Humanity Redefined - 500 weeks later
I hope you enjoy this free post. If you do, please like ❤️ or share it, for example by forwarding this email to a friend or colleague. Writing this post took around eight hours to write. Liking or sharing it takes less than eight seconds and makes a huge difference. Thank you! Last weekend, I sent the 500th issue of Sync. For 500 weeks—almost ten years—I have been preparing and sending a new issue of the newsletter without missing a week. The 500th issue also coincided with the first issue of 2025—a perfect opportunity to reflect on this journey and look ahead. Reflecting on a decade-long projectWhen I look back to that one afternoon in May 2015, in the basement cafe of the Google Campus in London, and reflect on this decade-long journey, I could never have imagined the journey that lay ahead. When I sent out the first issue of the newsletter, I did not expect to still be writing it nearly ten years later. Ten years is a long time, and much has changed during that period. I have changed jobs a couple of times, moved house twice, and started and finished (or abandoned) many other projects. Yet, throughout all this time, this newsletter has been one of the few constants in my life. I am proud that I have kept going, that I did not give up, and that I still have the passion to write and send another newsletter. Not everyone can say they have run a thriving side project for a decade and are still going. I am grateful to everyone who has ever read my work. I am grateful to everyone who subscribed to the newsletter, left a like or a comment, or reached out. I am grateful to everyone I have met along the way and who, in one way or another, has influenced who I am today. A special shoutout goes to three people—Andrew Cantino, Luke Robert Mason, and Michael Spencer—who have significantly impacted this newsletter and me. Andrew gave me some time when I questioned whether I wanted to continue writing this newsletter. The conversation we had provided me with a new perspective on what is possible and gave me the motivation and inspiration to keep going. Andrew also co-writes a newsletter—The Orbital Index—which is celebrating its 300th issue this week. Congratulations! Luke recommended moving the newsletter to Substack. It was one of those butterfly-effect conversations that seemed rather small at the time but had massive consequences. Without his suggestion, I might not have joined Substack’s community of writers and could have missed many opportunities to grow. And without joining Substack, I might never have met Michael. Micheal is the pillar of the tech and AI community on Substack, offering an opportunity for smaller writers to be noticed by tens of thousands of readers. Michael generously gave me his trust and space to publish my work, exposing it to thousands of new readers. Chances are that you are here, reading these words, because you came from one of Michael’s publications. I am also grateful for his words of advice and the impact he has had on my work. There were also many more conversations and many more people who shaped Humanity Redefined and me. To everyone with whom I had the chance to discuss writing, the future, or simply nerd out about technology—thank you for your time and for shaping, in one way or another, who I am today. Looking back at 2024The newsletter has grown both in terms of readership and the number of subscribers in 2024. The numbers are higher than they were at this time last year, though not quite where I had hoped they would be. Even though I have not missed a week for almost ten years, I have, in recent months, been missing the Friday deadline for sending out the new issue of Sync. I did an analysis, and below is a chart illustrating the weeks when I published Sync on Friday (green squares) and the weeks when I missed the deadline (red squares). 94.58% of all issues of Sync have been published on time. However, over the last 18 weeks, I have consistently missed the Friday deadline. Another area where I have been inconsistent is publishing standalone articles every week. The last article I published was in July 2024—that’s six months ago. This does not mean I am abandoning standalone articles—I have 70 unfinished drafts and another 70 or more ideas waiting to be written. The passion is still there, but it has not been translating into published articles. There is clearly an issue with my writing processes. They are not working, and it is up to me to identify what does and does not work, and to create new processes to ensure I consistently deliver what I promised—a new issue of Sync every Friday and 1–2 standalone articles each week. Looking aheadWith all that said, here is what I promise for 2025:
I will also try something new by creating a theme for 2025 to guide the tone and messages I want to convey throughout the year. The theme for 2025 is the optimistic future. This theme ties back to the mission of Humanity Redefined: Humanity Redefined sheds light on the bleeding edge of technology and how advancements in AI, robotics, and biotech can usher in abundance, expand humanity's horizons, and redefine what it means to be human. By “optimistic future,” I don’t mean naively believing everything will turn out fine. For me, seeing an optimistic future or being an optimistic futurist means acknowledging the state of reality as it is, not as we wish it to be, and then showing or imagining how a positive future can be achieved. It also involves acknowledging not-so-optimistic possibilities and highlighting ideas to minimise their chances of occurring. This year, through my work, my goal is to inspire action. Optimism is not passive; it’s an active pursuit of better possibilities. I aim to highlight the breakthroughs, ideas, and individuals working to turn potential into progress—and to remind us all that we have the agency to shape the world we want to see. This nearly decade-long project has been a wild ride, filled with highs and lows. As I celebrate this milestone, I am both happy and proud to still be here, sharing stories of progress, possibility, and the power of human ingenuity. Here’s to the next year—and the next 500 issues! Thanks for reading. If you enjoyed this post, please click the ❤️ button or share it. Humanity Redefined sheds light on the bleeding edge of technology and how advancements in AI, robotics, and biotech can usher in abundance, expand humanity's horizons, and redefine what it means to be human. A big thank you to my paid subscribers, to my Patrons: whmr, Florian, dux, Eric, Preppikoma and Andrew, and to everyone who supports my work on Ko-Fi. Thank you for the support! My DMs are open to all subscribers. Feel free to drop me a message, share feedback, or just say "hi!" |
Older messages
OpenAI proposes a new corporate structure - Sync #500
Sunday, January 5, 2025
Plus: Nvidia's next move; the state of AI hardware startups; "AI factories" for war; BYD enters humanoid robot race; ChatGPT Search vs. Google Search; and more! ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏
Deliberative alignment - Sync #499
Sunday, December 29, 2024
Plus: GPT-5 reportedly falling short of expectations; Nvidia GB300 "Blackwell Ultra"; automating the search for artificial life with foundation models; Boston Dynamics' Atlas does
o3—the new state-of-the-art reasoning model - Sync #498
Sunday, December 22, 2024
Plus: Nvidia's new tiny AI supercomputer; Veo 2 and Imagen 3; Google and Microsoft release reasoning models; Waymo to begin testing in Tokyo; Apptronik partners with DeepMind; and more! ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏
Google's Agentic Era - Sync #497
Thursday, December 19, 2024
Plus: Sora is out; OpenAI vs Musk drama continues; GM closes Cruise; Amazon opens AGI lab; Devin is out; a humanoid robot with artificial muscles; NASA's new Martian helicopter; and more! ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏
OpenAI o1 goes Pro - Sync #496
Tuesday, December 10, 2024
Plus: DeepMind Genie 2; Google released Veo and Imagen 3 on Vertex AI; Tesla Optimus shows off new hand; Grok is free for all X users; ads might be coming to ChatGPT; Waymo comes to Miami; and more! ͏
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