I definitely attribute discovering and developing some of my longest standing interests to some of my teachers. Close friends too, just thoughtful peopld. In contrast, even at a young age I have perceived writing as rigid and constraining more than educating and liberating. Perhaps electronic text in connection with large networks does have more rapid adaptability, it still clearly fails in comparison to the flexibility of speech.

Building devices running language models at the base layer might get us closer, like seeing a X post by Pavan Jayasinha yesterday, mentioning building an FPGA running a LLM end to end in hardware.

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I really love what you said about discovering long-term interests through teachers and thoughtful people—it’s such a subtle but powerful form of guidance. It reminds me how much of learning is about presence and connection, not just information.

And yeah, I get what you mean about writing sometimes feeling rigid. Even digital text, while faster and more adaptable, can still feel a bit lifeless compared to the natural rhythm of speech. Talking flows, reacts, breathes—it carries tone, emotion, spontaneity. Writing (even online) often struggles to keep up with that.