Last week, we featured a five-chapter preview of Lawrence Yeoâs debut book, *The Inner Compass: Cultivating the Courage to Trust Yourself. *This week, in celebration of 100 weeks of Wisereads, we teamed up with thought leader Derek Sivers to share his latest book, Useful Not True, in its entirety. đ đŻ
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Most highlighted Articles of the week
The Death of Partying in the U.S.A.âand Why It Matters
Derek Thompson ¡ Derekthompson.org
Journalist Derek Thompson pieces together how celebrated shiftsâsmartphones, dual incomes, even declining teen drinkingâmay quietly be thinning Americansâ social calendars. "Between 2003 and 2024, the amount of time âŚ
Last week, we featured a five-chapter preview of Lawrence Yeoâs debut book, *The Inner Compass: Cultivating the Courage to Trust Yourself. *This week, in celebration of 100 weeks of Wisereads, we teamed up with thought leader Derek Sivers to share his latest book, Useful Not True, in its entirety. đ đŻ
Keep reading to add to your Reader account below đ
Most highlighted Articles of the week
The Death of Partying in the U.S.A.âand Why It Matters
Derek Thompson ¡ Derekthompson.org
Journalist Derek Thompson pieces together how celebrated shiftsâsmartphones, dual incomes, even declining teen drinkingâmay quietly be thinning Americansâ social calendars. "Between 2003 and 2024, the amount of time that Americans spent attending or hosting a social event declined by 50 percent. Almost every age group cut their party time in half in the last two decades. For young people, the decline was even worse. Last year, Americans aged 15-to-24 spent 70 percent less time attending or hosting parties than they did in 2003."
The sound of inevitability
Tom Renner ¡ Tomrenner.com
Tom Renner warns readers not to be swayed by claims of inevitabilityâa debate tactic that, he argues, silences opposing views. "People advancing an inevitabilist world view state that the future they perceive will inevitably come to pass. It follows, relatively straightforwardly, that the only sensible way to respond to this is to prepare as best you can for that future. This is a fantastic framing method. Anyone who sees the future differently to you can be brushed aside as âignoring realityâ, and the only conversations worth engaging are those that already accept your premise."
Reflections on OpenAI
Calvin French-Owen ¡ Calv.info
Inspired by Nabeel Qureshiâs Reflections on Palantir, Calvin French-Owen distills lessons from his stint on the OpenAI team that launched Codex in just seven weeks. "Thanks to this bottoms-up culture, OpenAI is also very meritocratic. Historically, leaders in the company are promoted primarily based upon their ability to have good ideas and then execute upon them. Many leaders who were incredibly competent werenât very good at things like presenting at all-hands or political maneuvering. That matters less at OpenAI then it might at other companies. The best ideas do tend to win."
Most highlighted YouTube Video of the week
Andrew Ng: Building Faster with AI
Y Combinator
Speed is a start-upâs greatest edge. Speaking at YCâs AI Startup School, Dr. Andrew Ng, founder of DeepLearning.AI and Stanford professor, shows how AI can tighten decision cycles and feedback loops. "Concreteness buys you speed, and the deceptive thing for a lot of entrepreneurs is that vague ideas tend to get a lot of kudos. If you go and tell all your friends we should use AI to optimize the use of healthcare assets, everyone will say thatâs a great idea. But itâs actually not a great idea, at least in the sense of being something you can build. When youâre vague; youâre almost always right. But when youâre concrete, you may be right or wrong."
Most highlighted Twitter Thread of the week
the jackpot age
thiccy
Alex, better known online as "thiccy," highlights how investors gravitate toward reckless, negative-EV trades in pursuit of an elusive jackpotâa pattern he sees across crypto and broader money culture. "My answer is always the same. build more edge rather than risk more size. Donât kill yourself chasing the jackpot. Log wealth is what matters. Maximize the 50th percentile outcome. Make your own luck. Avoid drawdowns. Eventually you will get there."
Most highlighted PDF of the week
Measuring The Impact Of Early-2025 AI On Experienced Open-Source Developer Productivity
Joel Becker, Nate Rush, Beth Barnes, David Rein
Researchers at Model Evaluation & Threat Research (METR) report a surprising result: AI slowed seasoned engineers working in complex, familiar codebases. "16 developers with moderate AI experience complete 246 tasks in mature projects on which they have an average of 5 years of prior experience. Each task is randomly assigned to allow or disallow usage of early-2025 AI tools... After completing the study, developers estimate that allowing AI reduced completion time by 20%. Surprisingly, we find that allowing AI actually increases completion time by 19%âAI tooling slowed developers down."
Hand-picked book of the week
Useful Not True
Derek Sivers
You probably already know not to believe every thought you think. But rather than asking, "Is this thought true?" ask, "Is this useful?"
In his latest book, Useful Not True, entrepreneur and author Derek Sivers argues that truth is often elusive and not always relevant; whatâs important is choosing perspectives that foster agency and empathy.
"By definition, âthe futureâ doesnât exist. Itâs what we call predictions in our imagination... Even a statement as simple as âI need to relaxâ might not be true, since itâs a prediction that relaxing will help.
The problem is certainty, and not realizing itâs a prediction."
Weâre incredibly grateful Derek is sharing an exclusive full copy of Useful Not True with Wisereads to mark our 100-week milestone. To share our thanks, we invite you to check out his other books, How to Live, Hell Yeah or No, and more. đ
Handpicked RSS feed of the week
Derek Sivers
This weekâs author built his legacy by doing the unexpected: coding a music company from scratch, selling it for $22 million, and donating it all to charity. Along the way, he became known for sharp insights on philosophy, entrepreneurship, and life. From One big choice shapes a hundred more: "We make a big choice, like a house, job, spouse, or dog. We think about the thing itself: the look of the house, what the job pays, what a sweet dog. But a choice has so many cascading consequences. One big choice shapes a hundred little others.** **I try to imagine the ripple effects â the later details that make the day-to-day difference."