The solution might be cancelling my AI subscription
David Wilson reflects on how AI tools lead to an overwhelming number of abandoned projects and severe attention fragmentation. He describes AI as a 'thermonuclear ADHD amplifier' and concludes that the only sustainable approach is to curtail usage or cultivate discipline. Simon Willison finds this deeply relatable.
The solution might be cancelling my AI subscription
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31st May 2026 - Link Blog
The solution might be cancelling my AI subscription (via) I find this post by David Wilson very relatable. David lists 16+ projects he's spun up with AI tooling, and concludes:
I didn't mean to build most of these things. Usually the Claude session started with something like "write a quick script for X", and one hour later the result is not a quick script for X, nor in the usual case is my problem solved, whatever the original itch happened to be.
On that last point, this technology is horrific for attention. It's a thermonuclear ADHD amplifier and I have seen the same effect in every single one of my adult friends. Folk running 3 screens simultaneously working on totally unrelated "projects" they have little hope of maintaining, and such little commitment to the outcome that the time is obviously wasted.
This is a very real problem. I'm finding that coding agents can take me from a vague idea to a working solution, one with tests and documentation and that looks like a carefully considered project evolved over the course of many weeks... in less than an hour.
Even if the code is rock solid, there's a limit to how many projects like that I can sensibly care for - and if they're instantly abandoned, what value was there from creating them in the first place?
David doesn't think this is sustainable at all:
I have no idea how to manage AI at present except by curtailing use, because a tool producing a cheap reward with minimal input and no friction can only be a liability, and achieving that realisation is probably the only real contribution of AI to date.
I'm hopeful that the critical skill to develop here is discipline. That’s not great news for me: I’ve been trying to figure that one out for decades!
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This is a link post by Simon Willison, posted on 31st May 2026.
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