Writing Β· AI / Automation / Tech

2025-04-01
π“π‘πž 𝐁𝐚𝐭 π–πšπ¬π§β€™π­ ππ«π¨π€πžπ§β€”π”π§π­π’π₯ 𝐚 𝐏𝐑𝐲𝐬𝐒𝐜𝐒𝐬𝐭 π…π’π±πžπ 𝐈𝐭 Aaron Leanhardt isn’t your typical MLB guy. He’s a 48-year-old MIT-trained physicist who once cooled sodium gas to near absolute zero. Smart guy, obviously. Then he looked at a baseball bat and asked: β€œWhy is the sweet spot so far from where hitters actually hit?” Turns out, no one had a good answer. So he built the β€œtorpedo bat”—a bowling-pin-shaped redesign that shifts the weight closer to the handle. Result? Faster swings, more contact, and a lot more home runs. The Yankees just tied an MLB record with 15 homers in 3 games. Nine of those came from hitters using Leanhardt’s funky new bat. The wild part? This wasn’t high-tech. No sensors. No AI. Just one simple question that no one bothered to ask for a century. Being smart isn’t about having all the answers. It’s about spotting the obvious things everyone else overlooks. What tool, habit, or system in your business is way overdue for someone to ask, β€œWhy the hell are we still doing it this way?” Because the next breakthrough probably isn’t hiding in a lab. It’s hiding in plain sight.
AI / Automation / Tech

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