» Constraints that motivate and focus are most effective

» Boredom can trigger a creative and productive state of mind

» It’s important not to stave off boredom immediately with distractions

» You can optimise your working environment for greater productivity on different types of task

» Machine learning is the science of getting computers to act without being explicitly programmed

» DeepMind’s AlphaFold solves a complex protein folding problem in days rather than years

» Netflix and the BBFC automate age certifications for content with a staff-trained algorithm

» YouTube’s recommendation algorithm has the unintended consequence of creating echo chambers

» An algorithm widely used in US courts for predicting future criminality exhibits racial bias

» Filmmaker Shalini Kantayya explores the impact of biased facial recognition algorithms on human rights

» Leaders have a disporportionate impact on the psychological safety of their teams

» Effective teams feel their work means something and makes a difference

» A servant leader’s motivation begins with a consious choice to serve others without self-interest

» A leader can show support and respect by approving and following a team’s social charter

» Product strategy is how you will achieve your product vision

» There are only 4 types of work after finding product-market fit

» A step-by-step guide to building product strategy like Netflix

» “Framework fanatics” and “optimisation optimists” mask the absence of product strategy

» Using research to overcome organisational inertia to your product strategy

A whole product is often a complex combination of several products and services. Some you create yourself, some are created by others. You’re responsible for the whole lot, even if they’re not all directly in your control.

» Practical accessibility and inclusion guidance from UK and US governments

» Accessibility guides to various impairments by disabled gamers for the gaming industry

» Making your content accessible and inclusive isn’t ‘dumbing down’

» Professionals want clear, concise information, not jargon or complex terms