Winston Churchill: “To each there comes in their lifetime a special moment when they are figuratively tapped on the shoulder and offered the chance to do a very special thing, unique to them and fitted to their talents. What a tragedy if that moment finds them unprepared or unqualified for that which could have been their finest hour.” [via Shane Parish]
Visual neuroscientist Jenny Bosten on colour: “Physically, the rainbow is a continuous spectrum. The wavelengths of light vary smoothly between two ends within the visible range. There are no lines, no sharp discontinuities. The human eye can discriminate far more than seven colors within that range. But in our culture, we would say that we see seven color categories in the rainbow: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo and violet. That’s historical and cultural…I’ve always seen color as something really fascinating, especially the subjective experience of color. It’s still a complete mystery, how the brain produces that.”
Dr. Joe Bak-Coleman on the idea of a hive mind: “Under what conditions can we expect a group of individuals to act cohesively and effectively as a collective, and in what circumstances does human behavior prevent such action? I believe this is a defining question for science in the coming decades, as we develop systems that alter our interactions with one another and with technology, all the while facing challenges like climate change, pandemics, and war that threaten our existence as a species…We’ve learned how remarkably sensitive emergent behavior can be to the structure and nature of interactions between individuals. Changes to the network size or structure, altering how information is shared, or adding feedback tends to degrade collective behavior into failed states.”
The Generalist: “In the world we actually see evolving today, new AI tools effectively democratize facility and efficiency in unprecedented ways. In doing so, they’re empowering individual professionals to achieve new productivity levels while enabling society to achieve productivity gains that may exceed those unleashed by the Industrial Revolution. Not only that, but people will also find their jobs more engaging and fulfilling because they’ll have more time to focus on the most creative, strategic, and novel aspects of them. This future is here. There will be an AI amplifying tool for every major profession within five years. These tools can catalyze human excellence across occupations – right brain, left brain, and any brain.”
WSJ: “Algorithms are capable of predicting the new fashion styles, managing the supply chain, making optimal pricing decisions and reducing waste. But the problem, at its most basic level, is that the technologies often collide with the age-old wisdom of the experts who are the foundation of the industry: the designers, buyers, planners, factory craftsmen and merchandisers on the front lines of the fashion houses. That collision, however, need not be fatal, as our research has shown. Here are five ways we have found that fashion-industry managers are tripping themselves up—and how they can avoid those mistakes.”