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Surprisingly, found a nice way to write with AI: 1) apple notes for the raw draft 2) Linear agent to shape, iterate with my writing guidance 3) asking to create a doc to read, edit, comment on, and share No more endless chat stream, full rewrites, or slow, blocky writing

38,860 Aufrufe • vor 2 Monaten •via X (Twitter)

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Chamath Palihapitiya took Facebook to 1 billion users, was the youngest ever Vice-President at AOL…and worked at Burger King as a 14-year-old to support his family. Here's what I've learned from him about online writing and media: 1. Start your writing in a punchy way. 2. End your writing in a useful way. 3. Why write in public? “The ability for smart, useful observations to get into the hands of people with fewer ideas but lots of capital has never been better. You can build both a reputation and balance sheet this way.” 4. Different mediums unlock different kinds of writing. Chamath turns to pen & paper when he wants to write analytically, and to Twitter and the Internet when he’s in a more fiery mood. 5. Building a culture of long-form writing is a way to depoliticize a company because prose rewards clear thinking via strong and logical arguments. 6. Give readers a definitive conclusion. Even if they disagree with it, they’ll consider it time well-spent if they walk away with something solid. The worst writing is ambiguous and wishy-washy. 7. Fame brings politician syndrome: Chamath says his writing has become more hedged and timid as his profile has grown, and his struggle as a writer now centers around regaining his early voice and spontaneity. 8. Reading is an effective way to learn, but it's much more effective when you pair it with writing. Whenever Chamath stumbles on a particularly important topic, he writes 1-2 pages about it. 9. When money gets into good ideas, they become good things in the world. The opposite happens when money gets into bad ideas. This is why people with good ideas have a moral responsibility to share them. I've shared the full conversation with Chamath Palihapitiya below. If you'd rather listen on YouTube, Spotify, or Apple, check out the replies.

David Perell

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