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Fast Company

IBM just settled a major anti-DEI case for $17 million Sustainability is maturing 2028 candidates will face a new kind of economic anger Trader Joe’s class action settlement: How to find out if you’re an eligible shopper and claim your money Mamdani filmed his pied-á-terre tax video outside Ken Griffin’s $238 million penthouse. Social media loves him for it A U.S. state just banned big AI data centers. Here’s why it might not be the last From legacy processes to AI-native work OpenAI shifts its focus to business users amid Anthropic pressure A massive tariff refund program is launching. Here’s who actually gets the money Why people can’t build wealth on wages alone, and what to do about it Eldercare—the leadership crisis no one is talking about Why workplaces need a gendered health approach Why AI is the ultimate accelerator for creativity AI anxiety is turning volatile Inside NTT Research’s push to commercialize deep tech Warren Buffett once said that success at the end of your life comes down to 1 word For her ‘Confessions’ sequel, Madonna takes Helvetica to the club Nearly two-thirds of parents support their Gen Z kids financially, survey finds Gatorade, the inventor of the sports drink, is making a surprising pivot to reach non-athletes 6 mindset shifts to improve your risk and failure tolerance Record high beef prices won’t be fixed with more cattle, ranchers say. Here’s why For women, gender disparities in ADHD diagnoses can be deadly What’s next for Live Nation? Jury reaches verdict in antitrust case over Ticketmaster fees Social Security COLA prediction for 2027 could mean bad news for seniors Canva is officially ‘an AI platform with design tools’ Allbirds stock is already falling after the AI pivot. History suggests investors should proceed with caution Google DeepMind’s Demis Hassabis on the long game of AI The Trump Store isn’t shy about hawking merch. It’s paying off like never before Get ready for the great American TV trade-in rush AI isn’t built for all languages and cultures. There’s a push to fix that SpaceX’s insane IPO valuation is based on a sci-fi tale Meet Kyoto: the typeface that bleeds (on purpose) Every leader wants to change the world. Here’s how to tell if you’re actually doing so We need to kill the bloated 100 slide ‘Frankendeck’ To thrive in the age of AI, don’t reinvent yourself. Try this instead Is organic music discovery dead? Geese ‘psyop’ debate leaves artists frustrated by growing barrier to entry Starbucks’s ChatGPT experiment could quietly reshape how people order coffee Duolingo was evaluating its workers’ AI use. Workers pushed back. Where are new grads finding job opportunities? SantaCon president stole millions in charitable donations to fund luxury lifestyle, FBI says Target’s new retro-inspired Pokémon collection was made for superfans, by superfans From footwear to AI chips: Allbirds’ next move is hard to explain Let this goofy Trump chatbot tell you how your tax money is really spent Influencer dubbed ‘Sam Altman’s worst nightmare’ goes viral for breaking ChatGPT’s brain, over and over again The future of AI in schools isn’t personalized learning How new perspectives come from moonwalking New findings from this Gallup poll show how Americans are using AI for health advice The idea that the internet is built for people is crumbling. That has huge implications for your business Snap layoffs today: 16% of jobs cut as CEO Evan Spiegel is the latest to tout AI advances With 7 short words, the CEO of United Airlines just taught a brilliant lesson in leadership Meetings, egos, ‘circling back’: The ‘corporate ick’ that drives workers away Adam McKay’s new movie offers a glimpse at advertising’s final frontier: your dreams How we make decisions, and how to reach people who’ve already made up their minds What good AI in government actually looks like OpenAI CEO’s attacker faces attempted murder charges after throwing a device at Sam Altman’s home 7-Eleven is closing hundreds of stores: List of doomed retail locations grows in 2026 as chain seeks to reduce costs CoreWeave stock keeps going up: 3 reasons why the AI cloud-computing company is on fire this week A professional auctioneer’s tips for commanding the room We’ve entered a new era of risk for the modern CEO This one shift in Gen Alpha’s habits could reshape the entire snack industry Emma Grede says caring about money doesn’t make you selfish Why women stay broke—and how to change it, according to Emma Grede Strait of Hormuz shipping traffic appears to come to a halt as U.S. reveals details of the blockade Why the future of mental healthcare is team-based Chase Sapphire’s newest perk isn’t points or lounge access. 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The analog edge: 8 old-fashioned habits to stay sharp and fit at work
Laëtitia Vit · 2026-04-30 · via Fast Company
We are living through the most rapid and sweeping digitalization in history. The average adult touches their phone hundreds if not thousands of times a day. And yet, at this moment of peak digital saturation, a countermovement is taking shape in schools, governments, and research institutions. More and more people have reached the conclusion that for human beings to think well, learn deeply, and stay mentally healthy, we may need significantly less technology. Consider what’s happening in education. Australia passed legislation banning children under 16 from social media entirely. Sweden, having spent a decade rolling tablets into every classroom and replacing textbooks with screens, has now reversed course . Across the world, country after country is arriving at the same verdict: Digital tools, introduced with enormous enthusiasm and the best of intentions, turned out to be a corrosive threat to children’s cognitive development. What happens to our cognitive and professional capabilities when we automate the most demanding tasks? Every convenience comes with an invisible tax levied on our skills. We have spent decades enthusiastically building workplaces that use our brains less and less. In schools, the reckoning has already begun. At work, we are still waiting. The dominant professional narrative still pushes for more AI , more automation, more tools. Productivity discourse is almost entirely about addition—add this agent, this app, this workflow—with no attention paid to what is being subtracted in the process.  Here are eight old habits that will give you and your organization an edge because everyone else has forgotten them. 1. Keep a work notebook and write in it by hand The physical work notebook has become a rarity in the modern office. It shouldn’t be. When we write by hand during meetings or while thinking through a problem, we engage fine motor systems and higher cognition in a way no keyboard can replicate. A landmark 2014 study shows “the pen is mightier than the keyboard” : Notetakers who write by hand show deeper conceptual understanding than those who type because the slowness of the hand forces genuine processing and synthesis rather than verbatim transcription. You have to decide, in real time, what actually matters. A 2023 Norwegian study used EEG imaging to confirm that in regions of the brain associated with memory encoding and creative thinking, handwriting produced greater neural connectivity than typing. 2. Read long-form books, reports, and articles Professionals who read substantive books, reports, and long-form articles gain a clear edge over those who rely on short digital content. Deep reading builds the capacity to follow sustained arguments, retain nuance, and engage critically with complex ideas. By contrast, screen-based reading tends to encourage skimming and shallower comprehension. In a professional setting, this difference is significant. Being able to work through a 300-page book or a dense industry report (and apply its insights) is what distinguishes true expertise from surface-level familiarity. AI can summarize content, but it won’t replace your mental models formed through slow reading. 3. Run a real brainstorm with people, whiteboard, and no screens The pandemic normalized video calls to the point where gathering colleagues in a room with a whiteboard now feels old-fashioned. It shouldn’t. Physical copresence generates qualitatively different creative outcomes from remote sessions. People read body language in real time, interrupt productively, and build on ideas before they have been fully articulated. The best group outputs emerge from spontaneous, unplanned exchanges. A 2022 paper in Nature tracking 60,000 Microsoft employees detailed how remote work can measurably reduce the serendipitous connections that generate novel thinking. Also, remote workers’ professional networks become more siloed over time. “Weak tie” exposure is the single strongest predictor of creative output and career development! So book a room and ban screens for an hour.  4. Walk, especially during the workday The World Health Organization lists sedentary behavior among the four leading behavioral risk factors for global mortality, alongside smoking, excessive alcohol, and poor diet. Office work is sedentary by design. Most professionals know it and do little about it. The case for walking specifically is the most practical and evidence-backed intervention available to the worker. A Stanford study found that walking boosts divergent creative thinking by an average of 81% compared to sitting, and the effect persisted after participants returned to their desks. Walking meetings, lunchtime loops around the block, taking the stairs—these activities cost little time and money. But uptake depends on managerial exemplarity: When leaders model these behaviors, they legitimize them and shift workplace norms. Sitting for nine hours a day, five days a week, over decades, by contrast, amounts to a slow, preventable decline. 5. Train and learn without AI . . . to use it better tomorrow Here is the paradox at the heart of the current AI moment: The productivity gains from AI are substantially larger for senior, experienced workers than for juniors. A Harvard Business School study on AI-assisted consultants found that experts using AI outperformed all other groups, but that less-experienced users, when deployed on tasks beyond their current competence, produced worse outputs than those working unaided. Let’s use the elevator as a simple metaphor. Pressing a button is effortless. Repeat that choice every day, and your legs and glutes atrophy. The colleague who takes the stairs is eccentric until the power goes out and they’re the only one left who can climb the stairs without strain. If AI absorbs the entry-level and mid-level tasks through which junior staff traditionally developed into senior ones, organizations face a skills cliff. The solution may be deliberate, AI-free learning environments where people are forced to develop real competence and build the judgment that will make their use of AI useful.  6. Have coffee with your colleagues and mean it Small talk has a terrible reputation in productivity culture. It’s treated as wasted time. The research says otherwise. Casual exchanges improve mood, increase a sense of belonging, and make people feel more invested in the organizations they work for. They are the cement that holds professional communities together. Susan Pinker’s The Village Effect , published more than a decade ago, is arguably even more relevant today. It shows that face-to-face social contact is one of the strongest predictors of longevity and sustained cognitive performance. The professional who cultivates a wide network of casual, warm workplace relationships invests in the social infrastructure that underpins collaboration and psychological safety. Loneliness is also a performance risk. Among remote and hybrid knowledge workers, chronic loneliness is a pervasive occupational hazard. 7. Dress the part because enclothed cognition is real “ Enclothed cognition ” refers to the measurable influence of clothing on the wearer’s psychological state and performance. Participants wearing a white coat described as a doctor’s coat made 50% fewer errors on attention tasks than those wearing the identical coat described as a painter’s smock. What we wear at work tells us who we are in that context and shapes how we perform accordingly. The normalization of casualwear in professional environments, accelerated by hybrid work, has had a cost. Clothes also involve mutual respect. As the external signals of professionalism have eroded, many organizations report a corresponding drift in standards of communication, preparation, and commitment. It may not be necessary to go back to formal dress. But the small daily ritual of choosing to look like someone who takes their work seriously is worth a lot. 8. Speak without slides and learn to persuade your audience The slide deck has become the default unit of professional thought. Every argument must be bulleted. Every meeting must have its deck that can be shared, forwarded, and consumed asynchronously . Thus we are good at making slides and less comfortable making an argument in real time through the force of clarity and conviction. In fact, now that more and more slides are generated by generative AIs, it will be more and more essential to regain the faculty to convince others without them. Amazon famously banned PowerPoint in senior leadership meetings, replacing decks with written narratives that had to be read in silence before discussion: The underlying insight was that slides allow the presenter to hide behind formatting. Audiences who receive spoken explanation alone retain more than those who have explanation and on-screen text at the same time. Practice speaking without the deck.