In short: it is probably a mistake, in the end, to ask software to improve our thinking. Even if you can rescue your attention from the acid bath of the internet; even if you can gather the most interesting data and observations into the app of your choosing; even if you revisit that data from time to time โ this will not be enough. It might not even be worth trying. The reason, sadly, is that thinking takes place in your brain. And thinking is an active pursuit โ one that often happens when you are spending long stretches of time staring into space, then writing a bit, and then staring into space a bit more. Itโs here that the connections are made and the insights are formed. And it is a process that stubbornly resists automation.