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
U tweetove putem weba ili aplikacija drugih proizvođača možete dodati podatke o lokaciji, kao što su grad ili točna lokacija. Povijest lokacija tweetova uvijek možete izbrisati. Saznajte više
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
19/ Trust in lines of communication is underrated as a goal to strive for.pic.twitter.com/Pma21zfbpj
20/ The consequences of these organizational structures today - NASA changes it's goals every 4 or 8 years ...pic.twitter.com/GzmqFiFisW
21/ I'm still not sure if Bush or Jewett was right ... Deserves more digging!pic.twitter.com/mFajpWsuHJ
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
24/ Committees can actually be good: when there are two groups who think very differently but have a common goal.pic.twitter.com/b0p15cyQTy
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 questionpic.twitter.com/n6RoKMsebI
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
27/ Innovations appearing outside the organizations which find them useful is still a huge problem today.pic.twitter.com/QIDhROCAVt
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
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
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 signalspic.twitter.com/TaosaS7Dat
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
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
35/ I feel like *accidental* blackouts don't happen anymore in developed countries. One of those subtle but big improvements.pic.twitter.com/ryZZe4XGzO
36/ Nuance about commercialization. I feel like *commercialize all the things!* can be as dangerous as *commercialization taints your soul!*pic.twitter.com/feRITNFw49
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
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
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
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
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
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
44/ Air force needing oxygen for pilots -> research to make oxygen -> cheap oxygen -> cheaper steel making -> order of magnitude cheaper steel.
pic.twitter.com/KG497y2sSv
Twitter je možda preopterećen ili ima kratkotrajnih poteškoća u radu. Pokušajte ponovno ili potražite dodatne informacije u odjeljku Status Twittera.