← OpenEdux

Notes

Short thoughts on AI, work, cognition, investing, and building calmer systems for modern life.

June 2026
June 6, 2026
AI is incredibly powerful — but never let it replace your own judgment.
June 4, 2026
Test.
May 2026
May 30, 2026
If a system can only create value but not peace of mind, it is still incomplete.
May 29, 2026
Without form, there is no content.
May 26, 2026
There is no right or wrong — only positions.
May 25, 2026
Interacting with AI makes it easier to enter immersive deep work — the conversation becomes a container for sustained focus.
May 24, 2026
Hand your tasks over to a system, and it keeps compounding and leveraging — quietly, steadily, without asking for anything in return.
May 23, 2026
Two words stayed with me today: compounding and leverage. They point to the same thing — do the right things, and keep doing them with focus.
May 22, 2026
Knowing too much can make you unhappy. And how much you know is always relative — better to focus deeply on one thing.
May 20, 2026
Maybe being right starts with having a coordinate system — whether two-dimensional or three-dimensional.
May 20, 2026
Good outcomes = good direction + good timing + good choices + good strategy.
May 18, 2026
I won't make it to Mars in this lifetime. But I'm building my digital soul. One day, he may carry my spirit and join you among the stars. Godspeed.
May 17, 2026
More and more, I feel that the scarcest resource in the future will not be information, but stable attention.
May 15, 2026
Keeping ongoing conversations with frontier AI models may become an important part of future personal cognition systems. Not just for productivity, but for preserving context, refining ideas, and thinking more clearly over long periods of time.
May 12, 2026
The real value of AI may not be speed, but recovering attention and emotional space.
May 10, 2026
"Storage-compute separation" may become a core philosophy for future personal workflows.
May 8, 2026
AI is gradually separating execution from human cognition. The brain should spend less energy remembering, and more energy deciding.