Key Takeaways Google co-founder Sergey Brin tried to retire from the company in 2019.
In a new talk released by Stanford University, Brin says retiring was “the worst decision” he could have made because it was isolating and cut him off from intellectual stimulation.
Within months, he started going back into the office and spending more time on what became Gemini, Google’s flagship AI model.
Google co-founder Sergey Brin, 52, says walking away from the tech giant in 2019 and “trying retirement” quickly proved to be the wrong move for him.
In a talk released recently by the Stanford University School of Engineering, Brin called his choice to retire “the worst decision.” He initially imagined a low-key life, picturing long days spent sitting in cafes and studying physics. Instead, the timing could not have been worse: The Covid-19 pandemic shut down public life, including the cafes he had intended to use for his new routine.
Instead of a rich intellectual sabbatical, Brin found himself isolated and cut off from the stimulation he was used to. He told Stanford University students that without intellectually demanding work, he was “just kind of stewing” and felt himself “spiraling” and “not being sharp.” He felt a pressing need to return to the office, which was closed at the time.
Related: Google Co-Founder Sergey Brin Is Back at the Company ‘Pretty Much Every Day.’ Here’s What He’s Working On.
“After a number of months, we started to have some folks going to the office, and I started to do that occasionally,” Brin said at the talk. “[I] then started spending more and more time on what later became Gemini, which is super exciting.”
Sergey Brin. Photo by Jamie McCarthy/WireImage
The work developing Gemini, Google’s flagship AI model, gave Brin a crucial technical and creative outlet. Today, Brin is back working full-time at Google, focusing on AI initiatives.
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