Not only can strong technical people not report to non-technical people, they need those they report to, to be much better than them along at least one obvious technical dimension.
People think there are exceptions to this rule, they could not be more wrong.
Conversation
How do you reconcile CTO —> CEO?
1
“the biggest predictor of whether a company will successfully adopt machine intelligence is whether they have a C-Suite executive with an advanced math degree.” —
3
Yah - still feel like there are plenty of examples (inc. recent ones) where this isn’t true, not specifically with ML, but someone like Jobs comes to mind.
1
People love to find counter examples to this very useful and accurate rule. I don’t know why.
1
Well you phrased it (or at least I read it as) without exception and that seemed wrong so I said so heh
1
That’s how Twitter works isn’t it.
My point of course is it rarely works, it’s a big problem and everybody knows it. But people keep trying to make it work.
Like people not getting enough sleep and saying they don’t need it
2
Richard Feynman story on this I can’t find easily. Something about him being able to learn how to paint pretty well — enough to have a legit exhibit. But the painter could not get through Physics 101.
Not to say everyone should be a physics or physicists should run the world

