
Making tech literacy irrelevant | Infactory’s Ken Kocienda
What do you learn after spending 15 years at Apple and demoing your work directly to Steve Jobs? Ken Kocienda, Co-founder of Infactory AI and author of Creative Selection, joins us to share the answer. As a former Principal Engineer at Apple who helped create the iPhone keyboard and autocorrect, Ken discusses his incredible journey from a history major to a key figure in building technology used by billions. He explains his core philosophy of bridging the gap between the liberal arts and technology to create meaningful products, and why he believes AI is the next frontier for this mission. (BTW – we sat down with his co-founder Brooke, so if you like this episode be sure to check that one out!) The conversation dives into his disciplined, spec-driven approach to coding with AI and the power of "extractive AI" to unlock hidden value in data. Ken reveals the crucial lesson he learned from Steve Jobs—that "everything is provisional"—and how his "evolutionary design" process is perfectly suited for today"s AI challenges. This episode is a deep dive into the timeless principles of design and a powerful argument for why the best technology is so intuitive, it makes technical literacy irrelevant. Check out:Register now: AI productivity guide for engineering leaders Follow the hosts:Follow BenFollow Andrew Follow today"s guest(s):Learn more about Infactory AI: infactory.aiConnect with Ken on LinkedInKen"s Book: Creative Selection: Inside Apple"s Design Process During the Golden Age of Steve Jobs Referenced in today"s show:MCP is probably the first protocol in tech history with more builders than users… or at least that’s how it feels.Albania appoints world’s first AI-made minister Support the show: Subscribe to our Substack Leave us a review Subscribe on YouTube Follow us on Twitter or LinkedIn Offers: Learn about Continuous Merge with gitStream Get your DORA Metrics free forever
From "Dev Interrupted"
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