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Prompt Details

Model
(claude-5-sonnet)
Token size
504
Example input
[SOURCES]: Two articles on remote work productivity: one from a 2020 Stanford study, one from a 2024 Microsoft Work Trend Index.
Example output
**Claim A** (Stanford 2020): Workers who shifted to remote during COVID saw a 13% productivity increase on average, driven primarily by working longer hours and taking fewer breaks. **Claim B** (Microsoft 2024): Fully remote workers in the Microsoft cohort report 28% lower per-hour output compared to hybrid peers, with the gap attributed to fragmented collaboration time. **Why these conflict:** Both can't be true if "remote work" and "productivity" are measured the same way across the two studies. **Possible resolutions:** 1. The Stanford study measured during pandemic conditions where everyone was remote and tools were maturing fast; the 2024 number reflects a steady-state where hybrid is the dominant pattern and fully-remote workers are now a minority that may differ from the average worker. 2. The metrics aren't the same. Stanford measured raw output (calls completed per hour for a call-center sample); Microsoft measured a composite that includes "collaboration time" as a productivity input. Switching the metric switches the answer. 3. Sample differs significantly. Stanford was one company; Microsoft is a much broader sample, but its data comes from Microsoft 365 telemetry, which over-counts knowledge workers using Microsoft tools. **My read:** Resolution #2 looks most likely. The studies aren't measuring the same thing despite using the word "productivity." The Stanford finding (longer hours, fewer breaks) is consistent with the Microsoft finding (lower per-hour output) if you account for the fact that Stanford's measure favors total output and Microsoft's favors efficiency. **Apparent contradictions that aren't:** Both sources note that remote workers report higher job satisfaction, even where productivity numbers differ. That's not a contradiction; it's two metrics behaving independently. **What I couldn't tell:** Whether the differences in remote-worker characteristics (who chooses remote work in 2024 vs who had it imposed in 2020) explain part of the gap. The articles don't break down enough to know.
🌀 Claude

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CLAUDE-5-SONNET
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Reads sources head-to-head and finds where they truly contradict — concrete claims that can't both be true, not vague "differences in emphasis." For each clash: Claim A vs Claim B, why they can't coexist, and the likely resolution (one is wrong or outdated, the scopes differ, or terms are defined differently), plus apparent contradictions that dissolve on a close read. Sharper than a summary — for testing whether you've absorbed one side. One of 40 in the Pemway Power User Pack on Gumroad.
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