Infinite Loops Jean-Marc Daecius - The Last Human Chief of Staff (Ep. 300)
Jean-Marc Dacius, artist-programmer and OSV's Chief of Staff who builds AI-first workflows. He explains automating email and protecting deep work. They explore AI-driven publishing experiments, agriculture with robotic food forests, personalized recommendations over ads, and AI curators that cut cultural spam.
01:49:24
Ship Prototypes, Skip Meetings
- Ship prototypes instead of endless meetings: build an MVP to show value quickly.
- Use real feedback from working prototypes to decide whether to iterate or scale.
AI Enables Regenerative Agriculture
- Transitioning from monocrops to diverse food forests can rebuild topsoil and eliminate pesticides.
- Humanoid robots plus AI will enable intercropping at scale and run parallel experiments to optimize ecosystems.
AI Improves Recommendations Over Ads
- AI makes recommendations feel like trusted, human referrals rather than spray-and-pray ads.
- Targeted, context-aware outreach reduces attention waste and increases trust and conversion.
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Intro
00:00 • 58sec
Why Jean-Marc Took an Unconventional CoS Role
00:58 • 1min
Being 'Your Last Human Chief of Staff'
02:00 • 3min
Which Past Experiences Mattered Most
04:46 • 4min
Avoiding Scope Paralysis and Ship Mentality
08:26 • 6min
Reinventing Publishing and A/B Testing Covers
14:20 • 7min
AI and the Future of Agriculture
21:00 • 8min
Personalized Recommendation as Better Advertising
28:52 • 4min
AI as an Antibiotic for Cultural Spam
32:52 • 8min
AI's Role in Research and Creative Leverage
41:00 • 3min
Moral Panics, Calculators, and New Gates
43:31 • 5min
Invisible AI: Self-Driving and Background Impact
48:56 • 7min
Social Surveillance: Cameras, Youth, and AI
56:00 • 10min
AI Companions and Safer Childhoods
01:06:08 • 4min
Solo Founders, AI Workflows, and Corporate Resistance
01:09:47 • 6min
Food Automation: Deflationary, Higher Quality Food
01:16:15 • 7min
In-Person Rituals vs. Infinite-Scroll Consumption
01:23:21 • 3min
Ratings, Incentives, and Goodreads Arbitrage
01:26:16 • 7min
Five Breakthroughs for an AI-First Company
01:33:22 • 10min
An OSV OS: Centralized Context for Teams
01:43:17 • 6min
Outro
01:49:09 • 0sec

#340
• Mentioned in 80 episodes
Dom Quixote


Xavier, Alberto
Don Quixote, written by Miguel de Cervantes, tells the story of Alonso Quixano, a middle-aged gentleman who, influenced by his extensive reading of chivalric romances, decides to become a knight-errant.
He renames himself Don Quixote and, with his squire Sancho Panza, embarks on a series of adventures.
These adventures often involve Don Quixote's misinterpretation of reality, such as mistaking windmills for giants and inns for castles.
The novel explores themes of reality vs.
imagination, the decline of chivalry, and the human condition.
Eventually, Don Quixote returns home, regains his sanity, and renounces his chivalric ambitions before his death.

#361
• Mentioned in 77 episodes
Lolita


Vladimir Nabokov
The novel, presented as the posthumously published memoirs of Humbert Humbert, explores themes of obsession, pedophilia, and the manipulation of reality.
Humbert, a European intellectual and pedophile, becomes infatuated with Dolores Haze, whom he kidnaps and sexually abuses after marrying her mother.
The narrative delves into the complex and disturbing relationship between Humbert and Lolita, highlighting issues of morality, solipsism, and the erasure of Lolita's independent identity.
The book is known for its eloquent but deceptive narrator and its exploration of delusion, coercion, and cruelty.

#204
• Mentioned in 112 episodes
The Road


Tom Stechschulte


Cormac McCarthy
The Road is set in a world that has been devastated by an unspecified cataclysmic event, resulting in the extinction of nearly all life on Earth.
The story follows an unnamed father and his young son as they travel south along the road, carrying their meager possessions and a pistol with only two bullets.
The father, suffering from a worsening respiratory condition, is determined to protect his son from the dangers of their new world, including cannibalistic marauders.
Along their journey, they encounter various survivors, some of whom are cruel and others who show kindness.
The novel explores themes of love, survival, and the preservation of humanity in a world devoid of hope.
Ultimately, the father's health fails, and he dies, but not before ensuring his son's safety with a new family who may offer a chance for a better future.

#845
• Mentioned in 42 episodes
What works on Wall Street
The Classic Guide to the Best-Performing Investment Strategies of All Time


James P. O'Shaughnessy
In 'What Works on Wall Street', James P. O'Shaughnessy provides an in-depth analysis of over 90 years of stock market data to identify the most effective investment strategies.
The book examines various factors such as price-to-earnings ratios, price-to-sales, price-to-book value, dividend yields, and more.
It challenges conventional wisdom and offers multifactor strategies that have historically generated the best returns.
The book is designed to help investors of all levels, from conservative to aggressive, in selecting the best strategies for their investment objectives.

#41
• Mentioned in 267 episodes
Moby Dick


Herman Melville
Moby-Dick is a novel that tells the story of Captain Ahab's maniacal quest for revenge against Moby Dick, the giant white sperm whale that bit off his leg.
Narrated by Ishmael, the story follows the crew of the whaling ship Pequod as they embark on a journey that explores themes of obsession, man vs.
nature, and the existential questions of good and evil.
The novel is rich in detailed descriptions of whale hunting and life aboard a culturally diverse crew, and it has become a cornerstone of American and world literature.

#792
• Mentioned in 44 episodes
Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone


J.K. Rowling
The story follows Harry Potter, an orphan who lives with his abusive Muggle (non-magical) relatives.
On his eleventh birthday, Harry learns he is a wizard and begins attending Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry.
There, he makes friends with Ron Weasley and Hermione Granger and together they face the attempted comeback of the dark wizard Lord Voldemort, who murdered Harry's parents and seeks the powerful Philosopher's Stone to gain immortality.
Along the way, Harry must navigate the magical world, confront his enemies, and protect the Stone from falling into Voldemort's hands.

#2290
• Mentioned in 20 episodes
1491
New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus


Charles C. Mann
In this book, Charles C. Mann presents recent research findings that suggest human populations in the Western Hemisphere were more numerous, culturally sophisticated, and environmentally influential than previously thought.
Mann argues that pre-Columbian Indians were not sparsely settled in a pristine wilderness but instead actively molded and influenced their environment.
He highlights the advanced cities, such as Tenochtitlan, which had running water and clean streets, and discusses the significant impact of European diseases on Native American populations.
The book challenges traditional views of Native American societies and their technological and social complexity.
What happens when you design a company assuming AI should do everything it possibly can?
Jean-Marc Daecius, OSV's Chief of Staff, joins Infinite Loops to explain what it means to be "AI first" — and why he believes he may be the company's last human chief of staff.
The conversation explores how AI can remove meaningless cognitive load, protect deep work, and unlock creative leverage — from reshuffling priorities and filtering email, to reinventing publishing, agriculture, education, and even how we discover books, movies, and ideas.
Important links:
Substack: https://newsletter.osv.llc/
Jean Marc's "The Future of Food": https://newsletter.osv.llc/p/the-future-of-food

