Eesti rabad on kenad. Käisime täna Viru rabas.
Gen
Husband to Kati, father to Patrick. CEO & Co-Founder of Ampron. My personal thoughts are here.
Meie mehel sai kool lõpetatud. Nüüd oma elu peale.
Minu käest on viimasel ajal küsitud, et kust alustada AI rakendamisel tööl. Olen öelnud, et alusta AI käest küsimisega. Et kui ei teagi, kust alustada, ava oma AI agent ja seleta talle, et sa ei tea kust alustada, aga tahaks. Ja ta suunab sind edasi. Üks küsimus viib teiseni ja nii see hakkabki hargnema. Kui ei oska mingit asja küsida, siis nii ütlegi talle, et sa ei oska küsida ja et ta ütleks.
My AI Army. Most of them do the executive level work.
A fleet of AI colleagues, each with a scoped role, pulling facts from primary sources and reaching me through three channels.
My side project. Prototype is in the progress. Let’s see how well this goes.
My regular Tuesday:
“By the way, I’m building an ad-free social platform because I got tired of algorithmic feeds, and I’m also designing AI executives with non-human personalities, while trying to get my golf handicap down.”
See laul kõnetas täna. Mingi seletamatu sügavus on selles.
Jooksin täna Claude Max paketi nädalalimiiti. Tundub, et oli produktiivne nädal :)
I wonder what most software companies are building nowadays
Golf on vist üks väheseid pallimänge, kus palli kaotamine on loomulik osa mängust.
The first instinct when building an AI-powered organisation is usually to create one highly capable assistant and ask it to do everything. Sales. Operations. Strategy. Marketing. Administration. Product development. Customer support.
At first, this seems logical.
After all, if a single AI model can answer questions on almost any topic, why introduce complexity by creating multiple agents?
Humans like to start from complicated and work their way towards simplicity. Simple and minimal is hard.
This week I learned a simple lesson while working with both people and AI agents. When I want to help someone, I usually ask: How can I make your work better? It's a reasonable question, but I've realized there's a better one: What are the three things that would make your life or work significantly better right now?
The difference is subtle but important. "How can I help?" often leads to
I have spent twenty years in rooms where people decide things. Factories, airports, boardrooms. One pattern repeats everywhere: the loudest signal wins, and the loudest signal is rarely the truest one. The modern internet industrialized that pattern. Every major platform is an amplifier with a business model attached, and the business model is your attention, sliced and sold.
Zein is my answer to
Zein on eesti keele päralt sama palju kui inglise keele. Üks postitus, üks keel, ilma tõlkemüra ja algoritmita, mis otsustaks, et eestikeelne mõte on liiga väikesele turule kirjutatud.
Väike keel ei ole väike mõtlemine. Kirjutage emakeeles, siin on selleks ruumi.
This is the first post on Zein.
I built this place because I missed reading people, not feeds. Somewhere along the way the internet stopped showing us what our friends think and started showing us what keeps us scrolling. I wanted a quieter room.
Zein is that room. You follow people, not topics. Posts arrive in the order they were written.
Vaikus ei ole tühjus. See on ruum, kus mõte saab hingata.
The opposite of noise is not silence. It is a signal you chose.
Kirjutamine on mõtlemise aeglane vorm. Siin ei ole kiiret: üks mõte korraga, ilma et keegi loeks, mitu meeldimist see kogub. Proovin seda harjumust siia üle tuua.
Most feeds are built to keep you scrolling. Zein is built to let you stop.
There is no algorithm here. No suggested posts, no infinite scroll, no counter quietly measuring your worth in likes. You follow people, not topics, and your feed is only the voices you chose. When there is nothing new, the page simply ends, and that is the point.
The name carries three ideas. Zen, for calm and intent
