's transformed her writing output.

    We talk about her writing process, gifs, why more people should read George Orwell's Politics and the English Language, and what she learned from her once-half-paralyzed dance teacher. Plus, hear the bizarre true story behind the "Monkey Titty" portion of the essay title and why Parakeet believes everyone should re-read Atlas Shrugged as an adult.

    Key moments:

    (5:35) Origins of the dementia personality concept

    (10:30) Can we change our core mental loops? (15:18) Skittle Factory Mass Extinction Events

    (21:50) Rewiring your brain through Luigi Jazz

    (30:05) Why this essay got shared by so many smart people

    (31:50) Using gifs(40:31) Parakeet's productivity hack

    Reading Recs from Parakeet:

    Parakeet: YOUR EYES ARE LEAKING CORPORATE CUMℱ

    Parakeet: ALGORITHMIC GROOMING OF YOUR INNER CHILDℱ

    George Orwell: Politics and the English Language

    Ayn Rand: Atlas Shrugged

    Hyperlegible is sponsored by my friends at Readwise, who build software that helps you get the most out of your reading. If you want to give it a try, go to readwise.io/hyperlegible where you start a free trial and get all the articles discussed here on Hyperlegible automatically added to your account.

    Thanks to Jim Portela for editing and getting the parakeet animation to work!

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  • On Episode 004 of Hyperlegible, I speak with Alex Danco. It was a treat. Alex is on my Mount Rushmore of internet writers. When I’m writing well, his writing has probably had an influence on mine.

    In this conversation, we talk about his new essay, which is an update to some of his older pieces, Scarcity and Abundance in 2025. If you want to understand how to think about everything that’s going on right now as a result of AI in a really thoughtful, grounded way, read the essay.

    There’s so much here. What did Clayton Christensen get wrong? How does tech make things that, contra disruption theory, make things that are both cheaper and better? Is Apple in trouble? Will the vibe coding apps maintain their growth and revenue? What has become scarce?

    We talk about the shift from Code as Capital to Code as Labor, Tokyo zoning regulations, Red Queen’s Races, whether this time is actually different this time, why big company AI products suck because they’re trying to squeeze everything out of their existing assets, Steve Ballmer Trutherism, and why crypto + agents might actually be a thing. This summary just scratches the surface. Just listen.

    At the end, Alex gives some great essay recommendations:

    Book/Essay Recommendations

    Alex Danco, The Audio Revolution

    Alex Danco, Can Twitter Save Science?

    Simon DeDeo, Information Theory for Intelligent People

    Thomas Mann, The Magic Mountain

    C.S. Lewis, The Inner Ring


    Hyperlegible is sponsored by my friends at Readwise, who build software that helps you get the most out of your reading. If you want to give it a try, go to readwise.io/hyperlegible where you start a free trial and get all the articles discussed here on Hyperlegible automatically added to your account.

    Thanks to Jim Portela for editing!

  • In Episode 003 of Hyperlegible, host Packy McCormick talks with Julian Lehr about his recent essay The Case Against Conversational Interfaces and why natural language might not be the ideal way to interact with computers. Julian explains why conversational AI should complement rather than replace graphical user interfaces, and shares insights about his unique writing process.

    Julian is one of the most creative writers on the internet. Go read his work at julian.digital.

    Hyperlegible is sponsored by our friends at Readwise. You can find links to all of our conversations, and all of the episodes we discuss, at readwise.io/hyperlegible.

    Episode Highlights:

    (00:10) - Julian summarizes his essay on conversational interfaces and why they're inefficient

    (02:31) - Why writing is different: "a thinking process" rather than a speed-optimized workflow

    (03:08) - The "Pass the Butter Test" and the ideal human-computer relationship

    (05:04) - The privacy vs. experience trade-off with AI interfaces

    (07:10) - How Julian's visual approach to writing differs from traditional writers

    (10:07) - Julian's unique writing process: starting with pen and paper, switching between tools

    (11:22) - Using Figma as an underrated writing tool for visualizing content

    (12:24) - How Julian incorporates AI into his writing process, using ChatGPT as a thinking partner

    (15:18) - Discussion of AI at the OS level and predictions about browser development

    (18:38) - AI as a complement rather than a replacement, inspired by StarCraft gaming interfaces

    (21:01) - Sam Altman's always-on AI workflow and potential applications for writers

    (30:58) - Why Julian took a two-year break from writing and his publishing goals for this year

    (32:31) - The status-signaling aspect of the "thanks to" section in essays

    (36:12) - Julian recommends reading his essay "The Power of Defaults"

    (36:55) - Recommended reading: Kevin Kwok's "The Arc of Collaboration"

    (38:15) - Key takeaway: Think of AI as a complement that unlocks new possibilities rather than replacing existing workflows


    Essays and Podcasts Mentioned:

    Julian Lehr: The Case Against Conversational Interfaces

    Julian Lehr: ⁠The Power of Defaults⁠Kevin Kwok: ⁠The Arc of Collaboration⁠
    David Perell: How I Write with Sam Altman

    Big thanks to Jim Portela for editing!

  • Utsav Mamoria recently wrote How to Live an Intellectually Rich Life on his Substack, Tumse Na Ho Paayega. It blew up, breaking out of containment in India and spanning the globe to the tune of 1,100 likes at the time of recording.

    For good reason: Utsav combines philosophy, mathematics, biographies, personal experience, and hand-drawn sketches to create a map – quite literally – for living an intellectually rich life. He takes us on a journey through Moradoom, Igamor, and Evermore, before arriving at Luminspere, the Mountains of Knowledge.

    His one sentence takeaway: Consistency trumps everything.

    I loved reading the essay, and was pleasantly surprised to enjoy our conversation even more.

    You can find Utsav on X at @utsavmamoria and subscribe to Tumse Na Ho Paayega here.

    I asked Utsav for some recommendations.

    Substack to Follow: Ted Gioia’s The Honest Broker

    Favorite of his own pieces other than this one: Why we understand time wrong

    If you enjoy Hyperlegible, subscribe and leave us a rating. We have some great conversations scheduled and I want to bring this to as many people as we can.

  • For the first episode of Hyperlegible, I talked to my friend Tina He (@fkpxls on twitter) who writes the excellent Fakepixels, which she recently brought back to life after a four year hibernation and on which she’s dropped gems each week since.Last week, Tina wrote an essay called Jevons Paradox: A personal perspective about something surprising she’s noticed: AI is causing a lot of people to work more, not less. Since you can now do more with each hour, the opportunity cost of each hour not worked is higher! The treadmill spins faster and faster. Read it, and subscribe to Fakepixels while you’re there: https://fakepixels.substack.com/p/jevons-paradox-a-personal-perspectiveIf you're wondering how (or whether) to compete in the age of AI, Tina's personal perspective will help. Please let us know what you think and share your favorite essays with me @packym on twitter.

  • In April 2022, Packy wrote a Deep Dive on Primer:

    https://www.notboring.co/p/primer-the-ambitious-home-for-ambitious

    Three years later, a lot has changed. Primer is building schools. The opportunity is both bigger and more challenging than it was then.

    In this conversation, Packy and Primer CEO Ryan Delk discuss the need to fix in K-12 education. Ryan shares insights on Primer's transition from a software-focused company to a vertically integrated Microschool model. He also addresses regulatory hurdles, the market potential for innovative educational solutions, and the vision for making quality education accessible to all families.

    If you want to build a vertically integrated company to solve a really big, important problem, you need to listen to this.

    Chapters

    00:00The Importance of K-12 Education Reform

    02:18The Shift from Software to Microschools

    04:04The Pivot to Microschools

    06:28Building a New Education Model

    09:03Scaling and Integrating Education Solutions

    11:43Balancing Control and Innovation in Education

    14:18The Role of Software in Education

    17:15Future of Education and Personalization

    21:56The Future of Education Funding

    24:14AI Tutors and Their Limitations

    26:12The Shift in Educational Structures Post-COVID

    28:59Addressing Concerns About School Choice

    31:19Breaking the Narrative of Private Schools

    33:58The Vision for Free Education

    36:49Navigating the Incumbent Education System

    39:15Market Opportunities in Education

    41:19The Future Landscape of Education

    43:09Growth Projections for Primer