In which recent graduates are unemployed and older professionals explore alternatives to work-life balance
In which we distinguish between necessary progress and useless innovation
In which we learn from rich people how to shop and from kids how to find better hobbies
In which we realize that all the drama about the shortening of our attention span is nonsense
In which we set on a quest to explore new fields of knowledge and find the solutions that we need
In which we learn that some tough love can help any organization improve their hiring and firing practices
In which a new generation of professionals starts to show signs of disillusionment
In which we learn to appreciate full sentences and to despise endless babblers
Hidden ceremonies, the ideas that tech is silencing, and a forbidden island
Playing with challenging ideas, presenteeism and how sci-fi can help you develop a better strategy
I appreciate the few authors who help us understand things without making them too simple.
Healthy positivity, useful AI, dancing plagues and two gifts for you