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@Ben_Reinhardt | |||||
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13/ This is the moment that Universities began to depend on federal research dollars.
I think this started as a good thing, but the relationship has metastasized. pic.twitter.com/OpJuhFsnCr
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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3/ Bush is the king of precision and nuance.
Studying history can be *both* good (learn from the past) and bad (it can devolve into mythologizing.) pic.twitter.com/KMOBJAZzdj
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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4/ Sometimes it gets super meta. He doesn't do a chronological tale of his life at all - instead he cherry picks stories he thinks are the best to learn from. pic.twitter.com/P3J3Kls9Vp
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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5/ More meta - "yes, I realize there are a bajillion books on the Making of the Atomic Bomb and the Radar* so I will skip those"
*I recommend The Making of the Atomic Bomb and Tuxedo Park if you are interested pic.twitter.com/1i5v0eZwvu
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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6/ What *is* dated is his oft-repeated concerns about overpopulation. It's a wonderful reminder of how many things we thought would bring about the end of civilization that are now (arguably) non-issues. pic.twitter.com/5EKKWiUJmw
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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7/ It's also fascinating which breakthroughs he thought were just around the corner, and which were not even on his radar.
Why did he think general antivirals were imminent? Why weren't they? (Would certainly be nice to have right now) pic.twitter.com/0l6xOwZMiS
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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8/ Individuals making the difference between success and failure of critical technologies and programs is a huge theme. pic.twitter.com/BU10OJzTwB
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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9/ Specifically, he repeats the theme of innovations only happening because individuals went against the system.
Which raises the uncomfortable question - in order to get more amazing sci-fi shit, how do you systematize going against the system? pic.twitter.com/lpnYCWW5Bg
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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10/ Tons of detail about how they structured organizations like the NRDC and *why*
Feels like he's basically giving blueprints for people who want to follow that are easy to understand and hard to execute. pic.twitter.com/lnvAth0kTY
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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11/ He describes the *massive* shift in how science and research was done in the US during WWII.
This is where our modern system was born - both the good parts and bad. pic.twitter.com/gvkr8gM1BT
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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12/ Today, university administration is basically bloatware.
But it actually started as a valuable labor aggregator so researchers could focus on research. pic.twitter.com/LreSR9HTUQ
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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14/ From what I can tell, Bush was a *great* manager. pic.twitter.com/HWsIBu11n7
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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15/ Also, apparently F.D.R. was a good manager too. 🤷♂️ pic.twitter.com/FY8LsJDJJP
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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16/ They could review a project in a week and get work started on it *the next day.*
More fodder for @patrickc 's patrickcollison.com/fast pic.twitter.com/NUcojhHsrF
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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17/ Bush earns his reputation as the person who can go between Military/Government, Academia, and Industry.
He gets both how the structures of each of them make sense in their own context, but then clash when they interface. pic.twitter.com/LyrluRGsPy
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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18/ SO FAST pic.twitter.com/Q3i8keE8Gw
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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19/ Trust in lines of communication is underrated as a goal to strive for. pic.twitter.com/Pma21zfbpj
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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20/ The consequences of these organizational structures today - NASA changes it's goals every 4 or 8 years ... pic.twitter.com/GzmqFiFisW
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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21/ I'm still not sure if Bush or Jewett was right ...
Deserves more digging! pic.twitter.com/mFajpWsuHJ
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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22/ Many of the stories emphasize @SafiBahcall's point in Loonshots about the need to manage the transfer of technology from the people who create it to the people who use it.
Also hi Millikan! I love how random science heroes just drop into the story. pic.twitter.com/3iyT2WPoT6
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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23/ "I am a hog on the ice - see how I slide!" pic.twitter.com/761HyQHw9P
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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24/ Committees can actually be good: when there are two groups who think very differently but have a common goal. pic.twitter.com/b0p15cyQTy
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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25/ Made me think a lot about the value of coordinating efforts vs. letting a thousand flowers bloom.
Where I came down is that you should absolutely have parallel efforts but there is an optimum amount of coordination that isn't zero. Were that optimum lies an open question pic.twitter.com/n6RoKMsebI
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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26/ War may be one of the few situations where *massive* numbers of people all have a real stake in the outcome. pic.twitter.com/iuOIJg3XWB
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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27/ Innovations appearing outside the organizations which find them useful is still a huge problem today. pic.twitter.com/QIDhROCAVt
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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28/ To be written of like this: LIFE GOALS pic.twitter.com/YvlgYAkDbc
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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29/ There are so many things that fall into this category: the concept is straightforward so it's not 'novel' but it takes a ton of R&D and grinding to even get it to the point of a proof of concept. pic.twitter.com/LOaVmCF08K
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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30/ I think Bush was a truly kind person. This is the story of what he did for civilians who kept sending him ideas for inventions they thought were desperately important to the war effort. pic.twitter.com/cnAOFPNhZE
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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31/ The duality of command - sometimes commanders need to be obeyed no questions asked, and sometimes they need to be challenged. I love the idea of having a literal physical signal for it.
Apparently businesspeople used to use their ties for this too. We've lost these signals pic.twitter.com/TaosaS7Dat
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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32/ I feel like we don't talk about inventing things anymore. We have entrepreneurs, hackers, researchers ... but nobody is an inventor. pic.twitter.com/EsLEKX9EFH
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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33/ Some things never change ... pic.twitter.com/Ea0dAL4o99
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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34/ A sobering analysis of why large companies with a single major product have no incentive to incorporate an improvement (even a large one) to a single part of that product. pic.twitter.com/ThQnWOGBsd
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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35/ I feel like *accidental* blackouts don't happen anymore in developed countries. One of those subtle but big improvements. pic.twitter.com/ryZZe4XGzO
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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36/ Nuance about commercialization. I feel like *commercialize all the things!* can be as dangerous as *commercialization taints your soul!* pic.twitter.com/feRITNFw49
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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37/ Now this was a 🤯🤨🤔 moment - the assertion that patents aren't actually there to reward an inventor. Instead it's to give a venture captialist incentive to *fund* the inventor.
Still mentally masticating this one. pic.twitter.com/V3cPhQbIuz
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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38/ I'm *very* hesitant to use the B word. But if there was actually a good way of encoding what was new about an invention - what constraints it relaxed and which constraint it had, might that be a place for (furtively looks back and forth and whispers) Blockchain? pic.twitter.com/IO7fTxNcOU
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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39/ The level of meta self-awareness here is off the charts.
Also a lesson for a lot of people talking about AI today ... pic.twitter.com/uIbrIqKgfM
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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40/ NBD pic.twitter.com/vdKezdTqIm
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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41/ He's calling out that electric cars would be awesome ... in 1970. Problem was the batteries.
Imagine if we had a good way to encode which technologies would be amazing except for a precise constraint - how much awesome could we unlock? pic.twitter.com/jSoduVrMHH
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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42/ Did you know that Stirling (of Stirling Engine fame) was a clergyman? So much early science (see: Mendel) was done by clergymen because monasteries were one of the few places where you had a bunch of educated people with time and relative safety on their hands ... pic.twitter.com/PapZyYVPYi
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Ben Reinhardt
@Ben_Reinhardt
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30. sij |
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43/ Advances in material science are the root cause for a mind-blowing number of technological advances. The field is still underappreciated. pic.twitter.com/ncqUfjE3QA
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