The End of Productivity
Curiosity is a better compass than cynicism—it shifts from defending your territory to exploring what's possible (this reframe — from Holly Herndon, was a big unlock for me).
Imagine starting every project with the clay of humanity's accumulated knowledge at your fingertips, waiting for you to mold it to your liking?
AI is powerful but taste-blind. I... See more
Imagine starting every project with the clay of humanity's accumulated knowledge at your fingertips, waiting for you to mold it to your liking?
AI is powerful but taste-blind. I... See more
What matters in the age of AI is taste

from “The End of Productivity” on two types of KM: For administrative information, a search bar or hierarchical folder structure is sufficient. When you’re locating your child’s health insurance forms or retrieving your tax returns, you want efficient, predictable retrieval—not exploration.
But for creative information, what you need is tools that e
... See moreBut I also think that something more profound is happening here. Instead of being a passive consumer of the web, I begin to feel as though the internet is molding itself around my intentions, transforming from a distraction machine into a precision instrument for creativity … an attractor for and generator of thought. It’s like a thematic gravity w
... See more
So... you want a tool that automatically organizes your knowledge?
Stop.
What you actually want isn't to organize things,
it's to make things.
That's why we built Sublime different—a PKM (stands for Personal Knowledge Management, for the blissfully uninitiated) tool designed for creation, not just organization.
Tags don't make things.
You slap #AI or #ph... See more
Stop.
What you actually want isn't to organize things,
it's to make things.
That's why we built Sublime different—a PKM (stands for Personal Knowledge Management, for the blissfully uninitiated) tool designed for creation, not just organization.
Tags don't make things.
You slap #AI or #ph... See more