Thanks for the article — it made me think, though in a different direction than most commenters here.
What bothers me is that this isn't creative work — it's text production. The same thing capitalism keeps demanding from us: produce more, faster, constantly. These polished, perfect texts are recognizable. You can spot them. And when that happens, your own voice disappears — something that matters deeply to me. Something I'm looking for, in myself and in others.
Even if an LLM imitates someone's style, it's still just imitation. Do we really want to choose mass production of text over individuality? That's my core concern — in a flood of perfect texts, the actual human goes missing.
Human touch is definitely the thing worth protecting Monika, and I get your concern. Most of the writers here still do the final touches themselves, that's where their voice stays intact. But great point, thanks for raising it.
What makes this work especially valuable is that it moves the conversation beyond technology itself and into the realm of human possibility, creativity, and adaptation.
The examples feel practical, grounded, and quietly transformative — particularly for those who may never see themselves as “developers,” yet are already becoming architects of new ways of thinking and working.
Timely, generous, and much needed. Thank you for expanding the conversation with such clarity and depth.
awesome list!
there are so many things u can do inside of claude code. In fact, you can also running an entire company within it.
it's just so wild to me imagining possibilities here!
Definitely! With Claude Code projects, plus routines and dispatch, you can build almost anything, even control it from your phone.
Always love to see how other people are using the same tools in using, especially on the platform and (some of them) in the same field!
Amazing article!
Glad you liked it Ilia, thanks for the contribution
Always learn so much from an expert roundup!
Glad you liked it, Joel. I also really learned a lot.
https://substack.com/@millingtonhq/note/p-197096768?r=7y1b3j
Thanks! This is really handy.
Thanks, Corey. Which method do you plan to try first?
I'm not using Claude yet, but I'm in an information gathering stage. Every post like yours is like a tutorial for me.
My first thought reading this: wow, everyone’s newsletter has such strong brands.
Great roundup!
Thanks Jenny. I’m also surprised how everyone has different systems yet Claude Code somehow fits into all of them.
Worthwhile reading this, as not only IT people can get benefits from these tools, but people like us on Substack can also utilize them.
That's the whole point. The tool doesn't care if you call yourself a coder. It just runs.
Exactly, the tool just wants you to give a good and right prompt so that it can execute the results for you.
Thanks for the article — it made me think, though in a different direction than most commenters here.
What bothers me is that this isn't creative work — it's text production. The same thing capitalism keeps demanding from us: produce more, faster, constantly. These polished, perfect texts are recognizable. You can spot them. And when that happens, your own voice disappears — something that matters deeply to me. Something I'm looking for, in myself and in others.
Even if an LLM imitates someone's style, it's still just imitation. Do we really want to choose mass production of text over individuality? That's my core concern — in a flood of perfect texts, the actual human goes missing.
Human touch is definitely the thing worth protecting Monika, and I get your concern. Most of the writers here still do the final touches themselves, that's where their voice stays intact. But great point, thanks for raising it.
What makes this work especially valuable is that it moves the conversation beyond technology itself and into the realm of human possibility, creativity, and adaptation.
The examples feel practical, grounded, and quietly transformative — particularly for those who may never see themselves as “developers,” yet are already becoming architects of new ways of thinking and working.
Timely, generous, and much needed. Thank you for expanding the conversation with such clarity and depth.
Let’s continue the conversation.
🇨🇦 www.salmiinconversation.com
🇨🇦