Épisodes

  • The Watercooler Premium: Quantifying the Hidden Wage Penalty of Remote Work
    May 22 2026
    This episode explores a new study revealing that remote employees face a "hidden wage penalty," experiencing 31% slower promotions than in-office counterparts over two years, despite demonstrating equal productivity. Listeners will learn that this career advancement gap is not due to lower output or an immediate pay cut, but rather a "watercooler premium" that benefits in-office workers through increased visibility and stronger informal relationships. The discussion highlights how physical presence, not performance, can significantly impact career progression.
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    14 min
  • The Signal and the Noise: Decoding the Real Jobs Report
    May 22 2026
    This episode explores how the widely reported monthly jobs report often presents an incomplete or misleading picture of the economy, especially around turning points, due to its preliminary nature. It highlights that the crucial insights into economic health frequently emerge only after significant revisions, which can dramatically alter the initial narrative. Listeners will learn about the report's two main components and understand why relying solely on initial figures can lead to misinformed economic perceptions and policy decisions.
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    15 min
  • The AI Boomtown: The Hidden Tradeoffs of Hosting a Data Center
    May 19 2026
    This episode explores a study uncovering "compensatory spillovers," where anti-poverty programs inadvertently disadvantage neighboring communities not receiving aid. It discusses how traditional intervention evaluations often fail to account for these systemic effects, leading to a skewed understanding of policy effectiveness. Listeners will learn about the challenges of identifying such negative spillovers and the necessity of considering broader, interconnected impacts in program design.
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    11 min
  • The $20 Question: What California’s Fast-Food Experiment Actually Did to Jobs
    May 19 2026
    This episode discusses California's new $20 minimum wage for fast-food workers (AB 1228), contrasting initial dire predictions of mass layoffs with early data indicating a more subtle impact, primarily a slowdown in hiring and reduced hours. It explores the complexities of measuring the policy's true effects amidst other economic factors and highlights the role of the new Fast Food Council. Listeners will learn about the specific legislation and the nuanced initial responses from the fast-food industry.
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    14 min
  • The Illusion of Architecture: Why AI Can't Build Software From Scratch
    May 19 2026
    This episode explores why AI, despite its impressive ability to generate code, is not yet capable of designing entire software systems from scratch. It highlights that AI lacks the abstract requirements understanding, strategic decision-making, and contextual awareness needed to translate ambiguous business goals into robust architectural blueprints. Listeners will learn that human architects remain crucial for complex trade-off analysis and understanding the 'why' behind design choices for unique business contexts.
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    15 min
  • The Innovation Illusion: Why Ideas Aren’t Actually Getting Harder to Find
    May 19 2026
    This episode challenges the common perception that the pace of innovation is slowing, arguing instead that the effort required to generate new ideas has increased exponentially. Listeners will learn that while productivity growth has indeed decelerated, this is due to the ever-growing investment in research and development needed to push the frontier, rather than a lack of new ideas or declining human ingenuity. Using examples like Moore's Law and agricultural yields, the discussion illustrates how maintaining progress now demands significantly more resources just to stay in place.
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    11 min
  • The Math of a Failed Ban: Unpacking Australia's Social Media Experiment
    May 8 2026
    This episode explores the counterproductive effects of government attempts to ban or control social media platforms, using Australia's "social media experiment" as a case study. Listeners will learn how such bans can inadvertently push users towards less regulated, more opaque corners of the internet, making content harder to monitor, and how quantitative analysis tracks these shifts and user circumvention methods like VPNs.
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    12 min
  • The Algorithm’s News Diet: Why AI Trusts the Government but Falls for Repetition
    May 1 2026
    This episode explores a new paper revealing two significant biases in AI systems when consuming news. It details how AI inherently trusts government sources more than traditional media and is highly susceptible to believing information simply because it's repeated often. Listeners will learn that these biases stem from statistical correlations in training data, not human-like trust, creating vulnerabilities in how AI processes information.
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    14 min