The Drip
Anthropic just landed exclusive access to SpaceX's Colossus data center — and the early numbers are
big. Roughly 10x the compute on the model side, roughly double on usage limits. The takeaway isn't the
hardware story. It's that the gap between "I can't get my work done in Claude today" and "this is back
to normal" can close in an hour. We talked about the experience on the podcast, including the broader
point — criticism of Apple and Microsoft for "falling behind on AI" tends to assume every big tech
firm should be racing for the same finish line. They're not.
Inside The Bottle
We spend most of this week's episode on the simplest productivity tool we use, and the one that's done
the most for us: the finish line.
A finish line is a single named outcome you commit to at the beginning of the week. Not a goal. Not a
theme. A specific, binary thing — either you did it or you didn't.
There are four rules to writing one:
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First person. Start with "I…" — it forces ownership.
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Past tense. Write it as if you've already finished. "I shipped the pricing page."
"I went to the gym three times."
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Binary. Done or not done. No "made progress." No half-credit.
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Clear definition of done. A friend should hear it and know exactly what you got
done.
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The reason this works isn't magic. It's that it makes your week visualizable on Monday morning. "Work
out more" can't be pictured. "I went to the gym three times" can.
But the bigger shift is the order of operations. Most people start their day with the noise — the
inbox, the calendar, the messages. They wrestle the noise first, then figure out what's left for the
real work. We do it the other way around. The first question every morning is: what am I doing today
to advance the finish lines I'm committed to this week? Everything else fills in around that.
Kellan adds a piece that's easy to underrate: a morning brain dump. Pen and paper. Everything that's
on your mind — the dentist appointment, the LinkedIn thing you keep meaning to start, the trip you
haven't planned. Not action. Just declutter. Then check the list against your finish lines and decide
what's actually getting done today versus what's noise dressed up as urgency.
What you find pretty quickly is that pushing something to "tomorrow" often reveals it was never
necessary in the first place. The stress was real. The work wasn't.
It's boring. That's the point.
Lab Notes
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Justin's note: I'm prone to the planning trap — itemized packing lists for a
three-day trip, that kind of thing. The finish line gave me a higher-level container for the work
and let me stop spiraling on granular execution.
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Kellan's note: If accountability is a thing for you, tell someone your finish
line. Spouse, friend, teammate. It costs nothing and you'll get it done.
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