This is interesting because a couple years earlier, I saw a talked that covered the same topic, wildly popular (most YT viewed talked from the conference of all time) but incomprehensible. I didn't even know what the talk was about until I saw Gary's talk 2 years later.
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After watching the wildly popular talk, I asked about twenty people at the conference if they could explain what the talk was about and how the 2nd half related to the 1st half. Literally zero people told me they thought they understood the talk.
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I kept asking about the popular talk for about a year and eventually found one person who said they understood the talk, but after talking to them at length, they couldn't explain the talk. This talk was widely loved and is still highly cited today.
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Gary's talk was so good, so clear, that everyone I talked to thought the talk was bad. If there was more vague ranting or talking around the point instead of actually conveying the point, I suspect people would've liked the talk.
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This also happens at work! A friend of mine went up for "senior staff" promo (and succeeded), but someone on the promo committee objected b/c "that could've been done by a SWE-2", as if figuring out a simple way to do something valuable makes it less valuable.
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Replying to @danluu
What’s your opinion of Rich Hickey talks then? They seems to be quite popular ...
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Replying to @jesterreborn
I've only seen a few of his talks, can't speak to his talks in general, but the ones I've seen have all been "big idea" talks, which (IMO) usually don't work well outside of Bret Victor-style inspirational talks. Most of these talks (w/any speaker) end up being a rorschach test.
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Replying to @danluu @jesterreborn
I'm trying to put together a specific "small idea" talk and it's hard to explain clearly. One single example, which would be a preface in a blog post or 1 of 8 examples in a book chapter, takes 10min to work through, half of the talk time. Talks are a very low bandwidth medium.
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Replying to @danluu @jesterreborn
In 99% of "big idea" talks I see that try to explain why you should do something, the "why" is woefully underdetermined and you can use the same style of reasoning to justify the opposite thing. This isn't to say these can't work, there are some that work.
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Replying to @danluu @jesterreborn
Gary's talked (mentioned above) is arguably a "big idea" talk and it works. But Gary is careful to frame "big" topics in a way that they can be explained adequately in a short talk. IMO, this is rare and most talks in this class end up being a horoscope.
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A talk saying "remove unnecessary complexity and embrace simplicity" is not so different than the daily horoscope column, which reads "recent turning points in your life have taught you flexibility, and now you need to put those lessons to work"
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Replying to @danluu @jesterreborn
One pet hypothesis of mine is that we _need_ conflicting or ambiguous advice. In Go (the game), an enormous amount of advice takes the form of proverbs or patterns that are only applicable some of the time.
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There are people who try to distill those proverbs to laws that can be applied without any ambiguity. I believe those attempts fail, or only capture things that are uninteresting.
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