I'm delighted to introduce you to my newest colleague at Infinite Loops: Vatsal Kaushik (@antilibrary_vk) who, in addition to being an incredibly talented man, demonstrates the emerging power of the Digital World
2/ Time, Space and Geography are collapsing--Vatsal lives in Bangalore, India, but that no longer matters in the digital world.
We've already established an easy working relationship via text, emails and Zooms. Yesterday, I marveled this would have been impossible just a
3/ few years ago, but one of the positives of the global lockdown is it accelerated trends that might have taken years absent our need to adapte.
It's now clear to me that geography no longer matters--if you have access to high speed Internet,
4/ you can work with anyone, anywhere at anytime.
From my point of view as an employer, that means hundreds of millions of incredibly talented, creative and intelligent people just became available as potential colleagues.
5/ For talented people like Vatsal, it means the world's opportunity set just opened up a massive new set of potential careers where they can pursue roles and opportunities that geography denied them in the past.
The leverage inherent in this new world is stunning.
6/ And for all its faults, Twitter is emerging as the new scouting zone--like my colleague @InvestorAmnesia, I discovered Vatsal on Twitter.
He didn't want to wade through all of my GIFs (can you blame him?) to get to the threads I write,
7/ so he created a master thread of my threads. I still use it to find threads I've written (insert "okay boomer.gif) but it made me start watching him and his posts.
He also created an online "antilibrary" filled with book recommendations, did threads on things that
8/ many people had difficulty in understanding, simplifying them and allowing others to more easily use the process.
He used Twitter as his "proof of work" and, in aggregate, it became his living resume that made me want to work with him.
9/ And he's already taught me a lot.
When offered a title, he replied "Why don't you just call me Mr. Meeseeks? (that he's a @RickandMorty fan was a big plus for me)
More seriously, he said "I find titles to be limiting. I'd work as effectively (or maybe even more) without
10/ a title. Once acquired, (many) people only (shallowly) try to game the metrics attached to that title and nothing more."
He wanted to create as many opportunities for me and himself and felt that could only be achieved with an organic expansion of his responsibilities.
11/ I see this as an example of his openminded, positive sum attitude that suggests baking more pies rather than fighting over some arbitrary "fixed" pie.
His mindset is one of expansion and discovery and he wanted to be able to use his many talents, not just a few, in the role
12/ This is the new world--if you're talented and motivated, the "Big Bang" just happened to your opportunities, as the chains of time and place have been shed. I think what's coming is spectacular, but you're worldview will determine how far you can go--think big.
13/ In the meantime, please join me in congratulating @antilibrary_vk on his new role and watch for lots of cool new improvements to Infinite Loops (and other projects we're working on.)
14/ Learn, Build, Share, Repeat, authentically, in public will take you places unexpected and maybe impossible under the constraints of the physical world.
To quote @patrick_oshag "The change and experimentation we are about to see is 🤯"
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2/ For much of human history, when someone wanted to figure out *why* something was the way it was, they often heard the same answer “The Gods did it.”
@DavidDeutschOxf, in his seminal book “The Beginning of Infinity: Explanations That Change the World” argues that’s
3/ why humans made so little progress over much of unrecorded and recorded history. Generation after generation were born, lived and died under the same “rules” and bad explanations such that one could conceivably be born 200 years after a great, great-grandfather and yet
1/ My thesis that by externalizing our thoughts by writing them out, we:
~Understand if we understand or not (writing is a forcing mechanism);
~Quickly see holes or problems in our ideas that we wouldn't grasp if they just remained in our thoughts;
2/
~Externalize our thinking in time such that our minds can't helpfully "update" our memories to make them consistent with what we know and think now (hindsight bias);
~Help us understand WHY we were thinking things at the time and remind us that our "memories" are unreliable
3/ narrators. There's nothing quite as shocking as truly thinking you thought something during some event and then being called a liar in your own handwriting.
This is vital for correcting our errors and updating our mental models. I simply can't think of any other easy activity
2/ Edward Harriman, a railroad baron and stock speculator, had a keen understanding of the power of human emotions in pricing a stock.
Asked if he could sell Southern Pacific, then trading at $70 a share for $80 per share, he answered: No, but he *could* move the price
3/ of the stock UP to $150 per share and then sell it DOWN to $100 per share.
When asked why, he said that a $10 move in the share price wasn't big enough to ignite the imaginations of stock investors, but that an $80 spurt in the price would capture everyone's attention
This extraordinary book, like much of what it explores, is difficult to categorize, but if you read/view it, you will come away thinking that is a very good thing indeed.
2/ Author/illustrator @Nsousanis liberates us from "Flatland" by fusing symbols, images, and language together in an almost magical way. He quotes S.I. Hayakawa: "We are the prisoners of ancient orientations imbedded in the languages we have inherited." There's a way out:
3/ "Text immersed in images" and "pictures anchored by words" allow us to escape from the linear world of Flatland into the three dimensional (and more) world of many nonlinear dimensions. The world we live in requires this reframing of thought, as it and we become
We are increasingly comfortable with abstractions.
I remember vividly when this music video came out in 1983, with its novel close-cuts and an androgynous Annie Lennox, everyone thought it was the coolest thing in the world:
Now, it seems quaint.
And you can pretty much do anything you want, your only boundaries are your own imagination and creativity.
For example:
And virtual art is making a splash, not just NFTs:
1/ .@polina_marinova, sometimes cool synchronicities happen. Just as you posted this bit about my wife and my simple rule of "try to raise great adults" precluding saying things like "because I said so" to your kids, I read this
2/ passage from @DavidDeutschOxf's outstanding book "The Beginning of Infinity: Explanations That Transform the World" which does offers an excellent explanation for *why* saying that to your kids is such a bad idea.
3/ "Bad philosophy has always existed too. For instance, children have always been told, ‘Because I say so.’ Although that is not always intended as a philosophical position, it is worth analysing it as one, for in four simple words it contains remarkably many themes of false