2025 December - What I Have Read
Substack
Lastly, the crux of the tweet: "Optimistic contrarians are the rarest breed." This speaks to individuals who possess the courage to deviate from the mainstream not for the sake of contrariness, but driven by genuine belief in a different, often better vision. More importantly, they do this with optimism. Unlike cynics, optimistic contrarians see the potential in what others dismiss. They are hopeful about their divergent views, even in the face of criticism or skepticism. They combine the audacity to think differently with the belief that their path, though less traveled, is full of promise.
― Cynicism is easy. Mimicry is easy. Optimistic contrarians are the rarest breed. - Naval's Archive [Link]
“Status games are multiplayer, zero-sum, hierarchical, judged socially. Get grades, applause, titles now – emptiness later. Natural games are single player, positive-sum, internal, judged by nature/markets. Pay in pain now – get wealth, health, knowledge, peace, family later.” — Naval Ravikant
― Play Natural Games, Not Status Games - Naval's Archive [Link]
Your brain builds language pathways through repetition and active use. Every time you practice articulating an idea, explaining a concept, or searching for the precise word, you’re literally rewiring neural connections that make language retrieval easier (Bassett & Mattar, 2017).
― How to Become Well-Spoken - Noteswnat [Link]
One of the good habits I haven't had: "Watch a 10-minute interview clip. Then, try explaining the same topic they discussed in your own words. Notice how much clearer your thinking becomes when you’ve seen it modeled well."
How to articulate yourself intelligently - Dan Koe [Link]
The three frameworks Dan Koe lays out are:
Beginner – The Micro Story
This is meant for fast articulation in short-form writing or speech.
Best for: quick clarity and attention
A simple storytelling structure:
- Problem – state a relatable problem
- Amplify – show the negative consequences if it’s not solved
- Solution – present the insight or fix
Intermediate – The Pyramid Principle
This works especially well for podcasts, presentations, and longer explanations.
Best for: structured thinking and credibility
A logic-first communication framework:
- Start with the main idea or conclusion
- Support it with 3–5 key arguments
- Back those up with evidence, examples, or data
Advanced – Cross-Domain Synthesis
This is best suited for newsletters, essays, talks, or long-form content.
Best for: originality and thought leadership
A deeper, more original structure:
- Problem + amplify (clear, relatable setup)
- Cross-domain synthesis (borrow concepts from other fields to explain the idea)
- Unique process or solution (your own framework or steps)
The difference between average and great is taste.
The future belongs to those who can filter signal from noise. When anyone can produce anything, choosing what deserves to exist becomes the skill.
The ability to learn any skill fast, however, will.
Devon Eriksen talks about the “liberating arts,” the skills that free people have always needed to act on their own behalf:
- Logic: deriving truth from known facts
- Statistics: understanding the implications of data
- Rhetoric: persuading, and spotting persuasion tactics
- Research: gathering information on unknown subjects
- Psychology: discerning the true motives of yourself and others
- Investment: managing and growing assets
- Agency: deciding what to pursue and acting without permission
― Why the next 2 years will matter more than the last 10 - Dan Koe [Link]
If your thoughts are average, they can be compressed.
If your ideas are derivative, they can be predicted.
If your personality is shaped by trends, you can be simulated — and eventually replaced.
The more you become like everyone else, the more you disappear.
To be incompressible is to break the pattern. To do something that hasn’t been done. To think what hasn’t been thought. To speak in a voice that’s unmistakably yours.
It means cultivating taste that isn’t algorithmic.
It means being boring to the AI and fascinating to the human.
Most of all, incompressibility requires solitude. Silence. Reflection.
Space from the noise so you can remember who you are when no one is watching.
― Be Incompressible - Naval's Archive [Link]
Naval’s line, “If you don’t commit to meaningful work, life will fill your time with busywork,” is a reminder of a quiet truth: your time will never stay empty. Something will always come in. The choice is whether it’s chosen by you, or assigned to you by circumstance, employers, algorithms, or the thousand tiny demands that chip away at your attention.
Meaningful work, on the other hand, rarely arrives disguised as something urgent. It doesn’t ping, buzz, or demand anything. It whispers. It waits. It requires intention. It asks you to choose it repeatedly, often against comfort, against convenience, against the easy path. It’s the book unwritten, the skill unmastered, the company unstarted, the craft unrefined. The things that make your life bigger but don’t shout for your attention.
― If You Don’t Commit to Meaningful Work, Life Will Fill Your Time with Busywork - Naval's Archive [Link]
How to fix your entire life in 1 day - Dan Koe [Link]
You aren't where you want to be because you aren't the person who would be there.
You aren't where you want to be because you don't want to be there.
You aren't where you want to be because you are afraid to be there.
The life you want lies within a specific level of mind.
Intelligence is the ability to get what you want out of life.
Cybernetics illustrates the properties of intelligent systems.
- To have a goal.
- Act toward that goal.
- Sense where you are.
- Compare it to the goal.
- And act again based on that feedback.
To become more intelligent, you must:
- Reject the known path
- Dive into the unknown
- Set new, higher goals to expand your mind
- Embrace the chaos and allow for growth
- Study the generalized principles of nature
- Become a deep generalist
How to launch a completely new life in one day
Three phases that people go through to successfully flip their identity:
- Dissonance – They feel like they don’t belong in their current life, and become sufficiently fed up with their lack of progress.
- Uncertainty – They don’t know what comes next, so they either experiment or get lost and feel worse.
- Discovery – They discover what they want to pursue and make 6 years of progress in 6 months.
Questions make you aware of the pain in your current life:
- What is the dull and persistent dissatisfaction you've learned to live with? Not the deep suffering but what you've learned to tolerate. (if you don't hate it, you will tolerate it)
- What do you complain about repeatedly but never actually change? Write down the three complaints you've voiced most often in the past year.
- For each complaint: what would someone who watched your behavior (not your words) conclude that you actually want?
- What truth about your current life would be unbearable to admit to someone you deeply respect?
Questions to come up with your anti vision - a brutal awareness of the life you dod not want to live:
- If absolutely nothing changes for the next five years, describe an average Tuesday. Where do you wake up? What does your body feel like? What’s the first thing you think about? Who’s around you? What do you do between 9am and 6pm? How do you feel at 10pm?
- Now do it but for ten years. What have you missed? What opportunities closed? Who gave up on you? What do people say about you when you’re not in the room?
- You’re at the end of your life. You lived the safe version. You never broke the pattern. What was the cost? What did you never let yourself feel, try, or become?
- Who in your life is already living the future you just described? Someone five, ten, twenty years ahead on the same trajectory? What do you feel when you think about becoming them?
- What identity would you have to give up to actually change? (”I am the type of person who...”) What would it cost you socially to no longer be that person?
- What is the most embarrassing reason you haven’t changed? The one that makes you sound weak, scared, or lazy rather than reasonable?
- If your current behavior is a form of self-protection, what exactly are you protecting? And what is that protection costing you?
Questions to create a minimum viable vision:
- Forget practicality for a minute. If you could snap your fingers and be living a different life in three years, not what’s realistic, what you actually want? What does an average Tuesday look like? Same level of detail as question 5.
- What would you have to believe about yourself for that life to feel natural rather than forced? Write the identity statement: “I am the type of person who...”
- What is one thing you would do this week if you were already that person?
Random questions throughout the day:
- 11:00am: What am I avoiding right now by doing what I’m doing?
- 1:30pm: If someone filmed the last two hours, what would they conclude I want from my life?
- 3:15pm: Am I moving toward the life I hate or the life I want?
- 5:00pm: What’s the most important thing I’m pretending isn’t important?
- 7:30pm: What did I do today out of identity protection rather than genuine desire? (Hint: it’s most things you do)
- 9:00pm: When did I feel most alive today? When did I feel most dead?
- What would change if I stopped needing people to see me as [the identity you wrote in question 10]?
- Where in my life am I trading aliveness for safety?
- What’s the smallest version of the person I want to become that I could be tomorrow?
Questions to synthesize insights:
- After today, what feels most true about why you’ve been stuck?
- What is the actual enemy? Name it clearly. Not circumstances. Not other people. The internal pattern or belief that has been running the show.
- Write a single sentence that captures what you refuse to let your life become. This is your anti-vision compressed. It should make you feel something when you read it.
- Write a single sentence that captures what you’re building toward, knowing it will evolve. This is your vision MVP.
To create goals:
- One-year lens: What would have to be true in one year for you to know you’ve broken the old pattern? One concrete thing.
- One-month lens: What would have to be true in one month for the one-year lens to remain possible?
- Daily lens: What are 2-3 actions you can timeblock tomorrow that the person you’re becoming would simply do?
Turn your life into a video game
Six components that lead to a good life:
- Anti-vision – What is the bane of my existence, or the life I never want to experience again?
- Vision – What is the ideal life that I think I want and can improve as I work toward it?
- 1 year goal – What will my life look like in 1 year time, and is that closer to the life I want?
- 1 month project – What do I need to learn? What skills do I need to acquire? What can I build that will move me closer to the one year goal?
- Daily levers – What are the priority, needle-moving tasks that bring my project closer to completion?
- Constraints – What am I not willing to sacrifice to achieve my vision from the ground up?
2025 was the year the comfortable assumptions got stress-tested.
- “Just scale it”? DeepSeek proved architectural efficiency could match brute-force compute – and wiped a trillion dollars off the market.
- “Distribution is all you need”? Despite Microsoft’s insane lead start, OpenAI’s clear consumer and mindshare lead, and Google’s incredible distribution, and Anthropic still beat them all in the enterprise and coding wars.
- “America leads open source”? I count nine competitive Chinese model releases in 2025. Meta shipped two (and Behemoth is still MIA).
- “Bigger models = better models”? Mixture-of-experts, inference-time compute, and distillation ate that thesis alive.
What actually mattered
- Great products beat distribution
- Efficiency mattered more than scale
- Standards emerged
- Multimodal became baseline
- OpenAI Rewrote its own ruless
― 2025 Recap: The Year the Old Rules Broke - AI Supremacy [Link]
What a year.
Blogs and Articles
2025 LLM Year in Review - Andrej Karpathy [Link]
Fara-7B: An Efficient Agentic Model for Computer Use - Microsoft Research Blog [Link]
User gives task → agent acts → browser takes screenshot → model sees screenshot → next action
The Complete Guide to Nano Banana Pro: 10 Tips for Professional Asset Production - Google AI Studio [Link]
Frontier agents, Trainium chips, and Amazon Nova: key announcements from AWS re:Invent 2025 - Amazon News [Link]
Now available: Create AI agents to automate work with Google Workspace Studio - Google Blog [Link]
Introducing Anthropic Interviewer: What 1,250 professionals told us about working with AI - Anthropic [Link]
Harvard-Perplexity study shows AI agents now shift towards more cognitive work tasks
Introducing Code Wiki: Accelerating your code understanding - Google Blog [Link]
Stanford AI Experts Predict What Will Happen in 2026 - HAI, Stanford University [Link]
Manus Joins Meta: Accelerating AI Innovation for Businesses - Meta [Link]
Payment Fragmentation Is Here to Stay, and Banks Must Adapt - Hussam Kamel, Finextra [Link]
The global payments industry is moving away from harmonisation and toward persistent fragmentation. This shift is structural—not temporary—and banks must fundamentally rethink their payment infrastructures to remain competitive. Fragmentation is structural and enduring. Banks that succeed will be those that embrace divergence, modernise their core payment architectures, and treat flexibility as a strategic advantage rather than a cost burden.
Google, Nvidia, and OpenAI - Ben Thompson, Stratechery [Link]
- Nvidia: structurally strong, but facing long-term margin pressure.
- OpenAI: has the best consumer position, but is undermining itself by avoiding ads.
- Google: the only company that can fight on all dimensions simultaneously — model quality, compute, monetization, and distribution.
The AI war is no longer about who innovates first — it’s about who can sustain dominance at scale.
Apple AI chief steps down following Siri setbacks - Emma Roth, The Verge [Link]
OpenAI CEO declares “code red” as Gemini gains 200 million users in 3 months [Link]
Stop talking about your impact. Start spotlighting theirs. - Jenny Wanger [Link]
The strongest professional reputation isn’t built by showcasing how much you do, but by amplifying how others succeed through what you enable.
The book recommendations mentioned in the article:
- Wild Courage by Jenny Wood — Cited for advice on sharing wins and gratitude in self-promotion.
- Give to Grow by Mo Bunell — Recommended as a good resource on the importance of generosity and recognition.
- Give and Take by Adam Grant — Recommended for insight into how impact and recognition dynamics work in professional settings.
So What's Going to Happen to Product Management Anyway? - Peter Yang, Behind the Craft [Link]
How To Ask for Support from Senior Leaders - Yue Zhao [Link]
1) Mindset Shift: People often avoid asking for help because they see it as a sign of weakness. The author learned that asking for help is an essential leadership skill — especially when challenges exceed your control or expertise.
2) When to Ask for Help
You should consider asking for help when:
- The challenge is outside your area of expertise.
- It requires coordination across teams you don’t control.
- You need exceptions or decisions from leaders outside your chain of command.
The general rule: ask earlier rather than later — problems grow if unaddressed.
3) Types of Help to Ask For
The article breaks down effective asks into levels of involvement a leader might provide:
- Be a Sounding Board — light request: listen and give perspective.
- Give Air Cover — leader supports you publicly in meetings or when there’s pushback.
- Be a Messenger — leader helps deliver messages you can’t reach as easily.
- Fight With Me — leader actively advocates or argues on your behalf (highest effort).
The author suggests that asking for air cover is often the best default: It’s low-effort for the leader and lets you drive the work while they back you up.
Netflix and the Hollywood End Game - Ben Thompson, Stratechery [Link]
Netflix wins not because it makes the best shows, but because it is the best machine for turning content into sustained value—and now it wants to own the raw materials too.
Execution won’t stop. Strategy will unless you have a system: Jenny Wanger at INDUSTRY 2025 [Link]
- Execution isn’t the bottleneck; unclear strategy is.: Teams over-execute when strategy isn’t explicit, forcing constant validation, rework, and reactive prioritization.
- Lack of strategy clarity creates hidden time leaks.: Without a clear strategic “yes,” leaders and teams struggle to say no—resulting in fragmented effort and slow decision-making.
- An imperfect strategy is better than a silent one.: Strategy doesn’t need to be complete to be effective; even partial clarity reduces noise and accelerates alignment.
- Strategy must function as a system, not a document.: Value comes from embedding strategy into everyday decisions, tradeoffs, and communication—not from standalone artifacts.
- Perceived productivity can mask lack of progress.: Teams can ship continuously while failing to move the business forward if work isn’t anchored to a shared direction.
- Strategy is ultimately a leadership communication discipline.: Clear, consistently reinforced strategy enables faster decisions, greater autonomy, and compounding momentum.
Card fees creep onto restaurant tabs - Justin Bachman, paymentsdive [Link]
Restaurants are increasingly adding credit card surcharges or cash discounts to offset sharply rising card interchange fees. The shift reflects thin margins, declining traffic, and ongoing frustration with card networks, though adoption remains limited due to customer backlash and state regulations.
J.P. Morgan harnesses blockchain for debt issuance amid digital asset adoption boost - Pritam Biswas and Anirban Sen, Reuters [Link]
J.P. Morgan helped issue $50 million of short-term debt using blockchain technology instead of traditional systems. The debt was issued for Galaxy Digital on the Solana blockchain and bought by Coinbase and Franklin Templeton. Payments were handled using USDC, a digital dollar. This deal shows that big financial institutions are starting to seriously use blockchain
What’s going on here, with this human? - Graham Dunca [Link]
The Three-Part Framework for Seeing People Clearly:
Seeing Your Reflection in the Window (Self-Awareness)
You can’t see others clearly unless you see your own biases, projections, and triggers.
Interviews are co-created interactions; your tone, assumptions, and values shape how the other person shows up.
Personality frameworks (Myers–Briggs, Big Five, self-monitoring, etc.) are most useful when applied to yourself first.
Use multiple frameworks to avoid becoming trapped by a single lens.
Key idea: Misjudgment often comes from mistaking your own internal reactions for objective insight.
Seeing the Elephants in the Room (Unconscious Drivers)
Borrowing from Jonathan Haidt: each person has a rider (conscious narrative) and an elephant (unconscious motivations). Interviews mostly capture the rider; references reveal the elephant.
Espoused beliefs ≠ actual behavior (“espoused theory” vs. “theory in use”).
High-quality reference checks are often 5–10x more valuable than interviews, especially from trusted, calibrated observers.
The best signal often comes from:
- The tone of a reference
- “Table-pounding” enthusiasm
- The dog that doesn’t bark (what’s conspicuously missing)
Key idea: Humility about your limited perception is a prerequisite for accuracy.
Seeing the Water (Context and Ecosystem)
There is no such thing as an “A player” in the abstract—performance is context-dependent.
People thrive or fail based on subtle environmental factors: culture, incentives, belief loops, and feedback structures.
Moving someone to a new ecosystem is risky; strengths in one context can become weaknesses in another.
Belief from leaders and teammates can create powerful positive feedback loops.
Hiring should focus on fit between person and environment, not just raw talent.
Key idea: To understand someone, you must understand the system they came from—and the one you’re putting them into.
YouTube and Podcast
Tucker Carlson: Rise of Nick Fuentes, Paramount vs Netflix, Anti-AI Sentiment, Hottest Takes - All-In Podcast [Link]
Bernie Sanders: Stop All AI, China's EUV Breakthrough, Inflation Down, Golden Age in 2026? - All-In Podcast [Link]
Sacks, Andreessen & Horowitz: How America Wins the AI Race Against China - a16z [Link]
How AI Agents Will Transform in 2026 (a16z Big Ideas) - a16z [Link]
AI stops being something you ask, and becomes something that does.
- Interfaces: chat → action
- Design: human-first → agent-first
- Work: assistance → execution
Big Ideas:
- From prompts to action: AI interfaces are moving beyond chat boxes toward agents that proactively execute tasks and workflows on users’ behalf, acting more like autonomous employees than tools you query.
- From human-readable to agent-readable software: Software, content, and workflows will increasingly be designed to be machine-legible first, enabling agents to reliably navigate, interpret, and operate systems without brittle prompting.
- From demos to deployable voice agents: Voice AI is crossing a threshold from novelty to production-ready systems, becoming practical in domains like healthcare, finance, recruiting, and consumer wellness due to improved reliability and integration.
3 Industries That AI Will Revolutionize In 2026 (a16z Big Ideas) - a16z [Link]
Big Ideas:
- The Electro-Industrial Stack: AI is driving a rebuild of the physical economy—manufacturing, energy, logistics—into an integrated electro-industrial stack where software, hardware, power, and supply chains are tightly coupled, reshaping national competitiveness.
- A Turning Point in Financial Services: Financial services and insurance are reaching an inflection point where replacing legacy systems with AI-native, unified infrastructure unlocks parallel workflows, cleaner data, and structurally higher margins.
- The Dynamic Agent Layer: Static systems of record will be overtaken by a dynamic agent layer where AI agents actively execute work across systems, shifting value from data storage to autonomous coordination and decision-making.
How AI Will Transform Fintech In 2026 - A16z [Link]
Fintech is entering a new upcycle, but it will look very different from the 2020–21 boom. The next phase is driven less by growth-at-all-costs and more by AI-powered fundamentals—especially fraud prevention, underwriting, and infrastructure efficiency—where incumbents and well-positioned platforms (like Plaid) regain an edge.
I shrunk down into an M5 chip - Marques Brownlee [Link]
Incredible video to convey the true sense of scale.
All-In x Kill Tony: A Hilarious Holiday Special - All-In Podcast [Link]
WTF Is Wealth? Ray Dalio Breaks It Down w/ Nikhil Kamath | WTF is Finance Ep 2 - Nikhil Kamath [Link]
Ray Dalio is talking about how money works, why bubbles are inevitable, and how to think across cycles rather than chase narratives.
Takeaways - what Ray Dalio explicitly believes or argues in this episode:
Money ≠ Wealth
Money is not real wealth; it is a claim on wealth. Wealth is real purchasing power backed by: 1) Goods, 2) Services, 3) Productivity. Printing money does not create wealth—it only redistributes claims on existing wealth.
Money Has Two Conflicting Functions
Dalio defines money as: A medium of exchange; A store of wealth
"When debt is high and governments intervene, money often fails at being a store of wealth." This conflict explains: 1) Inflation, 2) Currency debasement, 3) Asset bubbles
Debt Cycles Drive Everything
Economies move in long-term debt cycles (50–100 years). Excessive debt forces governments into a corner: 1) Raise taxes, 2) Cut spending, 3) Print money. Historically, they always print.
The Gold Standard Ending Was a Regime Shift
Nixon ending the gold standard (1971) permanently changed money. Since then: 1) Money is a policy tool, not a constraint. 2) Governments can promise more than they can actually deliver. This makes currency risk unavoidable.
Bubbles Are Created by Easy Money
Bubbles form when:
- Money creation outpaces real economic growth
- People extrapolate recent gains indefinitely
- Leverage increases faster than income
Dalio sees bubbles as mechanical, not moral failures.
Leverage Is the Silent Killer
Most people underestimate leverage risk. Leverage: 1) Magnifies gains, 2) Destroys you quickly when wrong
Liquidity disappears precisely when you need it most.
Wealth Preservation > Wealth Maximization
Dalio emphasizes:
Surviving bad regimes matters more than winning good ones.
Losing 50% requires a 100% gain to recover.
The biggest mistake investors make is over-concentration.
Diversification Is Not About Asset Count
True diversification means:
Exposure to uncorrelated return drivers
Assets that respond differently to:
Growth
Inflation
Deflation
Political stress
Holding many similar assets ≠ diversification.
If You Can’t Beat the Market, Don’t Try
Most people should not trade or time markets. Dalio believes: 1) Humility beats confidence, 2) Process beats prediction
Portfolio construction matters more than asset selection.
Productive Assets Are the Best Long-Term Store of Wealth
Dalio prefers assets that:
Generate cash flows
Adapt to inflation
Represent real economic activity
Examples: 1) Businesses, 2) Innovation, 3) Human capital
Gold Has a Role — But It’s Not Everything
Gold is a hedge against: 1) Currency debasement, 2) Political disorder. But it does not produce income. It should be part of a portfolio, not the portfolio.
Crypto Is Unproven as a Long-Term Store of Wealth
Dalio’s view is cautious, not dismissive: Crypto has some store-of-value characteristics, but: 1) No long multi-cycle history, 2) Regulatory and political uncertainty.
He treats it as speculative diversification, not core wealth.
Real Estate Is Politically Vulnerable
Real estate is easy to: 1) Tax, 2) Regulate, 3) Seize. Investors underestimate political risk in immovable assets.
Prediction Is Less Valuable Than Understanding Systems
Dalio does not believe in point forecasts. He believes in:
Cause–effect relationships
Scenario thinking
Probabilities, not certainties
The Five Forces Drive History
Dalio believes every country’s trajectory is shaped by:
- Debt & money
- Internal conflict
- External conflict
- Technology
- Acts of nature
Ignore any one of these and your analysis is incomplete.
Technology Is the Ultimate Long-Term Wealth Driver
Innovation increases productivity. Productivity is the foundation of rising living standards. Countries that innovate absorb shocks better than those that don’t.
Psychology Determines Success More Than Intelligence
Successful investors share:
Humility
Curiosity
Willingness to be wrong
Ability to learn from pain
Ego is the enemy of compounding.
Learning Comes From Proximity
The fastest way to learn is to be near: 1) Great thinkers, 2) Great decision-makers.
Wealth Without Purpose Is Empty
Dalio believes: 1) Legacy matters more than net worth, 2) Passing knowledge forward is the highest form of wealth, 3) Systems and ideas outlast money.
Sundar Pichai: Gemini 3, Vibe Coding and Google's Full Stack Strategy - Google for Developers [Link]