What's Brewing, Edition 1 - What Jonathan is Learning, Using, and Thinking
Developer Tea18 Maalis

What's Brewing, Edition 1 - What Jonathan is Learning, Using, and Thinking

  • The Power of Physical Checklists: Inspired by aviation, Atul Gawande's The Checklist Manifesto, and Daniel Kahneman's Noise, I've been experimenting with printed, physical checklists for repetitive tasks — from producing this show to running one-on-ones. The rigor of writing precise procedures carries over into clearer communication with both humans and AI agents.
  • Small Interventions, Big Returns: A Brother P-Touch label maker. Reorganizing scattered hobby gear. 3D printing organizational tools with a new Bambu Labs P1S. None of these are revolutionary on their own, but the compounding effect of better organization — essentially building a fast index for your physical life — pays back over and over.
  • Context Shapes Focus: Switching from a home gym to working out at Planet Fitness with my brother-in-law was one of the best focus interventions I've made. The change in environment eliminated the procrastination and context-blending that came from being steps away from my computer. If you're struggling with a habit, sometimes the environment is the variable to change, not your willpower.
  • The Reading List: Good Strategy, Bad Strategy by Richard Rumelt (and its follow-up The Crux), The Art of Action by Stephen Bungay (a great framework for thinking about agentic workflows), How to Know a Person by David Brooks, and my top recommendation: 4,000 Weeks by Oliver Burkeman — a book that will help you stop looking for the productivity hack that fixes everything and start thinking about what actually matters.
  • Learning as a Habit: Right now I'm learning to drive a stick shift on a 1983 Bronco. The point isn't the skill itself — it's staying in the beginner's seat. Intentional practice, setting small goals, refining through repetition. Keeping this habit alive is more important than ever when the industry demands rapid adaptation.
  • How I'm Actually Using AI: Claude Code for one-shotting tools with clear boundaries, local environment improvements, and terminal troubleshooting. OpenClaw for experimental agents like a personalized trip planner and Home Assistant automations via YAML. Claude Co-Work for file system management and screenshot organization. Obsidian as the connective tissue — a markdown knowledge base that gives AI agents personal context to work with. And at work, spec-driven development is showing real promise for shaping agent output quality.
  • A Framework for Thinking About AI's Role: I break AI use cases into categories: automating existing workflows (where most gains are today), operational restructuring (what happens when you free humans from a task), execution of complex technical work (agents on the front lines), iterative consulting on intent and goals, and the emerging frontier of exploratory connections and strategic synthesis.
  • What You Should Actually Do: Be action-oriented — the cat is out of the bag. Invest heavily in planning and specification before sending agents off to work. But more importantly, invest in mindful change: understand your own values, figure out who you want to be when you look back on this moment in 10 years, and let that guide your decisions about adoption, learning, and career direction.
🙏 Today's Episode is Brought To you by: SerpApi

If you're building an application that needs real-time search data — whether that's an AI agent, an SEO tool, or a price tracker — SerpApi handles it for you. Make an API call, get back clean JSON. They handle the proxies, CAPTCHAs, parsing, and all the scraping so you don't have to. They support dozens of search engines and platforms, and are trusted by companies like NVIDIA, Adobe, and Shopify. If you're building with AI, they even have an official MCP to make getting up and running a simple task. Get started with a free tier at serpapi.com.

📮 Ask a Question

If you enjoyed this episode and would like me to discuss a question that you have on the show, drop it over at: developertea.com.

📮 Join the Discord

If you want to be a part of a supportive community of engineers (non-engineers welcome!) working to improve their lives and careers, join us on the Developer Tea Discord community today!

🗞️ Subscribe to The Tea Break

We are developing a brand new newsletter called The Tea Break! You can be the first in line to receive it by entering your email directly over at developertea.com.

🧡 Leave a Review

If you're enjoying the show and want to support the content head over to iTunes and leave a review!

Tämä jakso on lisätty Podme-palveluun avoimen RSS-syötteen kautta eikä se ole Podmen omaa tuotantoa. Siksi jakso saattaa sisältää mainontaa.

Jaksot(1309)

Your Single Most Important Tool for Managing the Uneven Downsides of Risk

Your Single Most Important Tool for Managing the Uneven Downsides of Risk

The skills you build and the tools you master matter, but they aren't your most important asset when things go wrong — and something eventually will. In this episode, I work through why our careers an...

10 Heinä 25min

Why Can't You Go Faster With AI? Focus on the Friction to Find Out

Why Can't You Go Faster With AI? Focus on the Friction to Find Out

If you are a manager, a lead engineer, or anyone growing into more responsibility, this throwback episode is built for you. We keep hearing the same question, now louder than ever: "Why can't this go ...

24 Kesä 19min

Software Engineering Principles That Still Hold Up in an Agentic World - Old Lessons Made New

Software Engineering Principles That Still Hold Up in an Agentic World - Old Lessons Made New

The skills problem isn't going anywhere — it's just wearing new clothes. In this episode, I unpack how the lessons we learned decades ago (limiting work in progress, the theory of constraints, test-dr...

18 Kesä 31min

Principles Oriented Thinking as a Durable Skill in an AI First World

Principles Oriented Thinking as a Durable Skill in an AI First World

The skills that survive every industry shakeup aren't the ones you can Google — they're softer, harder to name, and far more durable. In this episode, Jonathan explores principle-oriented thinking: th...

10 Kesä 27min

What the Science Actually Says About Effective Feedback

What the Science Actually Says About Effective Feedback

A lot of what we've been talking about lately is durable skills — the abilities that last regardless of how our tools and tech environment change. In today's episode, I want to step back from the AI c...

3 Kesä 27min

Rebuilding Your Mental Models In the Midst Of an AI Tech Revolution

Rebuilding Your Mental Models In the Midst Of an AI Tech Revolution

Right now, the questions we have about our careers feel existential. We keep coming back to the same theme: how do you prepare for an industry that's changing this fast, and what mindset actually work...

27 Touko 26min

Practice Isn't Enough for Senior Engineers - Adaptation Is a Key Skill in an AI-First Industry

Practice Isn't Enough for Senior Engineers - Adaptation Is a Key Skill in an AI-First Industry

If you're a software engineer right now, you likely feel like your world is changing overnight. We are writing half or less the amount of code that we wrote even a year ago, which represents a seismic...

24 Touko 19min

Senior Skills to Maintain Employment Through the AI Wave

Senior Skills to Maintain Employment Through the AI Wave

If you've heard that your job in the agentic coding era is to "become a manager of agents," you may have noticed something doesn't quite fit. Most of us never trained to be managers, and frankly, that...

14 Touko 28min

Suosittua kategoriassa Liike-elämä ja talous

sijotuskasti
mimmit-sijoittaa
psykopodiaa-podcast
rss-oivalluksia-rahasta-elamasta
rss-rahapodi
rss-sami-miettinen-neuvottelija
oppimisen-psykologia
asuntoasiaa-paivakirjat
ostan-asuntoja-podcast
rss-perho-rajoilla
hyva-paha-johtaminen
rss-rahamania
rss-inderes
rahapuhetta
pomojen-suusta
rss-ysin-muijat
rss-karon-grilli
rss-rahataito-podcast
rss-sisalto-kuntoon
rss-viisas-raha-podi