This this all of this. I could quote this whole article.
https://hbr.org/2026/03/when-using-ai-leads-to-brain-fry
When Using AI Leads to “Brain Fry”
As firms increasingly incentivize employees to build and oversee complex teams of agents—for example, by measuring and rewarding token consumption as a proxy for performance—people are finding themselves pushed to their cognitive limits. Participants in a recent study described a “buzzing” feeling or a mental fog with difficulty focusing, slower decision-making, and headaches. The authors call this phenomenon “AI brain fry,” defined as mental fatigue from excessive use or oversight of AI tools beyond one’s cognitive capacity. This AI-associated mental strain carries significant costs in the form of increased employee errors, decision fatigue, and intention to quit. The findings also show how AI-driven workflows can be designed to diminish burnout and point toward specific manager, team, and organizational practices to avoid mental fatigue even as AI work intensifies.
Harvard Business ReviewAI is leading to burnout among its greatest advocates. When I hear about people spinning up too many projects chasing the dopamine of productivity and then crashing against the wall of their own meta-cognitive limits, I'm like "Oh, poor babe. You gave yourself ADHD."
https://hbr.org/2026/03/when-using-ai-leads-to-brain-fry

When Using AI Leads to “Brain Fry”
As firms increasingly incentivize employees to build and oversee complex teams of agents—for example, by measuring and rewarding token consumption as a proxy for performance—people are finding themselves pushed to their cognitive limits. Participants in a recent study described a “buzzing” feeling or a mental fog with difficulty focusing, slower decision-making, and headaches. The authors call this phenomenon “AI brain fry,” defined as mental fatigue from excessive use or oversight of AI tools beyond one’s cognitive capacity. This AI-associated mental strain carries significant costs in the form of increased employee errors, decision fatigue, and intention to quit. The findings also show how AI-driven workflows can be designed to diminish burnout and point toward specific manager, team, and organizational practices to avoid mental fatigue even as AI work intensifies.
Harvard Business ReviewEvery time I see this cover art for The Wild Robot, I see the robot eating the duck.
Looking through my CDs and totally forgot about this album. Jude, No One is Really Beautiful. Bangers all the way through. I wonder who BT is. Guess I got this album used.
Today’s #thrift find was a couple more nodes for my WiFi mesh system!
I’ve probably spent $40 total on my house mesh system, cables, and switches. All came from Goodwill!
Also, this forced me to really get into Figma and now I understand what’s so great about it. I might have to switch away from Sketch now. (The Sketch MCP server is so slow and consumes a lot of resources to use for average results.)
This is what has me excited. Using these tools to enhance what I can do, remove the tedious tasks, and let me make the important, human decisions. I’m driving and in control.
I also tried Paper, a new Figma clone that is built around this concept. Its rendering engine is more web standards based so it works faster. It doesn’t even have a pen tool yet, but it’s something to watch.
https://paper.design

Paper – design, share, ship
Paper is a modern and powerful design tool that helps you create, share, and ship your best work.
PaperI had to monitor the changes both ways, but with Claude Code it was about 80-90% right. Especially the code part. I spent my time with the design details and making sure Figma components were built correctly.
I very quickly spun up a design system for my blog and then changed a few design element inconsistencies that I didn’t see until laid out visually. Then pushed those changes back to my code. It’s fast and pretty accurate.