That Was Fun

I’m back from my trip to Singularity University, and I’ll just say it was one of the more remarkable experiences I’ve ever had — something like a futurist’s boot-camp, in the company of a hundred or so very smart people. The days’ events began at about 8 a.m., typically didn’t let up until midnight or so, and consisted of a half-dozen or so lectures each day from global leaders in rapidly advancing areas of technology — AI, robotics, nanotech, genetics, biology, medicine, neuroscience, forecasting, computers and networking, and so on — interspersed with interactive workshops, group discussions, technology demos, and at the end of each day a gathering in the main building for people just to hang out and talk (lubricated with plenty of alcohol). The idea behind SU is to break apart the “silos” in these developing fields by assembling everyone in the same room and sort of banging their heads together. It’s a very good idea.

Because SU is in the heart of Silicon Valley, the idea that visionary entrepreneurship is the most effective way to get things done in this world is front and center throughout. The faculty are not people who talk about what folks are creating at the leading edge of all these fields: they are the people who are actually doing it — most of them, in addition to being academically prominent, are founders of edgy startups, or project leaders at places like Google — and you begin to feel that you are standing right at the growing tip of human endeavor. It’s intoxicating.

I’m still digesting it all, but I’m sure I’ll have a lot more to say as the days go by. One thing I will say right now, though: over the past few years the tone of this blog has become increasingly dark, and increasingly centered on partisan politics and civilization’s decline, and that may change a bit. That isn’t to say that my opinions have changed about any of those topics — you certainly will not be seeing me issuing any calls for a bigger Federal government, or more Islamic immigration, or tighter gun laws, and God knows we still desperately need a regime change in November — but the content here will probably be a lot less likely just to swirl around and around in those gloomy vortices. That way madness lies, and I think I had begun to lose sight of that.

5 Comments

  1. Sounds like a big barrel of awesomeness. Glad you had fun. Thankfully, the world is more than the sum of its ideologies and politicians.

    Posted April 18, 2012 at 1:30 am | Permalink
  2. Yeah, what Kevin said …

    The outlook for an Obama second term is still very depressing to contemplate, but hopefully we’ll survive such a fiasco, too.

    I am not sure, however, that we’ll be able to stomach the inevitable gloating from our resident gadfly. (I just threw up in my mouth a little bit.)

    Posted April 18, 2012 at 1:16 pm | Permalink
  3. Malcolm says

    No point in getting depressed just yet, Henry. I have a feeling that come November 7th our gadfly will have nothing to gloat about.

    Posted April 18, 2012 at 1:50 pm | Permalink
  4. מהמקלדת שלך לאוזן של אלוהים. [God’s language]

    From your keyboard to God’s ear. [English]

    Posted April 19, 2012 at 2:17 pm | Permalink
  5. Chris Marti says

    I was there, too. It was everything Malcom says it was. Worth every dollar I spent to get there and every neuron I lost from the every night conversations over many glasses of wine.

    Posted April 22, 2012 at 11:04 am | Permalink

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