My wife's mother and sister were staying with us last week. We also had two other house guests. And our Internet service went out. Not just momentarily, but for days. Catastrophe!
Is Internet access becoming one of our basic human needs?
In 1943, psychologist Abraham Maslow published his famous “Hierarchy of Needs”. The idea was simple: the essential survival needs in the lowest level of the pyramid must be satisfied before the individual can turn his or her attention to the next level, and so on. Maslow’s “essential needs” are physiological; food, water, shelter, and physical safety.
Today, as we approach the 2020s, perhaps we need to add one more layer to Maslow’s pyramid: WiFi.
OK, humans probably don’t really need WiFi more than food, but without it, we feel frustrated and "twitchy".
My solution: dual providers and a fail-over router.
On a higher level, is Internet access a "basic human right" that should be handled like the New Deal treated electricity at the beginning of the 20th Century?
Expect to hear more about this (and not just because Bernie Sanders made it a campaign issue).
What Do You Do When AI Beats You?
When Beethoven was at the peak of his career, several of his contemporaries struggled to deal with the realization that they may never create anything that lived up to his creations. Brahms, for example, refused to make a symphony for 21 years. Schubert is quoted as saying, "Who can ever do anything after Beethoven?"
We're apparently seeing the same effect via Artificial Intelligence.
When it comes to popular AI, not much surpasses the popularity of AI's growing chokehold on gaming. Recently, I've shared about AI winning at video games, but in 2016 I shared about humans losing to AI in Go for the first time.
This week, a former Go champion who was beaten by DeepMind retired after "declaring AI invincible."
Lee Se-dol quit for a couple of reasons. According to him, even if he's the #1 human, there's an undefeatable entity above him and he felt he had failed his country by losing to the AI. It's an unfair fight - AI plays untold millions of games to learn to play better and it doesn't get tired, bored, sick, distracted. - we can't do that.
Much like Beethoven, AI is discouraging competition.
Was Lee wrong to quit? It's hard to say, but as AI gets better at more activities, it's an issue we're going to see more often. There's always someone (or something) better - and a purely utilitarian approach isn't necessary or productive.
I'm an advocate of intelligently adopting AI, and a believer that the scale of AI's "wins" is going to skyrocket - but I'm also a believer in the idea that "the game isn't over until I win". If I enjoy something, I'm not going to let 2nd place stop me.
The passionate pursuit of a goal is valuable regardless of the result, and bettering yourself at a skill - like Go - may not be a sustainable job, but it can still make a great hobby.
AI is coming - but it doesn't have to be joy-sucking.
Onwards!
Posted at 07:33 PM in Business, Current Affairs, Healthy Lifestyle, Ideas, Market Commentary, Personal Development, Science, Trading, Trading Tools, Web/Tech | Permalink | Comments (0)
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