Fast Company

WAIT, WHY WAS I LOOKING AT THIS PAGE?

Beats us, but we can help.

Can’t remember what you were just about to say to your boss? You’ll be glad to know a recent study from the University of Toronto found that forgetting things may make you smarter, optimizing intelligent decision making by letting go of things that don’t matter. But that’s little consolation as you stammer in front of the supervisor who’ll be conducting your next performance review.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Fast Company

Fast Company2 min readRobotics
Automating Dirty And Dangerous Work
THERE'S A long history of robots taking jobs that humans resent, resist, or outright fear. But a new crop of bots is tackling tasks that even machines might calculate to be out of their theoretical comfort zones. Gecko Robotics has been deploying its
Fast Company2 min readPopular Culture & Media Studies
Finding Your People
THE DESIRE TO FEEL SUPported, included, and in community with others, online or IRL, is universal. But many huge social media apps today seem more adept at making users feel on the outs—or worse. Algorithmic and content-moderation changes at X (forme
Fast Company1 min read
40 Day Week Global
THE NONPROFIT 4 DAY Week Global wants to create nothing less than a million new years of free time. The organization took the concept of a shortened week from fringe to main-stream last year, onboarding some 190 companies for trials of four-day weeks

Related Books & Audiobooks