AI tools changed how I work — and that changed what I want to work on. I use Claude, Gemini, and ChatGPT daily, not as productivity shortcuts but as genuine thinking partners. Working on the infrastructure that makes these models possible, I’ve watched the technology move from impressive to transformative faster than any platform shift I’ve seen in twenty years.
What draws me to labs like Anthropic isn’t the hype. It’s the specific, hard problem: how do you ship the most capable AI systems ever built — safely, reliably, at speed, at scale? That is a program management problem. The stakes are higher, the cross‑org complexity is greater, and the cost of getting the design‑vs‑execution tradeoff wrong is more consequential than anything I’ve encountered before.
My career has been a series of platform‑defining bets — BlackBerry’s global supply chain, AWS compute at pandemic scale, Surface at $50M development budgets, and now ML infrastructure for Google’s GPU and TPU fleets. Frontier AI is the next platform. I want to help build the operational foundation that lets the best researchers in the world do their best work — safely.
I’ve started building with these tools too — a Python optimization add‑on for Google Sheets being the most recent example. Not because I’m becoming an engineer, but because the gap between “I have an idea” and “I have a working tool” has collapsed. That changes how I think about what’s possible inside a program.
Claude
Gemini
ChatGPT
Google AI IDE
Python