Deep Questions with Cal Newport
Deep Questions with Cal Newport

Ep. 396: Can I Learn To Love My Phone Again?

3/16/202654:0110,243 words
0:000:00

Remember how much we loved our iPhones when they first came out? Can we get back to that relationship with these devices? In this episode, Cal explores five pieces of advice for transforming your curr...

Transcript

EN

Do you remember when the iPhone was first introduced, it was an exciting moment?

Like I want to play you a clip here from Steve Jobs keynote address at the 2007 Mac world where he first introduced his device. I want you to listen to the enthusiasm of the assembled crowd.

Three things, a wide-screen iPod with touch controls, a revolutionary mobile phone, and a

breakthrough internet communications device.

An iPod, a phone, and an internet communicator, an iPod, a phone, are you getting it?

These are not three separate devices, this is one device, and we are calling it iPhone. Wow, those are the days, and then when we finally got our hands on those devices for the first time, they were everything, we had hoped they would be, they were slick and easy to use, and they were super useful, and they were fun, but then of course, over the years that followed our relationship with the phones began to sour.

Now, a big part of this is the attention economy platforms that realize there's money to be made and making us look at these screens longer and longer, so they built their contrived addictive apps and soon we felt obsessed with our phones, but also it's just clutter. Over the years, we've added more and more different types of apps and services, some useful, some that we've forgotten, some that become habits, and some we wish we could

get rid of, and now there's the whole screen when we turn on that device is a multi-colored, garish, distracting pile of exhaustion.

Wouldn't it be nice if we could go back to the way we looked at our phones in 2007?

Well, here's the thing, I think we can.

In recent years, there's been a lot of interest in both the app space and the sort of strategy space, and figuring out how to transform the actual set up of your phone so that it is much simpler and more fun, like the phones used to be when we first got them, and to do this without having to give up major functionality that still makes smartphones useful. I call this effort putting your phone into 2000 and 7 mode, and it's what I want to talk

about today. So I have five big ideas I want to share, five practical ideas for transforming your existing phone into 2007 mode. The first four come from very popular videos online and the fifth idea will be my own. Collectively, these present a possibility for a much healthier

and more enjoyable relationship with your device, and let's be honest, we could all use

that in our current moment. Alright, so let's get into it. As always, I'm Cal Newport,

and this is Deep Questions. The show for people seeking depth in a distracted world, and we'll get started right after the music. Alright, so let's get into it with my first piece of advice for putting your phone into 2000 and 7 mode. This is probably the most drastic of the advice I'm going to suggest. So I want to start with it, so we can really set the tone right. The idea here is to

completely transform the visual interface you use to interact with your apps. In particular, I want to talk about moving away from screens filled with brightly colored application icons to instead a motto chromatic screen where your apps are listed in text. So you'll actually just see, for example, on a dark gray background in light gray text messages, the word messages, maps, the word maps, weather, the word weather, and so on. This type of

interface was really first popularized by a feature phone known as the light phone, which used an e-ink display like you would have on a Kindle that really could only do monochromatic displays, but people really enjoyed that. And so there's been a sort of renaissance and apps developed that you can run on a standard smartphone like an iOS phone or an Android phone to make your interface look like that light phone interface. Two of the more popular ones

are blank spaces and dumb phone, but there are others. Alright, so how do you technically, like what are the technical steps to doing something like this going from all of these icons to just a black and white screen with text on it? What I want to do here is play a little bit of a clip from a longer video about how to do this. This is from a channel called Nick Knowledgey, the very popular video that I'm going to play this clip from as viewed

Something like half a million times.

to give you a sense of the type of steps involved in these transformations. Obviously,

watch the video for the full set of instructions. Alright, let's hear this Jesse.

Actual light phone. Head to the App Store and download the dumb phone app. It looks like

this. The first thing you're going to want to do when you open the app is set up which

apps you want on your home screen. I chose phone, messages, notes, Spotify, Google Maps, and settings. These are the most basic things I use on a very regular basis and none of them lead to distraction. As you can see, I already have mine set up, but if you hit this little button in the bottom right, you'll be able to select which apps you feel are best for you. You can also reorder them to your liking. Once you've completed that, you're now ready to add the

dumb phone widget to your home screen. You're going to want to start with a completely blank canvas. Long-christ to activate wiggle mode, then remove all four apps from your dock. Next, swipe over to an empty page, then select Edit at the top left. Then add widget. Navigate down

until you see dumb phone. You can also search for it by typing D.P. Add the first widget to your

home screen. Alright, so I'll cut it off there, but that should give you an idea of what's going on. Just like quickly summarize, and I'll say if you're listening, this might be a case where you want to jump over the video so you can see that on the screen, but just a quickly summarize, when you go to that wiggle mode where you can take individual apps off and on different screens, you can take the apps off of the dock on the bottom. And now on every screen,

there'll be no apps on the bottom. And then what they did is they navigated to a blank screen. You know how you can scroll through different screens, and they added a widget from the dumb phone app. And then that widget is what you can configure in the dumb phone app to say, what apps do I want and what do I want to call them? The final thing, this is the thing to through me, which I didn't understand when I was watching this video, but now I do when I

watched a little bit more closely. How do you make that your new home screen? Just this blank

screen with this one widget on it that's displaying the the dumb phone app. There's a mode, I didn't recognize a setting screen where it shows all of the different screens. You can cite scroll through on your phone, and you can uncheck ones you don't want to see. They don't disappear. You can recheck them again and get them back. But if you uncheck them, they're no longer displaced. You can just uncheck everything except for the screen that has the dumb phone widget.

And so now when you turn on your phone, you just see this blank screen with the widget on. There's a lot of other tips in that video. You want to set your background, the the match it. There's a spacer widget. You can add to keep it centered. But that's basically what goes into it. You download an app. You set up what apps you want on your simple screen. You say what names you want. And then you do some settings on your phone to make that the only screen you see is one that has that

widget centered. All right. So if you do that, you already are, I would say 70% of the way, or 60% maybe towards 2007 mode. But now we got to start refining this setup even more, which brings us to our second tip. The next tip comes from a name that's familiar to my listeners, writer, Carol, inventor of the bullet journal method of analog life organization. He has a what I thought in a video that he posted on his site, a clever idea for how to take the next step. Once you've moved

to text-based descriptions of apps, you had an idea for moving to the next step to get even closer to 2007 mode. Let's, let's hear it in his own words and then we'll talk about a little bit more.

Jesse, let's hear what writer had to say. So here's what I did. I changed all

app names to verbs, actions that support who I want to be, like write, connect, move, learn, plan. The shift is subtle but powerful. I'm not reacting to brands or my life. I'm exercising my agency one intentional action at a time. So this is a powerful idea. He's saying as long as you're going to have text-based descriptions of your app, be careful about what text-based descriptions you use. Describe the aspirational outcome you want from using that app. Use that to describe the app

instead of its name. So I want to walk through, he mentioned them briefly, but let me walk through specifically the examples he gave in this clip right there. So he began with the following five apps listed text in his sort of minimalist phone setup. He had a writing app called I writer, the message is app, app notes, Instagram, and calendar. Those were apps he uses a lot and he

had those descriptions. Here's what he changed each of those descriptions to to make it more

value outcome oriented. He changed I a writer to write. So it's just described as write, the action write. He changed messages to the word connect. So you know, it's not the messages app. It's I click there if I want to connect to other people. And he changed Instagram to learn, calendar, to plan, et cetera. So the bigger idea here is the way you see your apps described will change the way that you think of them. And if you really focus in on the value enhancing action of the

App in his description, you now see this device as delivering you value enhan...

as opposed to just this sort of mechanistic consumeristic transactional relationship with other commercial activities. I don't know what you would rename TikTok in this game, though, Jesse. What is the action you're trying to, I think you I would just put on my phone give up. And that's when I click give up, that means I want to just scroll through TikTok. All right, let's take a quick break to hear from some of our sponsors.

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All right, so let's check in what we have so far. We're two tips into going into 2007 mode. One and most importantly, we've now changed our phone to a monochromatics display that just list apps as text. Two, we've carefully named those app descriptions to focus on the value

that we hope to enhance when we use it. All right, now let's keep going with our third piece of

advice. And this has to do with the app experience themselves. So everything so far is about the interface through which you access apps. But once I click on that app, now I'm back into whatever world that app developer wants me to be in. So I can label Instagram, for example, with whatever aspirational name I want. But when I click on it, I'm in Mark Zuckerberg's world. And all of the things they've optimized that get me mindlessly scrolling through algorithmically curated content or

whatever they're doing is still waiting for me in the app. So my third piece of advice is identify the most addictive apps. The apps that tend to keep you on phone longer than you want to be and make you unhappy. Identify what those are and let's re-engineer the apps themselves so that the experience is more useful, functional, and minimalist. So how do we do this? Well, there's some interesting tools out there that can make a big difference. In particular, there's a whole group of apps now,

which you might not have heard of that work as follows. If you access social media, YouTube linked in, there's a bunch of different websites that they're compatible with. If you access them through your browser, there are now apps that can get in there and manipulate what the experience looks like.

Because we can manipulate, I can't change what the Instagram app looks like.

goes in and changes what the Instagram webpage looks like. You can take things off or add things back to it. Let me play a clip here to explain this a little bit better. This is from the Race News

channel, very popular video. I had 2.4 million views. I want to play a little bit of a clip here where

he talks about using one of these app experience modification apps. Let's hear this and then I will check it on it. And it's all in there. I recommend the app called social focus, which costs $399 on iOS and it's free on Android. But with this app, it gives you some basic modifications for every social media site like YouTube, Reddit, Instagram, Facebook, even LinkedIn,

I think, where you can remove the algorithmic feed. You can remove recommended content. And

they make it more functional and less addicting. For YouTube, specifically, the same developer has another app called untrap for YouTube, which I've also bought. But it allows you to do stuff like remove the thumbnail or remove recommended videos from the sidebar. Like, this is what my YouTube looks like on my phone. It's just a list where I'm unlikely to fall into a bingeing rabbit hole. But all right. So let's summarize what's happening here. Instead of actually keeping individual apps

for social media or YouTube related sort of potentially addictive apps. Instead of keeping those apps on your phone, you will now access them through your browser on your phone. Step 2, you will use to type apps that were mentioned in that race you video. And there's a hundred of these and you can find a lot of videos of these online as well that will then modify to your exact specifications what you want the experience to be of using those apps. This is advice that keeps Mark Zuckerberg

up at night. This is the type of advice that whenever the head of, I don't know who his name is, but the head of bite dance when he turns around his skull of thrones, the check-in on how TikTok is doing and how many young kids they've ensnared into addictive cycles, absolutely fears. Because it strips away the addiction while keeping whatever like small sliver of usefulness you still find in those apps. And their whole point is the small sliver of usefulness

is supposed to be the lure that gets you to bite the hook, which allows them to pull you out of the lake. But you get rid of the hook, then people are getting value without having to use it all the time. They have no reason to use them all the time. They become useful. The phone becomes like we used to happen 2007. So I love this idea. There's no social apps on your phone anymore. And if you still, I don't want to have the debate with you now about using social media now. We talk about this a lot

on the show. I'll put that aside for now. But whatever you are using through the browser,

modified, so you take back control of that experience. I think that's a very powerful idea.

All right. Let's move on to our fourth idea. Our fourth tip comes from my in my in biolic. So we're a mispronouncing our name, Josie. But to you and I, that is people are age. We obviously know her as blossom. Remember blossom? The TV show? You were born in a crossfit gym and don't know what's going on in the world. It was like a very popular show in the mid 90s. What you were doing in the 90s? I remember the one of yours. I'm like the 80s. Okay. For the same age man,

you should remember blossom. Joey, her brother Joey, you don't remember this? I kind of remember that.

Six or seven. She had a friend to had a number for a name. Yeah. Right. I think her name was like six or something. Okay. Yeah. All right. Anyways, I think a slightly younger viewers know her as Amy from the Big Bang Theory. She's been in my forever. Anyways, she's been doing a bunch of videos about lots of stuff. But she did a lot of videos about technology and her struggle to beat her phone addiction. And in one of these videos, she hinted

out an idea that I want. I'm going to play this clip and I'm going to run with her idea and develop it to be even more severe. So let's start with the clip and then we'll run with what she's suggesting. Number two, I have an incredibly annoying damaging habit that I have adopted of scrolling through the news anytime there's a low in anything. Any time of day or night, no matter where I am. I have no clue why I started doing this. I'll be just walking like

from my car in a parking lot to a doctor's office and I'm like scrolling through news. I end up

looking at all these headlines and they're terrible. It's almost always like death and tragedy or

forgive me like celebrity gossip. But I do not need to be filling my head with. This habit is really hard to break. I'm hoping that just by having an awareness of it, it will encourage me to stop doing it. But I might need to take that news app just off my phone. It's all right. So she gets to the right answer only at the very end. At first, she's like, maybe I should like moderate my online news consumption. This is kind of a problem. I wonder if I should really just take the

app off my phone. The app's amusing to get news. That is actually the correct answer. Now this is an

important tip that's often missed because it hits people like me. People like me who don't use social

media or maybe if you do, you're using the advice from my last tip and now it's moderated. It's

An abrauser.

have a problem with it. But you still find yourself coming back to your phone all the time because news

has borrowed a lot of ideas that the tension engineers innovated and it can be just a sticky. And now you're like, I'm still on my phone instead of doom scrolling TikTok. I'm doom scrolling New York Times headlines. And this could be just as affecting Jesse. I've had to put up with this lot recently because you know, I'm doing this new, these new Thursday episodes, the AI reality check episodes, which requires me to read a lot of AI news so that I can sort of help people feel better

about it. And man, there's so many, it goes in waves of topics. But like something, they'll decide they being like the collective media. Oh, here's some like really negative topic about

AI. We all need to cover. And then every article is just like pounding this, trying to one up each

other in like the worst way. And so like what might start with AI might affect your job. It kind of

like builds up until you get the articles that are, you know, talking about how to use your dystopian trash can fired or properly cook your dogs. You don't starve. Like it's just dark. It puts me in a bad mood. And I know a lot of it's BS. I'm an expert in the topic. So don't let news become the hit and a victor. And the right way to do it is don't read news using apps on your phone. Have an alternative way of consuming news. It can involve your phone. But not an app that

can constantly refresh. Not something to if you check it when you get out of the car is going to

be different when you get back to the car. You want more static, high quality and self-contained

descriptions of the news. So this could be like daily news podcasts. This could be email daily news roundups. That's what I would do. Do not use the news apps because they are just following. I mean, we see this by the way. Like the New York Times figure this out is that they worried about losing readers to X. So now what they'll do if there's any breaking news of it is they'll put article after article. They'll put live updates. They found a way to make sure that there's an abundance

of information, piling up for you to keep reading through so that you can have that same scroll experience you have where it used to be five years ago or 10 years ago. If something happened, here is an article that explains it. And that's it. Right. For that day, that's your news about it. Now it's the pile pile pile. Here's it from six different angles and live updates so that you can

keep coming back to a you have a sense of urgency. So I think news apps is something that is a

hidden addiction trap on phones. So follow blossoms suggest in here and take those apps off of your phone. All right. We're going to get to our fifth tip. I went to offer one myself and I wanted to offer one that I hadn't actually explained before. So I'd like one of my standard pieces of advice. All right. So what is my addition to this collection of advice for putting your phone back into 2000 and seven mode? All right. I have this idea of seeking functional substitutes for in particular the social

platforms that are engaging you overly engage and you on your phone. So we talked about before changing the icons of the social platforms. We talked about before using a browser-based technology in which you can control the experience of what you're seeing on your social apps. Here is my addition to this. Find functional substitutes for those platforms. Meaning you ask the following question about the platforms you use. What psychological, emotional or practical role

do these platforms currently play in my life? Why is it that I'm going to tick-tock? Why is it

that I'm going to access? Is it the stave off boredom? Do I go here to try to get hits of inspiration?

Is this a numbing thing when I'm stressed out or anxious? I go here because it's just going to like numbing and I don't have to use my mind. Figure out the specific problems these are solving in your life and then say what is a positive functional substitute for each of those roles they play. If I use this app to stave off boredom, what's another way to save off boredom that I think is going to be more positive. If this is something I'm using to num myself on an anxious. What's a more

positive activity that I can do to save off anxiety? And what I would do is find, you know, add to your interface on the phone, like descriptions of those goals. Stay off boredom, you know, reducing anxiety or what have you. But now have these links go to these more positive substitutes. So when you pick up that phone, you see the thing you really want to do listed right there, you know, calming anxiety. And now instead of like going to tick-tock, it's going to go to

something that you find to be more productive. It's going to bring you to, you know, a podcast page of a sort of soothing podcast or it's going to take you to a meditation app or it's going to take you to your workout app that reminds you of like, oh, I should go do some exercise. So I think having

Functional substitutes for social media really helps you decouple from these ...

pulling back to your phone again, and again, even when you don't want to be. All right. So there we go. We have five ways the transform your smartphone into something that's much less distracting and much more useful. So let me go through what we had here. Number one was going to this sort of

extreme minimalist interface, which I think is to crux to all of this. Number two was giving better names

for the apps on your phone. Once you're in that interface, number three was re-engineering the most addictive apps by running them through your browser and using browser modification tools. Number four was don't use phone apps. You self-contained static forms of news that are updated say like once a day or so, so you get rid of that hidden addictive trigger. And number five find functional substitutes for social media and then put pointers on your phone that take you to

those functional substitutes. So your phone is helping you in healthy ways and not in unhealthy ways. So like there's a lot of other good ideas out there. This is a big discussion online. So if you go look at any of those videos that we pulled clips from today and you watch them in your entirety, you'll see a lot of other suggestions. You'll see a lot of people are talking about this out here.

You can customize this as you see fit. But the key thing here is you can take back and

control of your phone. You can transform it back to something that supports your life. You can regain

a little bit of that excitement that we felt back in 2007. And I think now is the time to do it.

Is your phone set up like that? I'm going to do the minimalist interface. You are? Yeah. I mean, I don't, you know, I don't use social media. I don't, I don't have as much a problem. But I like the idea of the minimalist interface. And I, and I think I'm going to use the writer Carol descriptions as well. I don't need the re-engineered the addictive apps. I really don't use that many of those. But I think that's, you know, good one. I guess I don't use news apps.

I do use the New York Times app. So I'll have to think about that. And for the last one, I might do that. Right. So I don't use social media necessarily. But I think it would be nice to have things, I ought, you know, relieve boredom, anxiety, like have some links on my phone that take me to a healthy way to do that. So then my phone, like, I'll just change my relationship to the phone. It'd be a source of solutions, you know, for problems. If you're going to a ballgame,

it is like the ticket, stuff, master app, how would you do that? She's got the other page. Yeah. I go to the other page and it shows up while you're, yeah. So you can have, I was watching these videos. So like, what people, there's a couple of things you can do. There's two options. Some people just have their, their home screen now is minimalist. It's black and white with just the things listed. And it's like the main things to use. And then if you go to some other pages,

they'll have folders of other apps that like, they don't really have as much of a problem with. Other people build up page after page of minimalist descriptions. So they have like their main

things on the first page listed in text. And then the second page might be like sports stuff,

like the ballpark app and like the MLB app listed just in text. And then another page might be entertainment stuff, you know, listed in text. So some people make everything text. Others like just make their main page and like the, just the first thing they see when they turn it on just text. But you can, in the app, you can set up lots of different widgets with different apps and descriptions. And then you're just adding the widget the page is on your phone. And that page is

just showing that widget and the widget just shows the text. And so after a while, you can see you can kind of do either way. I want you to take this set up realistically. I watched that video six minutes for non-tech people to well, it depends how many pages, but like to set up one page. Yeah, you download this app. And then you go in and configure the widget. And then you go to wiggle mode, clear out your dock. Then you navigate over to an empty page. You add the widget.

You change the background. You add a space or widget if you want to like keep the text centered

which people care about. And then you uncheck the other pages. You don't want to see any more from the pages selection page. And then you're good. So I don't know. I think 10 minutes are less. You can have at least like some of these pages up and running. And then you can just like customize it as as like you see fit. Cool. But I think that's a cool way to do it. A lot of people are like, look, I like the idea of the light phone, but I need the ballpark app. I need the bus tracking app that

I use to see where my kids bus is. Also, I don't want to pay 600. I get this phone already pretty cheap. I don't want to pay 600 dollars for a light phone. But I love that interface. So it's like kind of cool that you can get that interface. Now on your existing lives, some of these also come with like social media control. I don't quite understand how this works, but they were they're saying in these videos that some of these minimalist interface apps will come with built-in features.

If you want to look at social media or something, it'll say, hey, you have to take five seconds first

and take a breath and all that type of stuff. And I don't know as much about that. But anyways, I think it's a cool space. All right, you've heard from me. Now we want to hear from you. So let's open up our inbox. And a quick reminder, if you have a question for me or want to share a case study or

Perhaps just want to try to get me going on a rant, you can send that over th...

All right, let's get into it. Jessie, what message are we going to look at first here?

We have a note here from Alexander about a new study on brain fry. All right, let's see here. Alexander said, Hi, Cal, big fan of your work. Have you seen this article on AI usage leading the brain fry? By this, they mean some kind of decision fatigue, stemming from the increased workload, workers can accomplish using AI. I have seen this study. It came out in the Harvard Business Review.

I think it has some interesting points in there. Actually, I'm going to talk about a little bit

here. Now, look, I know I have this sort of separate Thursday episode where I talk about the AI reality check. But I'm going to talk about this here because I think the results of this study

are not just about AI, but they're pointing to a phenomenon that is relevant for knowledge work

in general. All right. So the study is titled, when using AI leads to brain fry, it's a collection of authors led by Julie Bedard. It's a summer from Boston Consulting Group and summer from University of California Riverside. I'm just going to read a few quotes from this and then I'm going to help you interpret how this is relevant even beyond AI. All right. So early in the article, the authors say, in recent weeks, online AI users have described

increased cognitive load saturated attention and mental fatigue and social media post. Engineer Francisco Benachie, founder of QAI, wrote a popular exposed titled, "Vibcoding Parallysis

when infinite productivity breaks your brain." In which he lamented, I end each day exhausted

not from the work itself. But from the managing of the work, six work trees open, four half are in features, two quick fixes that spawned rabbit holes in a growing sense that I'm losing the plot entirely. As the article goes on to say, as a research group that studies emergent workforce and AI trends, these signals caught our attention. To understand what's going on, again, I'm reading from the article here, we conducted a study of 1488 full-time U.S. based workers

at large companies across industries, roles, and levels. We asked them about patterns and quantity of AI use, work experiences, and cognition, and emotions. We found that the phenomenon described in these posts, cognitive exhaustion from intensive oversight of AI agents, is both real and significant. We call it AI brain fry. That rhymes. That's nice. Which we define as mental fatigue from excessive use or oversight of AI tools beyond one's cognitive capacity. As an aside Jesse, this is my number

one research rule. If you're coining a term in a research paper, you better make that thing rhyme. That's the key. rhyming. They went on to say, we found that the most mentally taxing form of AI engagement was oversight, or the extent to which AI tools required to workers direct monitoring, there's some nuance here, however. We found when AI is used to replace routine or repetitive task, burnout scores, but not mental fatigue scores are lower. All right, so how do we make sense

of these observations? And what does it tell us not just about AI, but knowledge work in general?

Well, based on I sort of extensive writing about attention and distraction and knowledge work in the digital age, it seems clear to me that almost certainly a big factor of these observed results is the cognitive cost of context switching. Switching your attention from one target of attention to another is an expensive operation. And when you do it really quickly, you're now forcing your mind in the complex cognitive scenarios before you have been able to fully load up the relevant

context and that creates a sense of mental fatigue and confusion and difficulty actually doing the work. So if we're looking at AI, what would be the type of AI efforts that would make this the worst? And that would be reviewing or doing oversight of efforts by multiple different AI agents, right? So the way that we see AI agents being used most often right now, it tends to be in computer programming circles, they're doing complicated work, the production of code that you then or, you know,

spec writing or specifying architecture documents that have to be reviewed by you, the the engineering charge. And that's really hard and it's in a very specific cognitive context.

So when you have to switch between agents quickly, you're switching between, oh, I have to review

the work that this agent just did, which is a very hard mentally demanding task that review. And then I jump over to this agent and try to review its work, but that's a completely different cognitive context. This is really difficult for the brain to do. It takes context switching at pushes it to an extreme and no wonder it's calling brain fry. But the bigger message here is that we all have to worry about this. I mean, I wrote about the negative cost of context switching

Back in my 2021 book, a world without email that this is a one of the key iss...

in knowledge work is that we have many different ways that we force people to have to switch

their context rapidly. And it really exhausts us. So AI, the sort of agent overview approach to AI, which I've a lot of thoughts about because I think it's over blown now. We're going to ran it back in. I'll talk about that more in the Thursday episodes. It's really pushing this context switching issue to the extreme because overseen a bunch of employees that are working very fast all on separate projects. And you're trying to switch back and forth three minutes here, one minute here,

four minutes there is almost an impossible task to ask in a course, people are burning out. And so there's something we need to do about it there. But more generally, just remember context switching is productivity poison and something we worry about. I want to take another quick break to hear from some of our sponsors. Now, here's a mistake that a lot of small business owners like myself often make. We think because we're not big, we will be ignored by bad actors.

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All right, Jesse. What are the messages do we have? We have a message from Karen about the use of phones on the set of the pit. Oh, I like this one, right? Because we talked about the pit that HBO showed the pit starting with a while. A couple of weeks ago, and we had Sarah Hart

Unger on the show because she's a doctor and I was like, you have to explain to me all of these

different ranks of doctors for intern, the resident, whatever. So we're thinking about the pit.

So I guess that's why Karen sent this in. So here's what she said in more detail.

My first time writing in came across the below Instagram reel with Noah Wiley on the on this alternative, the cast and crew developed for themselves during long hours on set where they don't have access to their phones. All right, let's hear a little bit of this clip here, Jesse. Michael Robby, we're a bit of it on the pit. One of the cool things that we have here because nobody's allowed to have their cell phone on set is we have a landing library where everybody can come

background, foreground, through and check out a book, just going over the last two seasons and I'm willing to wait until we've got one of the better red passes and crew and all that was going on. That's cool. So they're not allowed to have phones on the set of the pit. Now I don't know if that is a, a rule they put in place because they thought it would be like good for people's mental health or if it's a rule they put in place because of security,

they don't want people like recording what's going on. But that's pretty cool. They have a

Lending library for the cast members to go and get books.

when I was reading about them a couple of weeks ago, Jesse, which makes this lending library

even more relevant is the fact that the episode takes place, I mean the seasons each take place, I don't know if you've seen the show, they take place over one day, right? So each episode is another hour. It takes about seven months to film a season. So for seven months, you're filming one day in the life of this hospital. Well, what that means is the people in the waiting room because they keep going out to the waiting room, those extras have to be sitting there in the waiting room for seven

months, right? Because the same people need to be there every time you come out. And what I heard,

this was, I believe this was an interview, I was listening to an interview with, uh, Wells,

there's a David Wells, the showrunner who also was the showrunner for the West Wing. Anyways, let's see, it's his last name as well. So I was listening to him being interviewed on the the ringer podcast, the town with Matt Bell Me. And he was talking about this that they have these really structured days for the extras to make this sort of palatable, right, because you have to just sit there all day, day after day and they have like very specific breaks. But he said they're

always reading. So they all get these books and they sit there and they read, waiting for like,

oh, we need to do some filming now, uh, and they put down the books and like film their scene of one of the doctors walking through the waiting room. And then they kind of read again. So it's kind of cool. It's like an environment there where everyone is just, everyone's just reading. So the pit, there we go. All right, let's see, what else do we have here? Let's have our name Adam sent a note and response to your email newsletter from last week about the

17th century scholar dealing with information overload. He said, so essentially this is just the experience of being human, any amount of data can overload if we let it. Yeah, I mean, yes, I guess that's pretty much true, right, is that our experience of being human is there's specific types of information we're used to taking in, usually information through all of our senses, hearing sites, smell, touch, so that we can understand what's happening in the physical world around this.

The modern turns, sort of like the turn that changed the entire human experience, somewhat like the whole human experience is now built on the post-pilot of the age,

was also now using those brains, the process information. And the way we never would have done

on the savanna's, you know, 250,000 years ago, this is, I mean, this is like a theme of a lot of my thinking and writing about thinking. This is like a perilous balancing act. It is difficult to use the human brain to do abstract reasoning about abstract or symbolic information. And so yeah, we get overloaded really easily. So we have to think about it. We have to practice thinking, we have to contain thinking, we have to have plans for how we're going to think,

what information we're going to encounter, how we're going to encounter, how we're going to make sense of it, what we're going to keep away, we really have to care about that. And when we don't, just like when we don't care about our body and we throw all this modern food into the world and we get really unhealthy, if we don't care about our mind, we easily get into trouble. So this is the way

I think about the modern human experience is it's a intricate balancing act to get a brain that's

really not meant for abstract processing of symbolic information to do that all the time in a very productive way and sustainable way. So I think that is, I think that's a good point. All right, before we wrap up this episode, let's quickly check in what I've been up to. All right, so there's a couple of things here. I'm trying something new from a tool's perspective, so sort of inspired by Sarah Hart, Unger, coming on the show to talk about planners a couple

weeks ago. I bought a Hobanachi notebook, not a Hobanachi cousin, which is the planner she used, because obviously I'm a big fan of my time-block planner, which does, I mean, I designed it, so does exactly what I need. But for the purposes of a single purpose notebook, which I've talked about on the show before, where I have a small portable notebook that I'll use for like one problem I'm working on. As a place to keep coming back to working through thoughts, adding thoughts,

I can capture inspiration from a wider net of my daily schedule, and I can do more sort of analog hard thinking away from a computer screen. I find single purpose notebooks to be really useful.

So I'm testing out using a small size, Hobanachi. I think it's called the techno grid paper,

Hobanachi notebook, I've sort of this size. I don't know if you call that five inches by four, or three and a half or whatever. And I'm working on a sort of academic paper about oh, it's complicated. I'm complicated paper. And I'm seeing if this notebook format, it's a really nice notebook that has nice pages, very thin, lace flat, and interesting ways with this binding. Trying it out. Maybe this will be the new notebook I use for my single purpose

notebook. Right now I use field notes primarily, but I'm giving this. It was like 15 bucks. Which I think is like a good sweet spot for like, oh, I got to take seriously whatever project

I'm working on, but also not like irresponsible.

brutally important. I have an important update to what I'm doing now. Some new things I bought for my Halloween display technology. I am moving on. The last two years I worked on building my own custom light and sound controllers. Basically from scratch, I would start with a microcontroller that I would custom program and solder the circuits myself for it to interact with programmable lights and sound systems. Because I thought that was like a fun challenge.

Now I'm ready to move on to using a hardware and more advanced open source software

for doing things like show control and prop control. So I think this will be the new fun

challenge for what to do and it's going to be more reliable and it's going to open up many more opportunities and reduce the chances that I shock myself by building my own relay board. So I am now moving over to running the open source FPP Falcon controller software on a Raspberry Pi as my main scheduler. So I bought a Raspberry Pi. This then hooks into a Ethernet network switch and then you can network into it other device circuit boards that

the controller can talk to. So I bought a custom circuit board for doing my programmable LED controls. So I'm getting rid of my custom built circuit and that can actually network onto the same network. I'm going to get a relay controller and a motor actuator motor controller board.

And in theory now, I can now have much finer control, much more powerful and reliable control

of much more elaborate types of situation. So I am, this is like kind of my spring project. Just to learn all that technology so I can start thinking about the, how do we need to head. This is like the stuff that's important. Let's be honest. That's great. So I'm working on that. Recent interviews. I did, there's a couple of things. Couple, if you want some more cow, I didn't interview with Chris Williamson on his modern wisdom podcast, came out last week.

I think it was really good. So it's worth listening. We get into, we do a lot of work

and distraction type of stuff. I listen to most of it so far. But it good, right? Yeah, you've been on a show a bunch. Yeah, I know Chris. We go back. Yeah. We was talking about his days of being a workman nightclub. Yeah. Yeah, like trying to like having to add up the money at the end of the day. Mm-hmm. Yeah, he's interesting guy. Good interviewer. I was like going on a show. Also, this is probably worth watching.

It's been viewed a lot. Like well over a million times just a couple of weeks.

You know, Hank Green, the YouTuber, did a YouTube video about AI and what worries him. There's like a 20 minute video on that. And then the next 30 minutes is he had me on the show to talk about the video that he had just aired and we talk AI and he's got a huge audience. I've got a lot of notes about that interview. I think it was a really good discussion. So check out my appearance on Hank Green's interview and also check out the AI reality check that I'm doing on Thursdays, maybe not every Thursday.

But that's where I'm moving my sort of project of just trying to be realistic about AI, but also lower the anxiety around it. The first one came out last week. Let's see, when this comes out, two will have been out already. So the first two would be out in theory. They'll probably be a new one coming out on Thursday. So check that out. All right,

reading and watching, not to open up the curtain too much, but we don't always record on the same

day. And so we're actually recording this pretty soon after our last episode. It's been like four days or whatever. So I've started three new books since the last episode. I did not finish any of those three new books in the four days that passed between the last episode and today. In the latest New Yorker issue, though, I did read Jill LaPore's article about the bicentennial. It was pretty interesting about what happened, the history of the celebrations,

and what happened in particular in '76. And it's like a kind of like a straight history piece. He pulled from a lot of sources. And it's, so I enjoyed it. I thought it was worth reading. Are the three books you started all heart copy? No. Like, one is Kindle to a hard copy. That's right. Yeah. Yeah. One's Kindle to and into a hard copy. But the two hard copy ones came later and they're kind of taking over my attention. I'll see if I get back to the Kindle

one, which is sort of impulsively downloaded. In terms of things I'm watching, I'm not quite done with it. Because it takes my wife and I multiple nights to watch movies, just a reality of like kids and sleep. But as part of our efforts to watch the Oscar nominated movies for 2026, Best Picture,

we're almost done with the secret agent. It was actually a Brazilian film that people really love.

It's a fascinating movie so far. I'm not done yet. But I'll just like drop a couple ideas here to see if this inspires you to watch it or not. It takes place in the 1970s, like in 1977 Brazil. And it's the photography, cinematography is very much in that style. So they film it and there's a sort of somewhat desaturated, decolor palettes is like very 1970s.

It's filmed on old glass anthropomorphic lenses, like the so that which is li...

thing you would see with like the new Hollywood directors in the 1970s. So you get a more cinematic

aspect ratio, but you get a lot of these horizontal flares, which you would get. That's just an artifact of these particular types of panasonic lenses that when you point them out of light, you get horizontal flares of light across. So it's sort of this cool like physical 70 style. The actors are all like fantastic, naturalistic, character actor style actors really real type

people. They're all fantastic. The only thing I just want to say, it's a different style of

movie than we make in America now. And the way you know it's a different style of movie is that

it's 90 minutes into the movie. Things are just happening, but you don't really know like who is this person, what's their relationship to this person? Is this person is on the run? Why? They don't tell you. You just kind of are seeing these things as really not tell 90 minutes through the movie that you even really begin to sort of realize like, oh, I think I see what's going on. This is what this person is doing and how it relates to these people. And now I'm starting to see

what's going on here. It's in no rush. It's laying out threads of realities on not too many spoilers,

but multiple timelines. And starts to sort of take its time weaving them together. It's more of an experience than like a super by the book plot bullet point unfolding in America. We don't do these things, especially on Netflix now because we don't trust people's attention span. So, you know, on Netflix we would have, I don't know, like a title card that would just explain it or have a narrator come in and just be like, you know, and the character realized and then just sort of explain who

everyone is and everything that's going on, put titles up on the screen. I don't know, have like arrows follow to like remind you who people are or just everyone's all just cut to like a YouTube style influencers. Like, all right, let's hold here. Let me explain to you what just happened. So it's nice to see a much more intentional sort of slower, novelistic, naturalistic type of screen writing and movie making, but I haven't seen the ending yet. So maybe it goes weird. So I can't,

I can't give up my full endorsement yet, but we're going to finish it tonight. So I'm excited about that. For almost there, Jess, we were almost, I got yelled at by the way, my friend, the mind, you heard me say that like, when my wife saw HamNet and I saw Frankenstein and we're kind of running out of time, so we're going to count that on both of our list. And he wrote, it was like,

no, you have to see HamNet. It's a great movie. You can't skip it. So I started watching Frankenstein.

I don't think I could finish it. I saw him the theater. I wanted to see it a 35 millimeter. So it was cooler in the theater, I think. Yeah. I like Yale and my del Toro, but I, yeah, I thought the screenplay could be better in that one. So crazy visual stuff in there for sure. Yeah. And as he does, that's pretty good. That's not going to win best picture though. So we're getting closer. We still have to see sentimental values. And God, what else am I missing?

Oh, Bagoña. Which I like that director. I like that director. I like him a stone. I'm looking forward to it. My wife is not looking forward to it. But we got to see Bagoña going to Atlanta to get director. All right. That's all the time we have for today. Thanks for

listening. We'll be back next week with another episode and until then, as always, we'll stay deep.

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