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A couple extremes which might be exceptions to this include (a) content creation monetized across a large audience, and (b) internal/external consulting with a skillset core to your research.
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If the profitable work of (a + b) can take < 10–20h/w of work, I can perhaps imagine enough bandwidth for real research. But I'm not sure how big that market is or how widely applicable across domains.
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One boundary-condition route which seems relevant: many folks could work as an sweng for Google for ~5–10 years, then simply fund their own work indefinitely thereafter. A stable version of "drawing down savings for a few years."
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But I suspect that even in this ideal-seeming case with funding taken care of, the work would often naturally evolve to something more institutional: a "center," an "institute," a startup, etc—simply as an avenue for greater impact/insight. See also:
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I was briefly calling myself an independent researcher: somebody who self-funds spec R&D on their own ideas. In theory it’s something like indie-research : academic research :: blogging/self-publishing : traditional publishing. But the idea doesn’t really work.
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That seems right! Do you have a rough guess as to what % of Google engineers could do that? Saving 200–400K/y to endow $100K in consumption over 5–10y is certainly doable, but I don't have a sense if that's 1% or 10% (or more) of engineers' compensation.
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What about smoothing that sort of thing over time, with part time (for example) software engineering/part time research? Certainly there are some big potential obstacles (size/stability of the part-time "knowledge work" job market, financial incentives, maybe IP)
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- but I'm somewhat surprised that it isn't a more common path, based on my anecdotal sense of stated preferences of people in tech and academic research. At least if the major hurdle is time and not expensive research equipment. Are these obstacles just that insurmountable?
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One theory: the kind of person who can tolerate 5-10 yrs as Google senior sweng, or navigate freelancer life, is a diff personality from the kind of person itching to do independent research
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That might be an unfair statement, I'm not high conviction on it. But I've noticed there are soft skills required for each path, and optimizing for one makes the other look less appealing
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