Wisdom
The pithiest statements from across the writing, compiled for the AI age.
264 quotes from 39 posts
“The act of expressing your inner experience is reason enough.”
“The MVP is a continuum. Every version, however small, is an MVP.”
“What you actually do is expose yourself to the outside world and feed the response back into your internal state.”
“When the dance stops, that's when you know it's time to change direction.”
“Letting go of market size as a fixed target allows your creative efforts to resonate naturally.”
“Writing is not an event; it's a continuous process embedded in daily living.”
“You don't need likes or views; the honest exposure of your inner world is already the thing.”
“The skeptics observe from a distance and conclude the problems are disqualifying.”
“Those who proactively embrace the machines have the most faith in human ingenuity and creative control.”
“The outcome depends on who shows up to shape it.”
“The question isn't whether you have technical skills. It's whether you engage with the technology with a productive mindset.”
“This is not the same as faith that replaces evidence.”
“The optimism I'm describing isn't faith in any particular technology. It's faith in human technological capacity.”
“The demand for persistent, dynamic agent memory is real.”
Google's memory agent thinks for itself, trading determinism for insight·Industry trends in agent memory
“Removing the vector database reduces operational and conceptual complexity.”
Google's memory agent thinks for itself, trading determinism for insight·Simplicity of the Always-On Memory Agent
“This one actively connects, compresses, and synthesizes.”
Google's memory agent thinks for itself, trading determinism for insight·Active consolidation in memory systems
“If the Always-On Memory Agent's consolidation produces a bad insight, that insight is now part of memory.”
Google's memory agent thinks for itself, trading determinism for insight·Risks of agent-driven memory
“The interesting architecture combines both.”
Google's memory agent thinks for itself, trading determinism for insight·Potential integration of approaches
“Passive memory is not enough.”
Google's memory agent thinks for itself, trading determinism for insight·Limitations of traditional memory systems
“I expect the architecture may converge on consolidation agents that think, running on top of truth layers you can trust.”
Google's memory agent thinks for itself, trading determinism for insight·Future of agent memory architecture
“Token issuance flips that order. The market capitalizes future narratives before the product exists.”
“When feedback latency is measured in years, narrative fills the gap.”
“Rejecting early adopters removes the only guide to what future users might actually need.”
“The incentive structure rewards producing the next milestone more than it rewards delivering on the last one.”
“Good products come from tight cycles: ship something, listen to users, iterate.”
“The best products I have used were built by teams that treated early users as the most important signal.”
“If the token price disappeared tomorrow, would the project still make sense? For most crypto ecosystems, the honest answer is no.”
“What these platforms call memory is closer to a profile than a record of what you worked on.”
“The result is something like a friend who forgets the details of everything you have talked about but has a vague sense of who you are as a person.”
“If exports are partial, stale, and surface-dependent, 'portability' is best-effort transfer, not reliable state migration.”
“The market is collapsing at least three distinct things under the word 'memory.'”
“Convenience memory wins the chat experience. Retrieval wins exploratory, one-off questions. Durable memory wins the state layer underneath.”
“Neotoma treats memory as explicit, user-owned data infrastructure rather than an opaque byproduct of chat interactions.”
“When one model or interface changes, the underlying state does not drift with it.”
“The thing that keeps breaking is not intelligence. It's trust.”
“Retrieval works for exploration and one-off questions. It falls apart for ongoing state.”
“Neotoma is a truth layer: the memory substrate that sits under your agents.”
“Trust starts with control. Before adding remote infrastructure, the contract and the guarantees need to be solid.”
“It's not a note-taking app or 'second brain.' It's schema-first structured state you control.”
“Privacy-first. Your data stays on your machine. Local storage only: SQLite and local files.”
“This release exists to pressure-test the foundations.”
“Memory design, not model capability, is now the limiting factor for long-lived agents.”
“Retrieval is also cheap to add... that is a real advantage, not just inertia.”
“When you depend on agent memory for truth, the breaks show up.”
“Structured state means a store with typed entities, stable IDs, relationships, and timelines.”
“Retrieval's default access pattern is 'find similar things.' A structured store's default is 'query by type, ID, relationship, or time.'”
“Neotoma provides structural retrieval by type, ID, relationship, time range, and graph neighborhood.”
“The field is converging on structured memory. The question is who builds the layer you trust with your data.”
“Agents will become stateful economic actors, softening the boundary between 'I did this' and 'my agent did this.'”
“When errors become priced, organizations stop asking whether outputs were helpful and start asking how those outputs were produced.”
“Audit pressure moves down-market not because small teams want it, but because risk follows usage.”
“Large AI platforms are likely to continue shipping memory features that are useful but fundamentally opaque.”
“AI tools are complements, not substitutes; marginal improvements do not collapse the stack.”
“Once costs are visible, metering follows naturally, making inefficiency and drift visible waste.”
“Memory stops being a UX feature and becomes infrastructure that is necessarily open.”
“A vision that cannot be falsified cannot be corrected, and a product built on such a vision risks becoming well-designed for a world that never arrives.”
“The humanness isn't in typing every word. It's in deciding what's worth saying.”
“Delegating low-level details frees us to work at a higher level of abstraction.”
“Every piece you create with AI gets you closer to understanding how to channel yourself through the technology more effectively.”
“The future isn't about preserving some notion of pure, unassisted human creativity.”
“We're all centaurs now. Half human, half AI.”
“The risk of publishing something AI-assisted and imperfect is usually lower than we think.”
“It's not that different from managing a team. When you lead people, you don't write every line of code yourself.”
“Human-facing self-custody wallets mostly reached people willing to absorb the attention and complexity.”
“Agentic wallets change that. The friction drops and the set of people who can practically hold their own keys grows.”
“This MCP server is experimental and not safe for meaningful funds.”
“Destructive operations default to dry_run: true.”
“I do not use point-and-click crypto UIs for routine operations.”
“Agents would monitor, reason, and execute within policy.”
“The wallet server is one execution adapter among many.”
“For agent memory, similarity over raw text fails.”
“Pruning fragments temporally linked evidence and produces wrong answers.”
“Structure often emerges in dialogue: 'add a task for that,' 'record that we agreed to pay 500.'”
“A deterministic, schema-first path gives you the same structural advantage without that brittleness.”
“Retrieval has to be driven by structure: how you decompose and organise the stream.”
“LLM-generated structure is brittle: formatting deviations, failed updates.”
“The conversation is the primary object. Structure lives inside the hierarchy.”
“You can ask semantic-style questions when the data lives in the store.”
“You build something they structurally can't pursue.”
“Incumbents can't copy certain architectures because their existing business models make it structurally expensive or impossible.”
“Build something that would cannibalize a profitable revenue stream.”
“If they can add it as a feature, they will. If it requires a rewrite, you have time.”
“Distribution advantage becomes distribution liability.”
“Speed matters, but it's speed of compounding, not speed of shipping features.”
“The goal is to build something they can't pursue without making choices they won't make.”
“We built something that would require them to make structural changes they're incentivized not to make.”
“The agent infers; it doesn't guarantee.”
“A truth layer is not retrieval. It is persistent, structured state.”
“Both retrieval approaches optimize for convenience and flexibility. A truth layer optimizes for consistency and verifiability.”
“Agentic search has no persistent graph. A truth layer does.”
“Retrieval is session-bound. It doesn't by itself give you persistent identity, provenance, or cross-session consistency.”
“Neither embedding similarity nor ad hoc agentic search is equivalent.”
“I'm building a structured memory layer that takes the truth layer approach.”
“The agent does things. It also remembers things.”
“Overwrites with no undo. The previous state is gone.”
“A truth layer isn't a replacement for the agent. It's the layer under it.”
“When a number is wrong, you can see where it came from.”
“You get the lift of an agent that does things and a memory that doesn't drift.”
“Retrieval and 'more context' don't by themselves give you stable identity.”
“The agent did something, and here's the state it wrote, with lineage and the ability to fix it.”
“The more the agent does, the more you need a place where that state is first-class.”
“The thing that keeps breaking is not intelligence, but trust.”
“You cannot safely automate against data you can't inspect, diff, audit, or replay.”
“State changes can't be implicit.”
“Memory updates have to be named operations rather than side effects.”
“Those aren't conveniences; they're prerequisites for trust.”
“When those systems fail, and they will, the first question will be, 'How did this happen?'”
“I'm building Neotoma to provide that: a substrate that is inspectable, replayable, and user-controlled.”
“Agents are increasingly stateful, handling tasks, contacts, transactions, and commitments over time, but their memory is built for retrieval, not truth.”
“People should control their own data, memory, money, and digital infrastructure, not cede it to platforms that optimize for engagement over truth.”
“The agents follow the same playbook I do.”
“The state layer is explicit and inspectable, which is exactly the contract Neotoma is designed to provide.”
“Neotoma treats personal data the way production systems treat state: typed entities, stable IDs, full provenance, deterministic queries.”
“I work as a solo founder in Barcelona, operating with AI agents as a team rather than as tools.”
“Expecting Facebook to know what happens to data off-platform is an impossible expectation.”
“We risk characterizing Facebook as an omnipotent parental figure.”
“It’s madness to expect a company with billions of users to draw lines of social acceptability.”
“If we want to prevent companies from reselling data, we already have real governments to do that.”
“The biggest shame would be pressuring Facebook into a totalitarian posture about data flow.”
“Users will suffer from being treated as increasingly untrusted to share their data freely.”
“We risk entering a cycle of losing progressively more liberty over our digital lives.”
“The most durable peace and satisfaction derives from an active concentration in the present moment.”
“Distraction is a near constant factor for many of us.”
“I turn off all phone notifications, entirely.”
“Home is a place to recuperate, not to check messages.”
“I use Asana religiously to track anything I feel I 'ought' to do.”
“I apply a modified Pomodoro technique with Focuslist.”
“Having a comprehensive picture of my finances reduces stress.”
“I simply take out a pen and piece of paper to jot down a rough outline of what keeps robbing my attention.”
“File organization provided me a sanctuary of sorts within a broader realm of adventure.”
“Each of us is a small publishing house and content producer.”
“We're terrible content managers and crafters, with either our public or private data.”
“It'd be a lot more powerful to put it all at the immediate control of your fingertips.”
“My goal has been to hit the save button and immediately have any changes go live on my website.”
“Aggregated republishing onto one's own website is one of the main use cases for the Neotoma sync service.”
“I want to focus on developing the sync service primarily for this use case, dogfooding it on my own website.”
“I booked a flight from San Francisco with little else in terms of preparation, an intentionally rash decision to experience what it would be like to land in a new country and improvise the establishment of a life there.”
“The non-lucrative residence visa application is a concise document, spanning a mere two pages. But therein lie a great number of details and potential pitfalls.”
“This basically means you can live in Spain and do whatever you want as long as you don’t work for a Spanish company.”
“The time between submitting the application and receiving an approval notice ended up lasting only 19 days.”
“It pays to put your best foot forward even if can’t manage to bring everything ready in time for your application appointment.”
“Bureaucracy at its finest.”
“The general theme seems to be reliable money in that the Spanish government doesn’t appear inclined to accept any type of income that may fluctuate.”
“Decide when you’d ideally like to move to Spain and then work backwards from there.”
“The recording was not only an instantaneous way to share a bit of my journey, but also a breadcrumb trail of moments.”
“I was giving my impressions away to three separate companies that would keep the memories in fragments on disparate servers.”
“We live in the digital age but as individuals, the vast majority of us do not have proper digital homes.”
“We should be empowered to own our personal online data, maintaining close control so we can use it and open it up to others as we please.”
“Dropbox is a beautiful tool because it bridges the local and network-based data realms.”
“Asheville is intended to help make that possible for non-technical and technical people alike.”
“If Dropbox were to disappear tomorrow, you would still have your files on your computer.”
“It blatantly panders to my predispositions.”
“The format screams unoriginality and desperation for visibility.”
“You're dumbing society down, list-by-list.”
“Who has time for sentences with conjunctions that encourage us to actually *think*?”
“You're making the rest of media envious of your apparent success.”
“It irritated me enough to write this stupid rant of a parody.”
“Startups often get so consumed by their day-to-day challenges that they do a poor job actually projecting their longer-term success.”
“Any projection of success should place valuation as its end goal and work backwards from there.”
“A company's valuation is derived by the total amount of profit it will accumulate forever into the future, discounted to a present value.”
“You need to focus on how quickly you are accumulating active users and increasing their engagement.”
“The number of active users for a product is determined primarily by its user acquisition rate, activation rate, and retention rate.”
“Even if you're at a beta stage with only 50 testers, you can start projecting them one-by-one.”
“It'll keep you honest about whether you truly have enough data to establish knowledge about the business's momentum.”
“Design is not just a word; it's a spectrum of types.”
“A good product designer is aware that prioritization is key to their work.”
“The interface designer is most responsible for making the product as intuitively usable as possible.”
“Visual design is the most aesthetic and subjective design type, but it's also the most immediately recognizable one.”
“It's hard, if not impossible, to make up for shortcomings in product design with amazing interface or visual design.”
“The practical question that startups often face is how much attention to give each of these types of design.”
“Most MVPs get released, however, this dream doesn't exactly pan out.”
“If the MVP contained the most important kernel of the experience... then your fundamental thesis was wrong.”
“Adding extra features... is not going to change the main lesson you've already learnt.”
“Inertia is the reason you don't see many startups make this hard decision.”
“The bravest and most critical thing that product managers can do is treat their products as the experiments they are.”
“If you can't pinpoint when new users achieve gratification, you have a structural problem.”
“No one feature in particular provides instant gratification.”
“Your product's value needs to be singular and immediately available.”
“Anticipating events imposes a good deal of psychological overhead, which isn't pleasurable.”
“Product designers often try to stuff several forms into one product.”
“People mostly treat new internet services as nice-to-haves rather than needs.”
“Social networks are essentially systems for distributing content among people who care about each other.”
“Most people simply don't go to that many events, and of those they do attend, many are not anticipated with a high degree of certainty.”
“People fear missing out on worthwhile events but don't actually like to take the deliberate initiative to avoid such missed chances.”
“Most social networks feed primarily on vanity, in that they allow people to share and tailor online content that makes them look good.”
“Plans don't have a long shelf life; their value drops precipitously after the event occurs.”
“Geographic specificity is another inherent limitation to a plan's value.”
“There's simply too much unearthed value to knowing about much of what our friends plan to do.”
“I look forward to seeing how technological advancements overcome the aforementioned challenges to get us there.”
“The indie web movement is rooted in a desire for digital freedom, primarily from monopolies that threaten to restrict and violate the common Internet user's online existence.”
“Most Internet users increasingly place their digital lives in the hands of proprietary services run by mostly private — and always self-interested — companies.”
“There's a moral tone to the indie web movement, not just an insistence that users ought to control their online identities.”
“Downtime is frustrating but most people learn to work around it; shuttered services disappoint loyal users but most likely faced their demise due to popular disinterest.”
“The idea here is that everyone should register their own second-level domain and put up a personal website of some sort.”
“The financial and time burden of using the tool to both set up and maintain a homestead needed to be minimized as much as possible.”
“The goal here is to have them engage with the setup process as painlessly as possible.”
“Once enough people have done so, it'll be much easier to weave an indie web between their homesteads and insulate them from the decisions or fate of any particular company.”
“Social networking is a precondition for new modes of information exchange, not an end in and of itself.”
“You care about the ways in which you can use it to interact with people you care about.”
“The differences are more important, if also more poorly understood, because they allow each of them to present unique ways of exchanging information.”
“These categories form three pillars of effective social networks.”
“Weaknesses can and inevitably will be tolerated within any given pillar, but each must be strong overall.”
“New social networks must differentiate themselves by establishing at least one of these pillars differently.”
“Bloggers dread the idea of someone coming along and justifiably saying 'so what?'.”
“The goal here is to help the blogger, not exploit them.”
“You should get out in front of this reaction by emphasizing the characteristics of your announcement that make it unique.”
“If you must, just ask the blogger to please not publish them and they won't, but you'll gain credibility in their eyes.”
“Do not send them a press release; it will only insult their intelligence.”
“Bloggers much prefer to work directly with executive-level representatives than PR firms.”
“Blippy is hoping that people are ready to share their purchases with the world.”
“I'd prefer to check Blippy as often as I check Mint.”
“Tell me what their biggest and smallest purchases were; their strangest purchases.”
“Blow that up if it's available and give me context.”
“I'd personally rather locate an interesting purchase *then* choose to view the comments around it.”
“Perhaps a 'I Want This' button would be more valuable.”
“Imagine how awesome it would be if we all had a better idea of what everyone was up to in the next few hours, days, weeks, or months.”
“Your plans will reach not only your subscribers on Plancast, but your friends on Twitter and Facebook as well.”
“It's been an amazingly fruitful journey getting to this point.”
“I'm truly lucky to have him, and I encourage you to get acquainted.”
“I suggest you get started by posting a few plans that may be tucked away in your personal calendar.”
“We're already seeing a broad range of people take a liking to it.”
“The social graph is deteriorating on Facebook and starting to be reproduced elsewhere in better form.”
“Friend lists tend to get bloated over time because users have a harder time defriending each other virtually than in real life.”
“Facebook's golden goose (the social graph) may not be so golden after all.”
“When you sign up for Twitter, you can determine anew who you care about.”
“Facebook has hoisted this dynamic paradigm onto a user base that didn't expect it, didn't ask for it, and perhaps doesn't want it.”
“Privacy and distribution controls simply aren't going to solve the problems of an over-encompassing social graph.”
“I've raised some (micro-)seed funding from fbFund.”
“It's a refreshing change of pace to work around like-minded people again.”
“FbFund isn't just an investment vehicle; starting this summer, it's also an incubation program.”
“If you haven't visited East Asia, I highly encourage you to do so.”
“The internet industry is often mocked because it doesn't readily provide dependable answers.”
“Wouldn't it be great if we could just design sites that sell like iPhone apps?”
“Imagine visiting a site's landing page, getting a description and some screenshots, and then seeing a button that says '$1.99 for full access'.”
“Apple has made things happen on the iPhone because they've created a closed system that makes it really easy for end users and developers alike.”
“Why can't someone do this for the web?”
“Such a payment system could revolutionize how websites are monetized - and consequently, how they are made.”
“It's hard to communicate the immediate value to users, especially ones that join the site before any of their friends.”
“Better to release something straightforward, see how users like it, and evolve by coupling user feedback with theory.”
“There's an intrinsic value to building something simple.”
“Users don't want to think too hard about how to use applications.”
“When you release a web app these days, you need to market it effectively, otherwise you'll get drowned out by all the other options.”
“It's easier to explain to other people what you're building once you've released something.”
“Twitter stands out because it's a counter example to this trend, a company that's going mainstream and perplexing people all at the same time.”
“The mark is both simple and profound, and it consists of demonstrating the potency of so-called 'microblogging' for the distribution of social information.”
“On Twitter, the users contribute directly into the news feed itself.”
“Twitter remains a stunningly simple application. That's its strength.”
“Over the next few years, we are going to see social services across the spectrum appropriate and expand upon the basic functionality of Twitter.”
“Microblogging is passive, it's distributed, and it's easy.”
“Twitter has set the standard. It's currently proving that its model can appeal to mainstream audiences.”
“A startup founder needs to be stubbornly optimistic, lest he or she succumb to the overwhelming number of doubts that may arise.”
“If you don't constantly question the core value proposition of your startup, you're bound to build something that people don't need or want.”
“It's immensely satisfying when people respond with 'wow cool, that sounds exactly like something I would use.'”
“Keeping up morale is particularly important when you're flying solo, because you don't have a cofounder who will constantly reassure you.”
“When you're starting a company, the goals are not defined for you and you're wrapped up in the success or failure of the enterprise as a whole.”
“There are definite benefits to working for yourself - and from home, as I currently am.”
“Sometimes it feels a bit like I'm on vacation, but then I remember that I'm actually working longer and on weekends now.”
“Working there keeps you in constant connection with the consumer internet technology scene.”
“The reassurance is that even if I fail, I will have learned and experienced much along the way.”
“Questions like these are just begging to be answered by web services.”
“I'm looking to set up a site that makes it easy for you to share information about who and what you know.”
“No service does this to my satisfaction yet.”
“The desire to meet people and learn about what's going on around you isn't new.”
“It's great to see sites like Engage and Mixtt try to innovate by making things more social, but so far their efforts haven't worked out all that well.”