University and Campus life

I have lived in college dorms for 2 and a half years and now that graduation is looming I have contemplated the advantages and disadvantages of this.

The great thing about campus is the social life, with 600 other young people living around you can be sure someone wants to hang out or talk or join in on your crazy idea.

But this comes at a cost, having so many people in close proximity means that when one person gets sick, everyone gets sick. It is a never-ending cycle of cold viruses.

Also the food sucks.

But you only care about the disadvantages when you have lived here for a while, until then its amazing. And at that stage you move off anyway, so the attitude is “That was awesome but thank god I’m leaving”

Then into the real world…

 

Go-Pro’s

While on the topic of change in our society I would like to point out another innovation that may cause great shifts in the way society works.

This is the exponential increase in the availability of digital images (Specifically film) and the information generated from the footage. The GoPro camera is what got me thinking about this.

Everyone these days is into photography, you can get a good camera relatively cheap and can take as many photo’s as you can possibly want. These inevitably end up on the internet. But all this was a result of the change from analogue to digital photography.

That was the first step.

Next we got cheap and small video camera’s (The GoPro). I know these are pretty popular at the moment (Heaps of my friends have them and I probably will soon), but once everyone starts using them all the time there will be a flood of footage on the internet of everything imaginable (Think about camera’s being used in a driver-less car; where-ever there is a car there will be recorded footage).

And the last step, computational methods designed for interpreting this wealth of data. Google became famous for computing textual data; once computing power and artificial intelligence develop sufficiently to interpret video then there will be a change on a level equal to that caused by Google’s search engine.

It is hard to imagine computing power becoming so powerful but once everything is being recorded a wealth of knowledge will arise from the computers interpreting this data.

It does give rise to some privacy concerns and issues about a “Nanny-state” but individual data will definitely be lost in the ocean of information. So no-body will really know what you are doing unless they really want to (Which the FBI can do now days anyway).

It’s hard to know whether this is good or bad.. Generation Y will probably struggle with  the change but the next generation will be all over it and calling us the obsolete generation.

Driver-less Cars

So google has been testing out “driver-less cars” for a few years now and I think the estimate is they will be available to the public in 5-10 years. This invention feels like a major paradigm shift; with little implementation it could be optimised to solve an incredible amount of problems, Best example is you could call up your car (Siri) and tell it to come get you.

Interestingly this would eliminate much of the need for taxi drivers, and public transport (no longer requiring drivers) would be much cheaper. Of course there are many benefits like less crashes (Without the human element everything is better) but I wanted to show the impact on public transport.

So I did some number crunching.

  • I assumed that fuel efficiency for a bus is 39L/100km
  • The free shuttle bus in my city drives 95 hours a week
  • Bus drivers are paid $25 an hour (Good Old Australia)

Anyway with a bus driving 95 hours a week at an average speed of 35km/hour (Taken from my car’s trip computer for city driving), it will drive 3,325km a week. At 39L/100km this translates to 1,296L of Diesel; At $1.50/L petrol costs $1,945.12 a week.

I simply guessed this, with the Bus cost amortized ($75,000 over 10 years) and maintenance costs ($2,500), Overhead costs would be approx $10,000 a year.

Then at $25 an hour, the bus driving 95 hours a week, salary cost would be $2,375 a week.

With these expenses the yearly cost would be $101,150 (Fuel) + $10,000 (Overhead) + $123,500 (Driver) = $234,650.

This is the cost of running a single Bus per year.

Now the interesting part is that wages cover 53% of this cost and with driver-less cars this cost would be removed completely. In essence:

Total cost halving would have serious implications. The public transport market (supply) would become flooded. Then as a result there would be cheap public transport… Imagine the social consequences.

Now I believe that driver-less cars would lead to innovation in other areas (Maybe flying cars become feasible without everyone needing a pilot’s license) but in this single area (the public transport industry) the technology has massive effects.

Yeah the future is gunna be awesome.

 

 

Practice

If I miss one day of practice, I notice it. If I miss two days, the critics notice it. If I miss three days, the audience notices it”. (Ignacy Jan Paderewski)

I heard this quote when I read The Talent Code and then noticed it’s effect when I wrote my last post. I fell off the wagon again and hadn’t written in ages, partly because assessment tasks were weighing me down, partly because I got sick. But when I went to write again the words didn’t flow well; now writing this is really forced.

The explanation behind this has to do with how the human brain works. Brains are incredibly adaptive and can learn patterns in even the most abstract situations if practiced enough. Writing is a perfect example of this, however if you stop practicing the connections that your brain has made immediately begin to deteriorate.

There are some skills that take forever to lose (Riding a bike) however if your skills become so finely honed that your brain can make sense of the most chaotic of situations (In professional athletes) then all it takes is a single day off for the skill to decline.

The only upside is mental attitude is under your control. If you do something once you will rarely tell yourself that you can’t do it again, even if out of practice.

You are what you eat

This saying is really well-known but again it is one that I hardly acknowledged. I now realise that eating good food is one of those things that can make your day amazing.

Yesterday for example I managed to eat 3 huge meals, this is kinda rare in my situation and often I spend a good part of the day hungry (Mostly cause I have a crazy fast metabolism and would have to eat non-stop). And the good food translated into a great gym session in the afternoon.

Eating properly is so important, back when I was eating super healthy I had almost endless amounts of energy and was always in a good mood.

conversely, junk food is a band-aid solution to eating, you get the sugar hit and some short-term benefits but the long-term costs leave you feeling terrible.

Can definitely see myself becoming a health freak when I move off campus

 

On others helping you

For a person trying to start-up their own business the idea of an “Angel Investor” is comforting, someone with lots of money and business experience who recognises the amazing idea you have and helps you get rich from it.

Similarly I assume most people think that a mentor should recognise their talent, give them the right connections and make everything fall into place.

I know I definitely believe these things.

Anyway I was reading this story about Christopher Langan who is America’s smartest person. He has an IQ of 195-210, scored a perfect high school SAT (even though he was late and fell asleep in the test) and came from a background of poverty. Also he was abused by his step-dad so he hit the gym until he was big enough to physically fight back (Nothing to do with smarts but regardless is awesome). He essentially was the real life version of Will Hunting.

So when he went to university and was scoring A+ in all his subjects you would assume someone would have noticed. In fact a mentor recognising talent on Langan’s scale would bring incredible prestige.

Alas no, and what did the university do when his scholarship ended abruptly? (His mother was too unwell to fill out the reapplication forms that were sent to her) They said “too bad”.

So he left and taught himself everything anyway.

The point is: If this GENIUS failed to get any form of help at all, how arrogant am I to think that I deserve recognition and merit for the talent that I may or may not have.

Music Taste

When opinions or criticisms are expressed regarding ones taste in music the result is almost always bad. Every single person alive has a unique taste in music but no-one has the ability to understand someone disliking music that makes them feel good (or enjoying music that disgusts them). This usually leads to heated arguments and broken friendships.

I have probably one of the weirder tastes in music (Metal, hardcore techno etc). The usual response to this is along the lines of “That is not music..”.

Anyway due to my unique taste in music, and that I don’t care for reality TV (or TV at all really), I never got into the Idol franchise (Or the voice, or X factor etc). But I did see a YouTube video today about a screamo kid and it made me think. The kid wasn’t particulary good but the immediate reaction from the judges was that of disgust, Simon Cowell quoting “Why are you even here”.

I doubt that any singer who specialised in non-clean vocals would get anywhere in these contests. The judges would misjudge their own personal distaste for a contestants lack of skill.

I would truly love for a world renowned singer in the death metal genre (Matt Heafy, Christian Älvestam) to go on one of these reality TV shows. It is unlikely that the judges would recognise them (few are in touch with the niche that is death metal) and with the judges ignorance of previous fame I can guarantee that the response would be to tell these gifted musicians that they are not talented.

It would be the classic tale of Charlie Chaplin coming 3rd in a Charlie Chaplin look-alike contest.

But I guess I only really care because people dislike music that makes me feel amazing.

More motivation

Seems that assessments are coming from no-where. But the thing that got to me was at the gym today I felt super exhausted and lifted pretty badly. This quote is amazing and applies strongly to weight lifting

“Courage doesn’t always roar. Sometimes courage is the little voice at the end of the day that says I’ll try again tomorrow. ”
― Mary Anne Radmacher

Lack of Motivation

The last few days have been pretty uneventful, there is a test tomorrow which has a lot of material and studying for it is very draining. I keep crashing and just wishing that I could get outside.

But as usual my method of dealing with it is to force through it.. Not sure if it is working.

Knee Jerk Reactions

If there is one thing that I believe causes damage to society its knee jerk reactions. By this I mean that when something goes wrong there is an immediate short-term remedy implemented that doesn’t solve the problem. Airport security is notorious for this, take the shoe bomb policy in the US . I can’t imagine that too many bombing attempts try this method but the “Solution” is that everyone has to take their shoes off to enter scanners.

The problem with knee jerk reactions is that they are often Band-aid solutions, they only treat the symptom and not the greater problem (Treating shoe bombs and not attacks in general).

I’m not saying I know how to treat the bigger problem, however punishing everyone is definitely not the way. It’s just that many security and government agencies use this as their “Go To”.

 

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