High paid manual labour wages

Something that is uniquely Australian is our incredibly high minimum wages. Although it is a little bit harder to find work in the unskilled labour market you can be assured that you will be able to live very comfortably.

This market is also unique in that it is easy to get casual work (With casual loading). This means you can be employed to work 2 days a week, and earn enough to enjoy your 5 day weekend.

The other option is to work your arse off for a few months, save everything, and spend the greater part of the year travelling and living nomadically.

The first is my plan, I want to develop my programming skills further (Probably for another 6 months) but I still need to earn a living. Thankfully 2 full days at 8  hours = 16 hours. At $25 an hour that is $400.. which is ridiculous.

Internal motivation

The human mind is programmed to be as lazy as possible. It is a very important trait because conserving energy is essential to ones survival (For a caveman). In such a prehistoric environment there are plenty of external motivators, usually because certain death follows one who idles .

Of recent times we have the luxury that we don’t die if we sit down and do nothing, we also have an environment where effort is directly correlated to reward. But we still have the tendency to rest whenever possible, even when we don’t really need to (The brain will exhaust itself long before the body).

So if someone has high aspirations for self actualisation and has to rely on their own self motivation they are forced with a conflicting mind-set. Part of them wants to conserve as much energy as possible, but another part of them wants to pump out as much work as possible. Unfortunately for most of us the lazy mindset usually wins.

In a work environment one is surrounded by managers who have the ability to threaten wages, that alone is a powerful source of motivation. For one to do a similar quantity of work in a self actualizing scenario one has to create their own motivation with similar moving power.

Some people recommend giving a friend a sum of money and telling them to donate it to charity it unless you meet a set goal. This is actually a really strong source of motivation, but it is maybe too much for overcoming mere laziness (If you had a goal to face a fear it would be more suitable).

A good one for laziness is simply to write a check list. If you have an realistic to-do list in front of you, being able to cross things off the list is often enough to get you to do them.

That is what I have been doing; creating a standard list of daily contributions to long-term goals is a great way to make sure one is travelling in the right direction.

Words are just words

Words can never be taken at face value, one must always consider the motivations behind the words, think about how the speaker is feeling and examine the context of a speakers statement.

For example I noticed a car for sale in the paper, it was really cheap and although I didn’t really want it, I probably could have resold it for more than what the guy was asking. However there was a condition in the ad “Call after 2pm”; so I called at 1.30pm to find the car had already been sold.

My mother immediately remarked “That doesn’t make sense, he said… blah blah” but she didn’t consider the motivations behind the words in the ad. The guy probably knew he would be swamped with calls and had stuff to do, but buyers called anyway and he was happy to be rid of the car quickly.

It just goes to show that people are complex and our statements aren’t reliable at the best of times. But they are consistently unreliable, meaning an intelligent person should factor this unreliability into their decisions. This is not to say that people aren’t trustworthy, most are, but miscommunications are common and we have to take responsibility for interpreting words correctly.

Idea’s

Idea’s and inspiration never come when you try to force it. If I am sitting at my laptop and the answer to a problem I am having doesn’t come after a few minutes of pondering it usually it won’t come. I will have all the information I need to answer the question but the technique I am using is likely the problem.

The inspiration to solve the problem usually comes when your mind is not thinking about the problem at all. Then like magic, it just comes! I don’t know why, the brain is retarded like that.

The most effective way to “tune out” and allow yourself to not think about the problem depends on the individual. For some people the shower is a great place for inspiration, others have to take a long walk or meditate. I personally get most of my inspiration when dreaming, the problem I had while programming yesterday miraculously fixed itself (in my head) while I was sleeping.

Even if the solution I created was made with dream logic (AKA nothing makes sense) I wake up feeling like I can solve the problem, which is more productive than the drained state when last trying.

Anyway my point is that the human brain is weird, but if you play by it’s messed up rules then it treats you really well (All of life’s problems seem trivial).

The problem with on-line programming tutorials

I have done a lot of programming tutorials and they all have one thing in common. They are all out of date the second they are released, not so much the content they are teaching, but the stuff the tutorials depend on for the actual code to work.

Today I was trying to do this tutorial and it turns out one of the files that were needed for it to compile got completely removed from Linux a few years back. So there  was no remedy to make this code work ever. That made me a bit sad. So I moved onto another tutorial but faced errors every step of the way.

I am giving up for the night and going to try again tomorrow with a fresh head.

Following the mould

There are plenty of smart people in this world who have followed the conventional wisdom of going to school, getting good marks, and getting a good job. There are also plenty of smart people who have not followed this wisdom, who wasted their potential and achieved nothing with their lives.

If you were to sample both these groups and compare how happy each group as a whole were, which group would you think would be happier?

The answer is, they would both be equally happy. There would be some really happy people and some really miserable people in both groups.

Now there might be a really smart guy who is working really hard in a ‘good’ job, but his boss is brutal and causes this guy to be really stressed. There might be another really smart guy, who gave up everything to become a painter but only enjoys moderate success in this area, many people criticize him but he is happy.

So in comparing the two, who has actually wasted their potential?

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Mind you comparing a happy person from both groups is a different matter (But one took less effort)

Gaps in our mental models

Occasionally things in this world don’t make sense. We all have a self-created model of how things in this world should work and if something reacts differently to what our model describes we are forced to ask ourselves why (Or Ignore or Worship, but that is something completely different).

A model I rely on is evolution, I believe that everything in the biological world should be explainable in terms of making an individual’s genes “fitter”, within the boundaries of gene mutation.

Normally this model is solid, but I did find something that doesn’t fit. I mean it probably does have an explanation but it is beyond me what it could be..

The anomaly is the phrenic nerve.

The phrenic nerve is what your brain uses to control your diaphragm, ie it controls your breathing. Normally nerves stay inside the spinal column for protection and the vertebra passes right through the diaphragm, it would make sense for the nerve to leave the spinal column right next to the muscle it controls right? This would mean it would only have to travel a few centimeters. But no, the phrenic nerve arises from the top of the neck and travels the length of your chest to the bottom of your ribs.

This is the reason a quadriplegic, who has no control over muscles below the severed spinal cord can still breath, because the nerve leaves the spine really early.

But it makes no sense for this to exist, there is no evolutionary advantage (As far as I can tell) and it exposes an important nerve.

So I’ve posted this question to an evolutionary forum, because according to my mental model this shouldn’t exist.

 

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Actually discrepancies between our mental models and the real world are good, they force a re-evaluation of the hypothesis.

The Brain named Itself

This quote was posted on reddit and has been keeping my thoughts occupied for the last couple hours.

So far (for me) this quote has inspired fear, happiness and awe.

I love things like this.

Following the high moral ground like sheep

There are a few people around who get on everyone’s nerves, they are the people who mimic ethicists. They are the people who go around forcing opinions about how indignant the world is and they generally try to make everyone around them feel bad.

They are quick to show dismay at how little everyone else in the world cares (when no-body is listening to them); this is not because few people in the world have morals (people are generally good) but because these wannabe ethicists haven’t themselves done any conscious thinking to earn the right to be on the moral high ground.

Most of the time these people haven’t witnessed acts to inspire them into charity, rather they watch something on television or get told that they should be outraged about something. That is a terrible reason to get involved.

A recent popular topic for these people regards the Chris Brown and Rihanna incident. Yes Chris Brown is a terrible person and his music is awful, but the only reason they care is because he is a celebrity. Go show the same hatred towards the drunk down the end of your street.

A true ethicist (Like Gandhi) doesn’t guilt trip because their time is dedicated to helping, not talking.

 

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The thing about people who make everyone around them feel bad is that people stop wanting to be around them.

The Future is Awesome

If you look at tech blogs long enough you stumble upon a heap of ideas that entrepreneurs and engineers are trying to build. Sometimes it is scary how advanced we actually are.

The words presented by the ReCaptcha validation tool used to be really easy to guess, but recently I have found myself often clicking for a new word because it literally is just scribble. The only conclusion is that optical character recognition software is reaching the point where words that can’t be recognised are actually illegible.

Similarly there are statistics that voice recognition software has accuracy ratings of nearly 99%.

So when I saw the kickstarter project for programmable lights I immediately thought that it would be cool to make all the lights in my house voice activated. The following thought I had was “Holy Crap this is the future” (my thoughts then trailed to the scene in I, Robot where Susan Calvin couldn’t work Will Smiths sound system because it wasn’t voice activated).

I can’t help but feel technology has sneaked up on us, it took 50 years or so to go from the Wright brothers plane to jet engines. What will be the next metaphorical jet engine to be perfected in 2060?

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