Zach Lieberman, artist and educator at MIT Media Lab, has posted one code sketch to Instagram every single day for ten years, starting New Year's Day after a difficult year. That is over 3,650 consecutive days of shipping creative work in public.
This Config 2026 talk is not about productivity or streaks. Lieberman breaks down the actual mechanics: why boredom is a tool, how he structures iteration cycles, and how he organizes research to keep a daily practice from going stale or repetitive. These are operational frameworks, not inspiration.
The reason to watch in full is the section on creative freedom, specifically how a rigid daily constraint paradoxically expands what he is willing to try. If you work in any creative discipline where output pressure kills experimentation, Lieberman's model is worth studying closely.
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