I know it's being said quite often, but...I feel like it's more important than ever to rely on fundamentals In every field. AI and tech can help, but what if all is gone tomorrow?
Don't build a fundament on sand.
That's why I find Virgil Abloh was one of the true visionaries. As controversial as he was, his stance hits the zeitgeist right now. People be saying alwys that "taste", "distribution" are the only moats and it's kinda right...
When AI makes copy stuff simple af, so Abloh had shifted creating something cultural new to the intentional 3% human intervention:
The remix, the taste, the precise twist (storytelling) and build up a voice and community around it (Personal Brand).
That’s the part that’s hard to copy.
Human judgment, curation, and vision become the only valuable thing in design.
You can always copy it later… but you have the edge of being first. Everything else doesn't matter anymore.
codex tip: ask codex to look through your sessions and archive one-off queries and organise your projects better
I have it running as an automation, keeps my side bar focused
Hinge's founder has created an AI dating app that's straight out of Black Mirror
There are no profiles or matches to swipe through – the AI decides who it thinks you will be compatible with
Next step, getting a cloud mac (for iOS dev). I pay certain price, but I can go ham from everywhere from just the phone.
Building apps, and being able to test the builds directly on the phone on the fly is the ultimate goal.
Miss me with setting up vps and sht, but gave GPT 5.6. the prompt to setup remote controI.
Now I can close my laptop, go to the gym, and still do work from my mobile device. Best thing about that… it’s all synced up between devices.
It’s experimental on linux, but it works like a charm
Miss me with setting up vps and sht, but gave GPT 5.6. the prompt to setup remote controI.
Now I can close my laptop, go to the gym, and still do work from my mobile device. Best thing about that… it’s all synced up between devices.
It’s experimental on linux, but it works like a charm