Carl Yeh
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
my train of thought kind of gets convoluted and for me to get from my thoughts to a concise thing, it's better for me to write.
But for majority of the work I do in terms of AI going through whatever literally I'm doing, it's a quick press on like, you know, a press on the function key and, and I just go with it.
And it does a really, really good job of it.
what I do is I don't, I don't just stream a conscious.
I still try to chunk my thoughts into very, here's one idea and then I'm done another idea that I'm done.
And I will sometimes go back and just edit it.
If I'm trying to do a, like if I'm trying to communicate something with somebody, um,
That's when I edit it just a little bit because sometimes my train of thought, it's like if you read it, you're like, this kind of makes sense, but it's not what I'm trying to convey.
So I have to actually come back and re-edit it.
But I feel I am actually...
I feel it would take too long for me to write a lot of this stuff.
It's just fast for me to just talk it through pretty much all communication with like our team is all through, through voice, eventually to text and literally all my, anything I do on my phone is,
is like the best use case I've seen my, my, my business partner do.
We were at a client's office and their wifi was like this really long string of numbers.
And I just by default start, you know, trying to like the, I'm trying to put all the numbers in.
He's just like, Oh man,
Oh, six, six, seven, six, six, one.
Like you just read through and it's like, Oh no, that's actually a really smart idea.
And then like, Oh, but it's kind of, you kind of have to retrain your brain on put all this using this for everything, which is now like my brain's kind of rewired to do that.
It's kind of crazy.