Thursday was my 60th birthday. I can't believe how time flies. Birthdays seem to come more quickly as you get older.
It makes sense, though, I suppose. When you were four, a birthday represented a quarter of your life. Now, a year represents a much smaller percentage.
While it's not always pleasant getting older, it sure beats the alternative!
This year, I made a concerted effort to be more healthy, fit, and vital in mind, body, and spirit. I said I wanted to sprint into 60, rather than roll into it.
If you are going to live longer, your future has to be compelling to you. Otherwise, who would want to extend their stay? That is why I strive to keep my future bigger than my past.
As time marches on, I become increasingly grateful for the friends and family who share the journey with me. This year, I spent my birthday in San Diego, surrounded by family and some close friends. On Saturday, they surprised me with a "Birthday Palooza," celebrating my 60th along with my wife Jennifer's 50th.
When I was a kid, I couldn't imagine being where I am today ... nor could I imagine the path that got me here.
Looking back, it all seems to make sense (even though it felt pretty random while making my way through it).
I feel lucky to have been in the right place at the right time, so consistently, and to find the gift in most situations (even when it seemed so well hidden).
I'm grateful for a lot today, and as much as I love innovation, sometimes things are perfect just the way they are.
Hopefully, you took time this weekend to let someone know they're important to you. If not, now is a good time for that too.
Onwards!
E.M.I.G.L.I.O: The Electronic Mechanical Industrial Generated For Logical Infiltration and Observation Robot
I have an old toy robot in my office that my kids played with when they were little. Its name is E.M.I.G.L.I.O.
Even though it is a toy, this Italian-made robot was interesting technology when it came out. It was remote-controlled, the remote had a microphone that transformed my voice to sound like a robot, and it had a tray sturdy enough to deliver a video game (or some other surprise) for my kids when they visited the office.
Looking back, it's barely even technology, let alone a robot. But that's because I'm evaluating it based on what's possible now.
I feel the same when I think about my previous company, IntellAgent Control, and what we considered A.I. in the 1990s. We made a sales automation solution for teams before tools like Salesforce existed. At the time, the decision logic we used was innovative. The premise is still valid today, but the technology and implementation scream "relic of a time gone by."
As another aside ... when I searched for Emiglio (in order to write this article), I was astonished by the archive of old robots someone had put together. The site is like a specialized Wikipedia site for toy robots. Each of the entries has high-quality photos of the robots and their packaging. It also includes facts, marketing copy, ads, and patents.
It is kind of cool ... Kind of like Emiglio.
It got me thinking about how much of history - and esoteric knowledge - only exists because a tiny community of people decided it needed to be cataloged or preserved.
Garbage In – Garbage Out. Nothing In – Nothing Out. What are we missing from the past because history is often written by the winner (or because no one volunteered to chronicle what happened)?
Even a site like Wikipedia has some serious content curation issues. For example, the top 50 Wikipedia editors have each contributed more than 500,000 edits. Think how much is missing.
Soon A.I. will decide what to write about what it decided happened, what to save and for how long, and what to say when asked about it.
Not only will the future be different ... even the past will be remembered differently.
Just a thought!
Posted at 12:12 AM in Business, Current Affairs, Gadgets, Games, Ideas, Just for Fun, Market Commentary, Personal Development, Science, Web/Tech | Permalink | Comments (0)
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