Challenge accepted! Some things that I think are underbelieved among my peers and are generally optimistic:https://twitter.com/naval/status/944301966989058048 …
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We now consider it a major knock on a world leader that they would give conscious thought to the possibility of ordering a nuclear strike. Not too long ago this was literally the #1 thing on the job description.
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Popular culture’s standards of craft, everywhere, are extraordinarily, extraordinarily high. TV commercials routinely have better FX than Star Wars did. Storytelling is often getting better, too. And there is a Cambrian explosion happening on YouTube/etc.
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Do you write software? It’s so much better than when my career started it’s incredible. Hosting is available for pennies with no commitments. You can download a (free!) fully functional environment for most mainstream options and have something minimally functional in 5 minutes.
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Uber/Lyft/etc are competing against McDonalds with this sales pitch: “No boss ever yells at you. You pick your hours. Want to pick your kid up at school or feel sick? No worries, log off. You’ll have a job tomorrow.” That is a truly excellent thing.
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The amount of routine government processes which are being eaten by web applications are higher than you’d probably realize, to the enormous benefit of both constituents (not spending all day in an office) and government (efficiency gains).
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We continue to replace retail locations with improved demand capture and service/good delivery via technically enabled firms, which makes things cheaper and frees up limited physical space for better things than chain retailer presences Store #6807.
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Computers talking to computers are faster, cheaper, and more accurate at doing record keeping than humans talking to humans ever were, and this bubbles up in consumer experiences all the time. Air travel almost unrecognizable now that you already have the ticket in your pocket.
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This is clearly being rolled back on the 3-5 year timescale.
Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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Have you reviewed pre WWI globalization/mobility? Singer (the sewing machine company) had a massive plant in Scotland and extensive operations in Russia. This was their St. Petersburg headquarters building:pic.twitter.com/12HRq4a4Re
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Since passports didn’t come into widespread use until after 1914, it’s arguable that mobility—or at least freedom to move, ex-technology—was significantly higher 120 years ago.
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