Tag: systems thinking

  • Grid Study #04: Working Beside the Machine

    There is a strange feeling that comes with watching artificial intelligence improve almost every week. A new tool appears. Another task becomes automated. Someone online claims an entire team can now be replaced by a prompt. Even while employed, it becomes difficult not to wonder: Will my work still matter in a few years? I…

  • Grid Study #03: Designing a Digital Workspace for Focus

    The modern workspace is often invisible. For many people working remotely, the office no longer exists as a physical place. Instead, it becomes a collection of browser tabs, cloud drives, dashboards, chat windows, calendars, and notifications layered across a screen. Work happens inside systems that are rarely noticed until they become difficult to manage. While…

  • The Problem with Infinite Flexibility

    Modern software often treats flexibility as an unquestioned advantage. More customization.More toggles.More settings.More ways to do the same thing. At first, this feels empowering. But after using enough software over the years, I started noticing something interesting: The systems that feel the best to use are usually the ones that quietly limit you. That is…

  • Inside a Recursive AI Reasoning Grid

    Most people imagine AI training as massive datasets, GPUs, and endless streams of information flowing through machines. But some parts of modern AI work feel surprisingly quiet. Sometimes it looks like carefully reading a mathematical solution line by line and deciding exactly where the reasoning stopped making sense. Modern AI workflows are starting to look…