# How Springboards Built an AI Model That Actually Thinks Differently Page: https://stenobird.com/podcast/day-one-7096683/how-springboards-built-an-ai-model-that-actually-thinks-differently Text version: https://stenobird.com/podcast/day-one-7096683/how-springboards-built-an-ai-model-that-actually-thinks-differently.md Podcast: [Day One®](https://stenobird.com/podcast/day-one-7096683) Published: 2026-04-23T20:00:00+00:00 Episode link: https://dayone.fm/show/in-the-blink-of-ai Audio file: https://dts.podtrac.com/redirect.mp3/prfx.byspotify.com/e/episodes.captivate.fm/episode/2b9262af-de81-4465-9c53-4f5cc5776484.mp3 Processing state: not_requested JSON: https://stenobird.com/v1/public/podcasts/day-one-7096683/episodes/how-springboards-built-an-ai-model-that-actually-thinks-differently Duration seconds: 2936 ## Resource Win $2,000 in credits with the Day One Network — take our 2-minute audience survey before 30 June: dayone.fm/survey "Shit at the speed of light is still shit." That one line from Pip captures the entire philosophy behind Springboards, the AI company he co-founded with Amy and Kieran that is quietly pushing back against what the rest of the industry is doing. The three of them join Georgie Healy for one of the most thought-provoking conversations the show has had about what AI is quietly doing to creativity, and what it takes to build a model that breaks the mould. Pip and Amy never planned to start an AI company. Both worked in advertising and got laid off within three weeks of each other, which led them to accidentally build the first version of Springboards themselves to solve a problem they kept running into: existing AI tools were not helping them do creative work better, they were making everyone's creative work look the same. Kieran joined as their technical co-founder and together they have now released Flint, a divergence model designed to break the AI hive mind. In this episode they unpack why 69 out of 70 language models will tell you that time is a river, why mainstream AI has converged into one gray mush of sameness, and why the scariest part of this might be that most people will not even notice. They also get into how they built Flint to score 7.5 on novelty bench when the frontier models score ones and twos, why the smallest possible model was always the goal, and why they deliberately avoid making the tool feel too polished. Plus why humans are evolutionarily lazy and what that means for our brains in the AI era, the unexpected analogy about sourdough and alcohol that changes how you think about creativity, and the honest reflection from all three found… ## Actions - request_transcript: `POST https://stenobird.com/v1/public/podcasts/day-one-7096683/episodes/how-springboards-built-an-ai-model-that-actually-thinks-differently/transcription-requests` — Idempotently request low-priority transcript generation for this episode. - read_markdown: `GET https://stenobird.com/podcast/day-one-7096683/how-springboards-built-an-ai-model-that-actually-thinks-differently.md` — Read the agent-friendly Markdown representation of this episode resource. A page view does not enqueue transcription. Agents should invoke `request_transcript` explicitly when they need this episode processed. ## Transcript Full transcripts are not published on public pages unless there is a clear rights basis.