Acquisitive vs inquisitive

We live in a society that has an odd set of values. People seem to judge themselves and others by how much they can get.

Do you buy great designer clothes? Do you live in a fancy house with cool furniture? Do you own an island?

People put a lot of effort into defining themselves by their stuff. But most people don’t seem to put the same level of effort into striving to create.

I do understand the economic benefits of providing social rewards for being a good consumer. After all, millions of people buying stuff is the engine that drives our nation’s economy.

But what if it were flipped? What if nobody cared how much stuff you have, but there was enormous social capital attached to how creative you are, how much you can contribute in new and original ways.

That would create an entirely different basis for a strong economy. It wouldn’t matter so much how acquisitive you are, but it would matter a lot how inquisitive you are. The means of production, and therefore the creation of national wealth, would be distributed widely among the population.

Wouldn’t that be cool?

Demo day

Today we had a demo day at our lab. We invited students and faculty from collaborating Labs at NYU and “virtually” invited via Zoom some collaborators from other academic institutions. Each of the students in our lab got up and gave a 5 minute talk and possibly a demo of what they are working on.

Our plan is for each lab to do this in turn, so that the students can all get to know each other and hopefully find interesting ways to collaborate. The “getting to know each other” is probably the more important part, because there cannot be good collaboration without good trust.

We served pizza. We didn’t ask the powers that be whether it was okay to serve pizza, because we didn’t want to know the answer beforehand. People were wearing masks while not literally eating a slice of pizza, and were very respectful of interpersonal distance.

But still, there was pizza. I think there is something iconic about offering that to students if you want to ask them to gather together and put in the extra effort.

I respect that.

King Tut revisited

Today is the 99th anniversary of the discovery of the tomb of King Tutankhamun. I am not sure what that means, but the little kid in me thinks it is very cool.

Given that the young king died in 1323 BC, I don’t think he would have been all that impressed with the hoopla that formed around him in modern times. I am guessing it all would have seemed very strange to him.

After all, there is no logical reason that the death of a ruler who lived and died more than thirty three centuries ago should have created such a powerful mystique. But maybe that’s the point.

Brainstorming

Today we had a group brainstorming session at our lab. Everyone was in the same room, and everyone was wearing a mask. It’s the first such session we have had here since the pandemic started.

For the last year and a half all of our group brainstorms have been over Zoom. You could see and hear each other, but everyone was reduced to a talking head.

Today’s session was amazingly productive. Really interesting new ideas were generated. I had forgotten how much better brainstorming work when everyone is in the same room.

There were so many subtle cues that people can use to understand what each other means, and to bounce ideas off each other. And people could jump up to scribble on the whiteboard, or point to a place in a video.

It is possible that some future form of virtual reality will allow us to do these things with the same ease and effortlessness. But it is clear that we are still a long way off.

Passion

I someteims go to conferences at Microsoft, in those years when they are funding our research. Back in the day, the big event was always when Bill Gates would take the stage, and we could hear directly from the man himself.

It was always interesting and informative, but I usually got the impression that he was there to push a company agenda, rather than to speak from his own passion. Except for once.

One time somebody asked him about Microsoft Office productivity software. And in that moment everything changed.

It was a though lightning was coming out of his eyes. The man spoke to the question of office productivity with an intensity and passion I have rarely seen. It was clearly something that he cared very much about and had thought about deeply.

Which I guess makes sense. The core of Microsoft’s success has always been its ability to server businesses reliably by providing high quality productivity software.

A successful company’s heart is never too far away from its wallet. And at the end of the day, the founder of a company needs to be deeply committed to its core business.

For Bill Gates, that passion turned out to be office productivity. And odd as it is to say, it was a beautiful thing to behold.

The Waist Land

A certain technology company has a vision for the future of people hanging out together in cyberspace as embodied avatars. A lot of smart people are working on it, and a very large amount of money has been committed.

Yet in all of the descriptions that I have seen, the idea is to represent everybody only from the waist up. The reason, I believe, is that the technology is readily available to track peoples’ heads and hands, but not so much to track their feet.

I wonder whether this is going to be just a temporary glitch, or whether it will become enshrined as a standard. Perhaps from now on, this is how people will look in their on-line lives — they will not exist from the waist down.

If so, I am not sure that I am ok with this. For millions of years evolution has seen to it that we have a particular arrangement of brain and body. The human brain has evolved to be highly attuned to that human body.

Maybe we shouldn’t just throw out half of the human body because of a temporary technical inconvenience. We don’t want our future reality to be an impoverished Waist Land.

Sigh. November is the cruelest month.

Widgets

I am thinking that starting in January I will institute “Widget Wednesdays” on this blog. The first one will be posted on Wednesday January 5, and I will plan to post one widget every Wednesday thereafter.

The idea is to present some idea not in words, but as an interactive graphical thing that people can play with. Like some guy never said, “A widget is worth a thousand words.”

I might use the days before and after to discuss related ideas. But Wednesdays will be for Widgets.

Happy Halloween everyone!

Fashionable research

For the last several years, the “fashionable” area in computer science research was Machine Learning. This makes sense from an economic point of view, since the rise of on-line giants such as Google, Facebook and Amazon has very much been precipitated by their ability to serve advertisers through better data analysis.

But now that Facebook is rebranding itself, I wonder whether the fashions might shift. Experiential Computing might become the new Machine Learning. As its potential for economic transformation becomes understood, funding for EC might start flowing more readily, and be easier to come by.

We shall see.

Chocolate day

I am glad that today is national chocolate day. I don’t really understand exactly what it means, but it makes me happy.

If you’re going to pick one thing for a day in celebration of, that’s a pretty darn good one right there.

Now I think I’m going to go eat some chocolate.