Ep163: The Phone-in-the-Box Experiment and the Speed of Truth copertina

Ep163: The Phone-in-the-Box Experiment and the Speed of Truth

Ep163: The Phone-in-the-Box Experiment and the Speed of Truth

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In this episode of Welcome to Cloudlandia, Dan and Dean explore the intersection of personal transformation and rapid global change in our technology-driven world. Dean reveals the profound results of his eight-week phone-in-the-box experiment, sharing how reclaiming 14 hours daily has restored his ability to read for extended periods and revolutionized his creative process. He discusses developing systematic approaches to manage ADHD, including mastering 50-minute focus sessions that consistently produce two fully-formed thought pieces. With Charlotte, his AI partner who can read his handwriting, Dean has created a sustainable rhythm for generating hundreds of insights annually. Dan shares unexpected breakthroughs from his stem cell treatments—while the 50-year-old knee injury heals slowly, his cognitive testing has improved 90% and his reflexes have returned to levels he hasn't experienced in decades. He discusses upcoming book launches, including The Greater Game with John Bowen, featuring original entrepreneurial research and interactive dashboards, plus the innovative four-by-four casting tool being developed as their first licensed internet product. The conversation shifts to examining how individual action amplified by technology can expose truth at remarkable speed. From Venezuela's Maduro being extracted to a Brooklyn jail cell to a lone citizen journalist uncovering $112 million in daycare fraud with just his phone and one day of investigation, we explore how Cloudlandia enables rapid revelation of hidden realities. We close by reflecting on the philosophical nature of AI use—how billions of people are each creating entirely unique cognitive signatures with their AI tools, as distinctive as fingerprints yet largely invisible to the world. It's a fascinating look at how technology simultaneously democratizes capability while making individual creative processes more private than ever. SHOW HIGHLIGHTS Dean shares eight weeks of results from his daily experiment, revealing how eliminating phone access for 14 hours has fundamentally restored his ability to focus, dramatically improved his sleep scores, and brought back the hours-long reading sessions he thought he'd lost forever..Dan reveals the surprising results from eight stem cell treatments—while his 50-year-old knee injury progresses slowly, his brain health has skyrocketed with 90% improvement in cognitive testing.The remarkable story of Venezuela's Maduro—executed flawlessly in 30 minutes by Delta Force with 120 planes, no American casualties, and no equipment left behind.Dan's theory that if you interviewed half the world's population, you'd find four billion people working on four billion different things with AI—each creating cognitive signatures as unique as fingerprints, largely undetectable and fundamentally private despite the connected world we inhabit. Links: WelcomeToCloudlandia.com StrategicCoach.com DeanJackson.com ListingAgentLifestyle.com TRANSCRIPT (AI transcript provided as supporting material and may contain errors) Dean Jackson: Welcome to Cloudlandia. Dan Sullivan: Mr. Jackson. How are you? Good, good. Had a great trip to London for- Dean Jackson: I didn't know you were going to London. Dan Sullivan: Yeah. Yeah. We just decided at the last moment, unfortunately, we got good flights and good rooms and some friends of ours from the DC area, they went and Steven Palter and his family were there. Oh, Dean Jackson: Nice. Dan Sullivan: So lots of great meals, lots of great place. Two out of three, which is good batting average. That gets you into Hall of Fame if you get two out of three. Exactly. Actually, if you get three out of 10, you've got a good chance. Dean Jackson: That's right. Dan Sullivan: If you play 20 years and have a 300 batting average, probably you're in consideration depending on Dean Jackson: Venture capital. Dan Sullivan: When the hits actually happened. Dean Jackson: Yeah. I got Babs texted on New Year's Eve and you guys were back from ... I didn't realize you were gone. Were you there for Christmas or after Christmas you went? Dan Sullivan: Yeah, we left on Christmas day night and flew overnight to London. And then boy, it was buzzing. London downtown doesn't matter what day it is, it's buzzing. Yeah. I just saw a video last night and it's one of these new AI films, which I think is really great where they'll take a sketch that was made of London 2000 years ago and then they'll animate it. And Speaker 3: It's Dan Sullivan: Really terrific. It's really terrific. For history buffs, it's terrific. I think this AI thing has uses. What do you think? I mean, are you noticing things that you wish you could have done five years ago more quickly? They're happening more quickly. Dean Jackson: Yeah. I'm working today on creating a better past. And the better past involves AI. Yeah. That's a really interesting thing. I watched over Christmas, there's a new series called Pluribus. Dan Sullivan: You ...
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