Daniel Jeffries Profile picture
Dec 31, 2023 11 tweets 3 min read Read on X
Here's the story of another technology that faced massive backlash in its time that will sound very familiar to today's battles over #AI.

Coffee.

a thread. Image
You might not think of coffee as technology, but the process of gathering the beans, roasting them, storing them and transforming them into a drink are all part of a chain of technologies that make it possible for you to get your morning caffeine fix.

1)
Today, when you're picking up your coffee from the local hipster barista shop or mega-chain you probably never imagined it was once controversial.

But for hundreds of years it faced slander, demonization, legal attacks and more.

2)
Kings and queens saw coffee houses as breeding grounds for revolution and regularly shut them down, harassed owners, taxed and arrested them. In parts of the Islamic world many powerful leaders saw coffee as an intoxicant no different than alcohol and drugs and they attacked it on moral grounds (same story, different day) with fatwas.

3)
Beer and wine groups formed powerful opposition groups to coffee, seeing it as a competing product that encroached on their market share. For the vast majority of history people didn't drink water because it was tremendously unsafe, but they did drink beer and wine that was watered down throughout the entire day. Beer and wine makers saw coffee as destroying their markets and fought it tooth and nail.

The parallels with today's battle between media companies and AI companies are an exact mirror of the past.

So what were they really fighting for then and today?

4)
What they were and are really arguing about is power.

Coffee houses were places where people got together and exchanged ideas and that was dangerous to the kings and queens of old who thrived on keeping people locked down and ignorant.

Competing businesses saw it as a way to eat into the profits and that was about jobs and who gets to make the money.

Both forces fought back against the society-shifting power of coffee just as we are seeing media companies battle AI companies today for the societal shifting power of AI.

So how did it all work out?

5)
You already know the story of how the prohibition of coffee turned out.

Today most people would look at you like you had two heads if you told them coffee was once a battleground. They're taking selfies with their coffee and getting it to go to work or study harder.

This pattern plays out again and again and again in history.

New technology. Resistance. Resistance overcome. Technology is just part of the fabric of everyday life and nobody thinks about it anymore.

Same story played out for all time, ad infinitum.

6)
After a technology triumphs, the people who come later don't even realize the battle happened. To them it's not even technology anymore. It's a part of their life, just another thing. They just use it.

To someone born today, a car or refrigerator or a cup of coffee is no different than a tree or a rock.

It was always there.

7)
The same will happen with AI, one way or another. It's just too important and powerful of a technology for it to not find a way forward. There is simply no industry on Earth that won't benefit from getting more intelligent.

8)
The more people use AI, the more they will realize how amazing it is and how much they want it in their lives and the more doomer predictions of the end times will recede in their minds. It's already happening. My step mother was using it to help with her writing and to spit out ideas about ideas for a raffle. My friend's five year old daughter talks to the GPT voice interface in her native language and they create stories together.

That child will grow up using AI and trying to take it from her will be like trying to take away her iPad or her doll.

9)
A decade from now, kids will grow up with AI and they'll just use it. They won't even think about it.

And if you told them there was once a battle over it they will look at you like you're crazy and wonder what all the fuss was about.

10)

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More from @Dan_Jeffries1

Apr 14
I wanted to see if AI could code me a complex app.

Not a crappy little one-off script. A real program.

Just one little problem: I mostly suck at coding.

So can AI make magic for someone like me?

Yeah. But...it's complicated.

Here's what I learned along the way.

1/ Image
I wanted to understand the state of the art by giving myself a hard problem that was also really useful to me. 

But what is the state of the art? 

That's not clear and the only way to make it clear, just like anything in life, is to do it.

To start off I have some real disadvantages doing this project.  Number one, as I said, I'm just not a good coder.  I've studied a smattering of C/C++/Java/Bash and Python over the years.  Coding always felt very brittle, arcane and frustrating to me after I got past early tutorials.  I just can't think in code.

But I've also got some strong advantages too, especially over someone with no technical expertise whatsoever.

I've run tech teams as a CIO, been a lead systems architect on big projects, and worked on super complex infrastructure setups as an IT consultant for over a decade.  In short, I know how programs work and scale and run.

I'm also a writer and a clear thinker.  That means I know how to ask for what I want in crisp, precise language. 

Prompt engineering really ain't nothing but good writing and that's a big advantage in the age of asking machines to do things for us. 

In a way, taking to machines is critical thinking at scale.

What I discovered quickly is that if you're coming to coding from painting houses, it's going to be too much of a leap.  But if you're an engineering manager who coded in a former life or a systems engineer like I was when I was younger than it's possible.

What is happening?  Why?  How can I get it to do what I want?  How can I explain it better? What's missing?

The more of this kind of internal thinking you can do the better off your are in the coming age of AI.

2/Image
Now did AI do all the work for me.

Oh my God, no.

If you believe the Twitter hyper masters we're super close to having superhuman AI come up with complex logic and brand new algorithms in a flash. 

The great and powerful Oz of LLMs will come up with the architecture, write the code, test it, fix bugs, write the documentation, deploy it and monitor it for you!

All we have to do is show up and ask like we're Scotty in Star Trek and it is done.

Like magic.

Uh, nope. Not yet, at least.



3/
Read 19 tweets
Jun 1, 2023
We are the luckiest 1% of 1% of people to ever live in the entire history of humanity.

Anyone putting "progress" in quotes does not realize that life in history was nasty, brutish and short and we are absolutely blessed to live when we live.

Some facts for you.

A thread (1): Image
2) Child mortality: Nearly HALF of all children used to die, rich or poor, in every country on Earth, into the late 1800s. In most places now it's single digits or a fraction of 1%. Image
3) Slavery was the basic fact of life in every country and all ancient empires. If you lost the war, you became a slave. Towards the end of the Roman Empire as many as 80% of the people were former slaves.

Now very few people live in the horror of slavery. Image
Read 13 tweets
Sep 30, 2020
1) Would you be surprised to learn that many of the traits you consider heroic/admirable are psychopathic traits?

Grace under pressure, radiant charm, bold risk taking, fearlessness, not driven by emotion.

Like all things with the mind, psychopathology exists on a spectrum.
2) You only know the psychopaths who make the news as serial killers but they're the smallest percent of the spectrum. I call them "failed psychopaths" because they have zero impulse control. Psychopaths make up about 2% of the pop. The vast majority exist in positions of power.
3) Psychopaths excel at certain kinds of jobs, like surgery and law and corporate leadership, where their cold blooded calm keeps them intensely focused when everyone else is cracking under the pressure.
Read 23 tweets
Jul 22, 2020
1/ "The way I figure it, dogs are the most advanced beings on the planet. They’re fully self-realized, possess unconditional love, + forgive instantly. They’re empathetic + sympathetic. They’re incapable of guile or dishonesty."
2/ "They’re always in the moment, not carrying the past or fretting about the future. Everything’s always new and wonderful. Every place is always the best place to be. I say they’re the most advanced beings and I mean that by our standards; human standards."
3/ "If you think about the qualities you’d like to possess, the ideal qualities—unconditional love, loyalty, devotion, unwavering friendship, forgiveness, selflessness, sincerity, being fully present in the moment, happiness --"
Read 4 tweets
Mar 29, 2020
Why would #bitcoin moon if the most powerful country on Earth creates a central rival that threatens its existence?

Thought experiment: What happens if nation states with their digibucks see BTC as a rival + outlaw exchanges. What's crypto worth then?

forbes.com/sites/billybam…
I've warned for years in article after article that #crypto needs to evolve into a parallel economic operating system with a new distribution mechanism that sends money directly to apps, doesn't have centralized exchanges, doesn't need fiat. Time is now running out.
And DEXs do not count as an alternative if they can't exchange fiat since 99.999999% of the money in the world is fiat. If people can't convert their money then their money remains trapped.
Read 7 tweets
Mar 28, 2020
Unfortunately #Bitcoin continues to fail its "safe haven" narrative. It's not a safe haven until it actually starts to rise big time against the tide of a broader market that's crashing. It may still prove a safe haven but until it does, watch out.

tradingview.com/x/MHV7dYu7/
When trading, detach emotion, detach belief, detach desire, detach narrative, detach hope. Look with clear eyes, without judgement.

Now what do you see?
The good news is there are only three answers:

Up.

Down.

Sideways.
Read 5 tweets

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