I'd seen this bubble up through various feeds over the past week and didn't think to do any due diligence on the claims myself. It was particularly rampant on LinkedIn as evidence of turning the corner on validating LLMs and layoffs - "Look what you can accomplish with two people!"
I've had this discussion with a few colleagues now around how it feels like the same snake-oily SEO "experts" that popped up years ago have switched the grift to "AI". It's scarier now since LLMs feel like even _more_ of a black box than SEO to a lot of people.
I’ve seen this play out at multiple startups. The people holding things together often don’t fit neatly into the KPIs or eng chart levels. They’re mentoring juniors, redesigning workflows, updating documentation, and bridging gaps between departments. Because their scope isn’t bundled into a single “initiative,” reviews don’t always capture their true impact.
I’ve felt this personally working on the design system used across the entire engineering org. Three years after I left, that system is still the foundation the team builds on. At the time, the cross-team coordination and invisible maintenance work pulled me away from more visible deliverables, so it was harder to show impact in a review cycle. But the endurance of that system is its own validation—it shows how much hidden glue work pays off when invested properly.
The takeaway for me is that the best orgs figure out how to see this kind of work before it fades into the background. If you can spot and reward it early, you not only retain the people doing it, you build resilience into the team itself.
I remember first hearing about protein folding with the Folding @Home project (https://foldingathome.org) back when I had a spare media server and energy was cheap (free) in my college dorm. I'm not knowledgable on this, but have we come a long way in terms of making protein folding simpler on today's hardware, or is this only applicable to certain types of problems?
It seems like the Folding @Home project is still around!
I grew up loving magic. I watched David Copperfield on a grainy old tv, and vividly remember rewatching taped performances of "The World's Greatest Magic" (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_World%27s_Greatest_Magic) trying to figure out how the big illusions were done. I was part of a magic club and loved peeking behind the curtain. It fascinated me how as you learned those building blocks of simple sleight of hand, you could compound and build on those components to pull off more and more impressive tricks. A double lift, palming, french drop, etc...all pulled together to a cohesive "trick".
I feel like a lot of what entertained me about magic also pulled me towards web development. Sites and interactions online seem like magic until you realize they also break down into simple problems, simple components that build upon one another to deliver the trick. That interest in figuring out how things work just never went away I guess!
AI enables quick shipping, but the traditional moat of development no longer applies.