Brian Maucere
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And then, you know, you go through the decades and they're, you know, social media, obviously.
And is it rotting the brain?
Is it taking away, you know, deeper thinking levels?
And now we're at AI and, you know, there's great conversations in these papers like that.
And I'll be interesting to see where this sort of nets out.
I don't know that we'll know really for another decade until there's just been enough data and research done.
I guess from my perspective, there are certainly things that I offload now to AI that I don't really have any cognitive load on.
But I also used to have a flip phone that had the little pager thing at the top and you still had to memorize all the numbers of your friends.
So like, because I don't have to memorize the phone numbers of my friends and my dumber for not having to keep that in constant, my local, like recent memory, because I offloaded it to my phone and my phone now has 400 numbers in it.
And that's not really, that's not really a problem.
And then I, I contrast that with like all the work I've been doing with, with cloud code and also my claw and, and other tools in, in knowing the amount of like,
And the way I would describe this or that I would gauge this is having to feel like I have to step away from the computer because I'm mentally drained.
I don't know, there's a lot of ways to figure out if you've got a high cognitive load going on.
But if you're like, I'm exhausted, but I've been sitting here, that's usually a good indicator that your brain has been working very hard on things, right?
Whatever that may be.
And we all have our different levels.
That can often be the way I feel with working with Cloud Code, despite the fact that Cloud Code is doing the lion's share of all, well, it's doing all the coding.
I'm not coding anything.
But it's also helping with some of the reasoning and things like that.
So is this really going to be a problem, Andy, in the future?