From Tab Graveyards to Knowledge Artifacts
I open my browser. Twenty-seven tabs stare back. Each one a promise of insight, a fragment of a world I wanted to understand. A long-form essay on the history of cybernetics. A technical whitepaper. A YouTube lecture I swore I’d watch. Their tab titles are like tombstones, marking the spot where my attention died. My Kindle library is a graveyard of good intentions, filled with books boasting a proud “10% Read.” This isn’t a personal failing. It’s the ambient condition of modern cognition. We have engineered the most powerful knowledge delivery system in history, yet we find ourselves stranded in a shallow stream of endless content, unable to drink deeply from any single source. In response, we’ve reached for a new class of tool: the AI summary. It promises a lifeline—the “gist” without the grind. But I’ve noticed a curious thing. The summaries, too, often go unread. They become just another item in the queue, another piece of content to skim. The problem isn’t that we lack tools...