k9s9's comments

k9s9 | 7 years ago | on: Brexit Deal Fails in Parliament

Given our current, "engagement maximizing" news media/social media architecture it doesn't matter who stands up and speaks the truth and how well they do it and how many clicks they get. They will fail.

In the arms race for the public's attention that has been setup, by this clicks/views/likes/retweets/upvote based architecture, the incentive for thousand other voices to drown out the truth, to pander, to distract, to mislead has never been higher. And its not hard work. It attracts and props up the most hard working yet unqualified people on the planet.

Until the architecture changes and incentives for these people change, just expect more and more Brexit and Trump like events wasting everyone's time and energy.

k9s9 | 7 years ago | on: China's Moon mission sees first seeds sprout

Oh Geez! I work in Industrial Automation. I have had a front row seat to the gains made over the last 20 years that nobody ever predicted. I give factory tours regularly and most people with decades of experience have their minds blown at the efficiency gains in industrial processes.

It has nothing to do with violating physics. Its just about being part of hyper-connected systems where incremental change, is happening in a thousand different places along the entire assembly line that add up to huge gains that nobody can imagine individually.

Are we going to see things materializing at button press in an instant? No. But we are going to get damn close.

k9s9 | 7 years ago | on: Neuronal Dynamics: From single neurons to networks and models of cognition

You maybe right. It took about a 100 years of thousands of weavers playing with punch cards, trying to increase loom efficiency, before Joseph Marie Jacquard perfected it. Until that happened, inspiring Charles Babbage, mathematicians had not produced any worthwhile computational machines. We have probably the same problem in biology. We need thousands of people playing and producing work like this before we see major mastery at the cellular level.

k9s9 | 7 years ago | on: Toshi: An Elasticsearch competitor written in Rust

The difference is in the size of your Sales team.

Lot of open source projects would benefit, if they had dedicated sales teams contacting firms day in, day out talking about their features.

People who run IT departments in the Enterprise world or even small firms lacking resources to keep up, just pick tools and make software decisions based on who reaches out to them.

Invest in a sales team and you penetrate markets that don't spend time monitoring developments in the tech world which is really the majority of all orgs. Elastic has done that quite well and is reaping the rewards.

k9s9 | 7 years ago | on: In China they’re closing churches, jailing pastors, and even rewriting scripture

Religious institutions are in a very odd place these days.

They are on the front lines, in terms of contact with the weakest, poorest and most troubled members of society. They attract people who are suffering.

The growth and existence and passionate defense of religious institutions, despite all our advances, signal society isn't providing alternatives that perform the same function that contribute to well being and community.

The more religion gets attacked the less is focus on providing those alternatives. And those alternatives will come only with a deep understanding of what religion got right in dealing with human suffering.

k9s9 | 7 years ago | on: Silicon Valley is evolving and focusing on employees

These things take time. Your job is to make sure they are constantly reminded an alternate path is available. Thats it really.

It doesn't matter if the majority of them are struggling or rejecting things. All it takes is one of them to make a breakthrough. And then its like dominoes.

Once upon a time, most leaders hardly ever visited a gym or bothered about their health. Today it's a rare thing to find one that doesn't. That didn't happen overnight. The key is for them to see other leaders having success with the approach.

k9s9 | 7 years ago | on: A Daughter’s Disability and a Father’s Awakening

People do things they never thought they could only when they tell themselves the right story.

More than "coping" or "making it ok" it's how mountains get climbed. Try contributing to a story that gets someone to summit a mountain. It's much more fun and satisfying than analyzing a story.

k9s9 | 7 years ago | on: How the Internet Is Broken: Big Questions and Bad Answers

"The only way" you are suggesting is not the only way.

Changing people's thinking and behavior, especially that of highly misguided characters in power, requires as Psychologist Marshall Rosenberg would say, choosing between Violence and Compassion.

Ideally for progress we want people to change the way they think about what they are doing, not spend their time defending it or how to get away with it. The latter being what we manage to keep doing.

This is where the choice of approach we take makes a huge difference.

Our Natural instinct is to choose violence, punishment, judgement, name and shame etc. We want to see heads role for suffering caused.

But this approach takes the focus off the suffering of the victim, and puts focus on how to cause pain to the perpetrator. It doesn't get perpetrators to change the way they think - to reflect. Instead they react - play defense, and spend their time and resources on avoiding and skirting punishment.

Think about this. Think about what Gandhi, MLK, Mandala did by not choosing this route. They didn't allow perpetrators to play that game. They showed us there is a big difference in outcomes when we tell a man - look at the pain you have caused VS you are <LABEL> and will be punished for the pain you have caused.

This ledger of harms concept is great, because it keeps focus on the suffering produced. It makes people in power squirm and reflect. Which is what plants the seeds of change. They will feel the need to change, just as the British Empire, US Govt or the South African govts did.

But as soon as you add punishment to each issue their focus will shift to self defense at all cost.

k9s9 | 7 years ago | on: How the Internet Is Broken: Big Questions and Bad Answers

I am going to keep posting the ledger of harms - https://ledger.humanetech.com/

Until we see all the issues in one place like a github issue tracker, solutions will always be piece meal and confined to personal experience.

We need more issue trackers like this, so that people with solutions to one issue or another have some sense of the big picture. Also Big Tech cant weasel out of one issue by talking selectively about another.

Who knows, maybe one day we will get to proper integration/system wide testing for fixes to social issues...

k9s9 | 7 years ago | on: How China could dominate science

Quite out of touch. No Russian I have ever worked with in the US has ever wanted to return to Russia. Russia has truly squandered their deep talent and potential over the decades.

While more than half the Chinese friends I made during grad school in the US after completing their PhD's or after getting work experience have returned home.

The results speak for themselves in the kind of companies the two countries have produced. There is no comparison between how Russia and China have treated their talent.

k9s9 | 7 years ago | on: Anxiety and burnout: why kids are consumed with worry

There is ofcourse more to it than that.

"Getting back up" after life knocks you down is a huge factor in their success. There are very few successful adults protected from life's blows given the competitive, cut throat world we live in. They all know something about getting thrown into deep holes and climbing back out.

However, I will say that a majority of successful adults, learn how to be resilient at the expense of the people around them.

Not because they are evil, but because no one has shown them better ways of how to handle situations they haven't faced before.

People don't realize how bad this used to be in the past. Nowadays we have much more access to info, better understanding of the right ways to "cope", better understanding of what to avoid, and the right people/environments that will pull one out of life's deep holes. It's nowhere near perfect but it's much better (if you have the resources as you pointed out).

In the past people were mostly just winging it. It's why you see a whole lot successful people who are also ruthless. And regret it towards the end of their lives as they tally the costs and see examples of better routes they could have traveled.

k9s9 | 7 years ago | on: Facebook and fake news: elderly more likely to spread misinformation

ledger.humanetech.com - good place to submit studies and view the cumulative damage, engagement maximizing social networks are doing in one place.

People need to see the diverse effects in one place, otherwise they keep reacting in defense, selectively to individual issues that are raised that don't necessarily effect them personally.

Think of it as an github issue tracker not about software bugs, but about the social issues being created.

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