In undergrad, Shoulto would study papers regularly from 10pm - 2am and on weekends would spend 6-8 hours reading papers -> Insane work ethic
On Research and Taste
Below are the **verbatim remarks the speakers make about (a) agency and (b) *research taste***, grouped and lightly trimmed for readability. EllipsesâŻ(âŚ) show places where a few words were removed, but the order and wording are unchanged.
1âAgency â driving work endâtoâend
# | Exact quote |
---|---|
Aâ1 | âI just donât get blocked very often⌠if Iâm trying to write some code and something isnât working⌠Iâll often just go in and fix that thing or at least hack it together to be able to get results.â |
Aâ2 | âThatâs arguably the most important quality in almost anythingâŻââŻpursuing it to the end of the Earth and whatever you need to do to make it happen, youâll make it happen. If you do everything, you win.â |
Aâ3 | âFrom my side⌠agency in the work [has been crucial].â |
Aâ4 | âIâve been very good at picking extremely highâleverage problems⌠then going âokay, wellâŻIâm just going to vertically solve the entire thing.ââ |
Aâ5 | âI was hired⌠as an experiment in trying to take someone with extremely high enthusiasm and agency and pairing them with some of the best engineers that he knew.â |
Aâ6 | âFor the people who assume the job board is totally mechanicalâŻââŻthis is not how it works⌠people are looking for the kind of person whoâs agentic and putting stuff out there.â |
Aâ7 | âSpecifically what people are looking for there is two things: oneâŻis agency⌠and the second is the ability to do worldâclass something.â |
Aâ8 | âThere are no adults in the room⌠you have to decide what you want your life to look like and execute on it.â |
Aâ9 | âOne final thing⌠we talked a lot about agency, but one of the most important things is just caring an unbelievable amount⌠going and fixing things that arenât your responsibility because overall it makes the stack better.â |
2âResearchâŻtaste â choosing interesting & fruitful questions
# | Exact quote |
---|---|
Tâ1 | ââŚduring my selfâexperimentation I was obsessively reading papers every night⌠across NLP, computer vision, robotics⌠you see all these patterns start to emerge across subâfields.â |
Tâ2 | âMy research agenda and the interpretability team seemed to just be running in parallel, inâline with just research taste, and so it made a lot of sense for me to work with the team.â |
Tâ3 | (On Andy Jonesâs lowâbudget scalingâlaws paper) âIt demonstrated incredible engineering skill and incredible understanding of the most topical problem of the time⌠as soon as that paper came out several labs wanted to hire him.â |
Tâ4 | âItâs amazing how quickly you can become worldâclass at something because most people arenât trying that hard⌠if you just go ham then you can get really far pretty fast.â |
These passages capture how the speakers frame agency (unblocking yourself, owning the whole stack, manufacturing luck) and taste (cultivating wide foundational knowledge, spotting highâleverage or topical problems, and caring about elegant questions).
Key points with verbatim supporting quotes
Key idea | Exact quote(s) from the transcript |
---|---|
1âŻâŻTiming & luck enable rapid growth | âluck obviously and IâŻI feel like I've been very lucky inâŻâŚthe timing of different progressions hasâŻbeen justâŻlike really good inâŻterms of advancing to the next level of growthâ |
2âŻâŻRelentless execution & fast feedback loops | âwe just needed to really execute on them and have like quick feedback loops and like do careful experimentationâ |
3âŻâŻAgency: never get blocked, fix the stack yourself | âI just don't get blocked very often⌠if I'm trying to write some code andâŚsomething isn't workingâŚI'll often just go in and fix that thing or at least hack it together to be able to get resultsâ |
4âŻâŻPick extremely highâleverage problems | âI've been very good at picking extremely high leverage problems, so problems that haven't been particularly well solved so farâ |
5âŻâŻHiring via enthusiasm + mentorship experiment | âI was hiredâŚas an experiment in trying to take someone with extremely high enthusiasm and agency and pairing them with some of the best engineers that he knewâ |
6âŻâŻBroad reading before specialization creates crossâfield insight | âI was obsessively reading papers every night⌠across NLP, CV, roboticsâŚyou see all these patterns start to emergeâ |
7âŻâŻManufacturing luck: more shots on goal | âChoosing to go to conferences itself is like putting yourself in a position where luck is more likely to happenâŚmy own way of trying to manufacture luckâ |
8âŻâŻWhat orgs actually want: agency + a worldâclass spike | âpeople are looking for theâŚperson who's agentic and putting stuff out thereââ+ââthe ability to do worldâclass somethingâ |
9âŻâŻâThe system is not your friendâ â own your path | âthere's this line the system is not your friendâŚâŻit's not actively against you... it's just not looking out for youâ |
10âŻâŻCaring an unbelievable amount drives quality | âone of the most important things is just caring an unbelievable amountâŚgoing and fixing things that aren't your responsibilityâ |
11âŻâŻWorldâclass is closer than you think if you go ham | âit's amazing how quickly you can become world class at something just because most people aren't trying that hardâ |
These direct excerpts illustrate how the speakers credit their success to timing, obsessive execution, choosing leverage, personal agency, deliberate luckâmaking, deep care, and sustained intensityânot merely baseline technical skill.