Mining Your Life for Context
LLMs make a lot of life searchable , from meeting transcripts to iMessages to half-formed morning thoughts, but all this context only helps if you know what you want to achieve. Today, we’re revisiting how AI entrepreneur Noah Brier uses Claude Code as a second brain to sharpen and expand his own ideas, Every head of growth Austin Tedesco shares how Codex helped him spot the interruptions crowding out deeper work, and we offer a workflow for mining your scattered past insights into a coherent draft.
Spotlight
Noah Brier , AI entrepreneur and seer
Brier is a true AI early adopter. The cofounder of the AI consultancy Alephic , Brier was all in on using Claude Code as a “second brain” for knowledge work back when most people still viewed the tool as a place to write code.
In September, Brier told Dan Shipper on our podcast, AI& I, how he turned the coding app into a research, thinking, and writing partner by connecting it to thousands of his personal notes. Since then, he’s started thinking beyond his own productivity—how does AI make it easier or harder for an entire organization to stay working toward the same goal? For that, he has a new framework, announced in Every last week , that he calls the “pace layers” of AI engineering, drawn from Stewart Brand ’s system for describing how different parts of society change at different speeds.
Just as hooking up Claude Code to an ocean of personal information requires you to determine what is—and isn’t—worth surfacing, running a successful AI company relies on human judgment. Similarly, AI makes code free to produce, but it doesn’t make it easier to identify a product people actually want or orient an entire system of humans and agents around that vision.
Read Brier’s essay on the framework he uses to achieve alignment and then watch his AI & I episode on YouTube, or listen on Spotify or Apple Podcasts. Here’s a link to the episode transcript.
Serial entrepreneur Noah Brier uses Claude Code as a second brain for knowledge work. (Photo courtesy of Sarah Jay Halliday for Every.)