Mauronic1 | 11 months ago | on: The Cold Start Problem: Using Network Effects to Scale Your Product – A Review
Mauronic1's comments
Mauronic1 | 11 months ago | on: The Cold Start Problem: Using Network Effects to Scale Your Product – A Review
Mauronic1 | 6 years ago | on: DJI RoboMaster S1
The problem that I observed is that my daughter's co-ed elementary STEM program attracted a lot of hyperactive boys. On top of that, the curriculum flipped some primal switches. What I called the "boy energy" spilled over to my daughter's experience and made it crappy for her.
She has been in a same sex educational setting for the past several years and it has been great. FWIW, she loves Chem, Bio and Theater.
p.s. I am enjoying this conversation even though I must be getting downvoted a lot since my karma is negative. LOL
Mauronic1 | 6 years ago | on: DJI RoboMaster S1
It's true that I haven't spent a lot of time thinking about how to solve the problem. But it annoys me when a billion dollar company doesn't seem to either.
Mauronic1 | 6 years ago | on: DJI RoboMaster S1
I was just sharing some female perspectives. If this wasn't so expensive, I'd buy 2 for myself.
As a parent, I don't think there's a need to teach the next generation ok kids about AI in the context of autonomous killing machines...
Mauronic1 | 6 years ago | on: DJI RoboMaster S1
That was 7 years ago, now she is in an all girls high school. The same sex education has provided a much less distracting environment. (Don't want to get off topic but I could go on and on about same sex education)
Mauronic1 | 6 years ago | on: DJI RoboMaster S1
Mauronic1 | 6 years ago | on: DJI RoboMaster S1
My daughter was turned off from robotics at a young age. She joined firstego league and there was a ton of domineering "boy energy" in her school. She enjoyed creating and personalizing the robots in unique ways, the boys wanted "to win".
This is what happens when you have a bunch of dudes designing educational robot toys.
Mauronic1 | 6 years ago | on: DJI RoboMaster S1