Sunday 12 November 2017

What you want, you may become

More sophisticated people want more sophisticated things.

More sophisticated things are composed of simpler things.

So more sophisticated people will just hire less sophisticated people to work for them.

If you just want to take it easy, then you are less sophisticated and likely be employed for someone else.

If you want to work for yourself, become sophisticated.

Wednesday 1 November 2017

What does God lack?

Limitation.
Definition.

I believe that organized religion creates a "believable God", by "defining", through stories, a God, so that people can know something about its nature. Some give positive definitions, others give negative ones.

If you know just a subset specification for a project with an infinite set of specifications, do you really know what the project is about?

But it is never the whole truth, and so there will always be controversy and the need for profound humility and an open mind.

Sunday 10 September 2017

On the Current NK Situation

Me:

That aside, what do you think about the NK issue?                        

Friend:

Not looking good. I lot of bad things could happen very soon. What do you think?                        

Me:

My long essay starts.
China's going to get squeezed into doing a lot more about it.                       
What the world wants mostly is to stop NK from testing weapons. If NK goes too far, China will likely take rapid and all-encompassing military action to ensure US and allies do not. Problem is, China doesn't have enough resources near NK to completely control and deny NK territory for now. But if we hear China multiply numbers and equipment near the border, which is likely now, we'll know that the end is near.

There is nothing NK can do about China moving in, and unless the US wishes to risk war with Russia, NK and China to defuse NK situation, there is nothing US and Korea can do about it either. It's going to be a massive win for China - they just have to solve the logistics issue of moving sufficient assets,  - which is basically the best of everything military that China has now, into the Northeast, preferably without detection.

It's going to be a very big win for China. On one hand, it would have full access to NK territory, which is strategically important for breaking out of the Pacific containment US and allies sought to hold, while keeping Japan and SK in check in regards to territory. It would also allow China to open up NK in the pace it sees fit, and the subsequent unification would lead to two more territories joining the belt-road. To the south, the ability to mobilize and react with military assets in such a short time and to a mountainous territory as harsh as NK would send a strong message to India that its military options for grabbing disputed Tibetan territory are ineffective, placing China in a better position to negotiate.

And of course, Taiwan will also be persuaded to integrate more closely with China, seeing that it would become less likely that the US will be able to help militarily, due to demonstrated area denial capabilities.

As for Russia, it's a wild card. I think it's probably going to follow China's plan. With China demanding ever more resources, Russia is going to find it hard to refuse the growing export opportunities for all kinds of natural resources, namely gas and oil. But at the same time, Russia does want more territory all the time. I doubt it wants NK territory, as the Koreans would obviously object, as they clearly look like the Chinese and South Koreans a whole lot more than most Russians.

Japan is going to find itself almost surrounded. I'm not sure they have much of a choice but to warm up to China.

Friend:

Sounds logical. Thanks. From what sources have you derived this assessment?

Me:

CNN panic, overcoming illusions of US omnipotence, logic, mostly. I went to Yunnan last week, and the trains and saw a train fully occupied by troops, which made me realize just how critical logistics to controlling such a big territory as China.

Wednesday 6 September 2017

Truths that are obvious they are hard to state #2

There is a more fundamental question to life than "What is the meaning of life?"

It could be this:

Who am I to create order out of chaos?

Fundamentally, the answer to this question is this:
I like being alive, and to continue being alive. And in order to live, I must do this and that.

Life can be fundamentally defined, and distinguished from all other phenomena, as a the one thing that decreases local entropy - creates order out of chaos.

Who is sanctioning this?

Religions have a pretty decent answer. But it's really not the most fundamental answer.
"God is your master and your ultimate purpose is to serve him/them"

But in creating order of chaos and placing life in a state of order, the life ceases to be life, in that dimension. As in, lifeforms in a state of order for a certain dimension loses the need to be life and takes away the meaning of life for them.

And so, life needs to move on to somewhere with problems to solve.

This is the central underlying problem of automation.

Much of what we are doing are not going to give its doers any meaning or value anymore, as automation excels at such a level that human employment is simply not justifiable anymore.

Saturday 26 August 2017

Truths that are obvious they are hard to state #1

No matter who we are, all we can do is write the next natural progression in history.

Sunday 6 August 2017

Quote of the Sunday Night

Thank You, Pain!

Feminists Vs Men's Rights

Feminists are constantly pointing to the "winners" of the socioeconomic games and saying they are men.

MRAs are constantly pointing to the 95% of men and women and pointing out that for the majority of cases, men have it worse than the women.

Who's right?

Life Advice: Don't push your friends away, no matter what relationship you are in.

It's Sunday, and I'd like to tell you a story.

I have a male friend who just put everything in in his girlfriend. He basically wouldn't spend any time with his guys again.

But one day, this girl goes abroad for studies. They promise to stay together for the duration of the two years.

And for a year, he stays put, and they have their long distance relationship.
Everything seems fine and happy until one day, while we're hanging out together, he takes a call.

She's breaking up with him!

And he comes and complains to me.

Wow, what were you doing when things were going well? And what did all that time texting go, when you could be having potentially life-changing conversations with your mates?

Don't turn your mates away, no matter how good the job is, or how awesome your GF is being to you. These things are always changing. They will aways serve their own self-interest first and foremost. Your boss is looking for revenue, profit, capital gains. Your GF is sizing you up to see if you're worth mating with, if you'll be a stable father and provider.

It is with semi-distant friends that had strong ties historically and now exist as weaker ties that have sentimental reasons to be empathetic and stick up for each other in the long run.

Saturday 22 July 2017

What would the world look like if you visualized it in terms of all sorts of dimensions?

Picture this:

Every action as a dimension, or hyperplane in multi-dimensional space, transforming from one to another, all dependent on time.

If we were to plot this, what would it look like?

Then in theory you could have an entire model of someone's life.

Sunday 9 July 2017

The Red Pill Part 1: BRIFFAULT’S LAW

The female, not the male, determines all the conditions of the animal family. Where the female can derive no benefit from association with the male, no such association takes place.
There are a few corollaries I would add:
  • Past benefit provided by the male does not provide for continued or future association.
  • Any agreement where the male provides a current benefit in return for a promise of future association is null and void as soon as the male has provided the benefit (see corollary 1)
  • A promise of future benefit has limited influence on current/future association, with the influence inversely proportionate to the length of time until the benefit will be given and directly proportionate to the degree to which the female trusts the male (which is not bloody likely).

Saigo Takamori

敬天愛人


On Saigo Takamori's famous philosophy of "Respect the heavens and love the people".

I felt that it does make a whole lot of sense.

If one respects the heavens but does not love the people, he will have a very boring life free of company.

If one does not respect the heavens but does love the people, he will be an irrational but loving person.

If one doesn't respect the heavens and doesn't love people, he will be irrational and lonely.

If one respects the heavens and loves the people, there arises a question - what do you do, when?

Such is life.

Saigo had the same issue. In his last act of rebellion, he put people first, irrationally ignoring his chances.

Maybe reason always has to go first.

Saturday 1 July 2017

Why you should hire developers with IoT experience

IoT is full of side effects.

One action never just does one thing, there are multiple effects to every cause and multiple causes to every effect.

IoT developers learn to deal with this effectively using the latest functional reactive programming techniques.

Being able and used to figure out the side effects of any one change may have, as well as a clear picture of overall architecture is where IoT developers excel at.

Monday 12 June 2017

Free Publc Transport if Air Pollution gets Bad

http://www.scmp.com/news/hong-kong/health-environment/article/2097683/hong-kong-urged-follow-south-korea-free-public

That's a good idea!

If I were in the US, people would probably just try to sue the bus company in a class-action suit.

Saturday 10 June 2017

HK Open Source Conference 2017 In a Few Points


1.

We don't have visibility to see what's going on in Google Home, Amazon Echo, Siri. They are all black (or white) boxes.

Once they all go INVISIBLE, we will have far fewer choices.

2.

A-frame

Works with ember.js,...
NewComers can build new.
Basic primitives, add custom menus.

3.

IoT is hard to debug
Ambient topologies.

See: Why you should hire developers with IoT experience.


4.

An app for each platform is an unsustainable model.
We can only use so many apps at the same time.
People use 7 apps/day on average.

Wednesday 31 May 2017

Are Cats Responsible for “Cat Ladies”?

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/are-cats-responsible-for-ldquo-cat-ladies-rdquo/

"Toxo can travel into a rat’s brain and cause the rat to no longer avoid areas where cats live. The rats, in fact, become attracted to the smell of cat urine. Previously repulsed by the smell, these brain-infected rodents run joyously through urine-laden environments. "

"Protozoans can affect the brains of humans."

"Cat ownership doesn’t seem to truly increase one’s risk of psychosis."

Sunday 28 May 2017

Anti-if League

Problem

People using too many if-s in a single piece of code, resulting in convoluted logic that is difficult for most humans to trace.

https://cirillocompany.de/pages/anti-if-campaign

Solution:

What can you do about IFs?

https://code.joejag.com/2016/anti-if-the-missing-patterns.html

Use polymorphism if applicable.
Break it down into functions. Ideally, every function should only descend one level of abstraction. Following this, one can get extremely reusable code, although this does mean a lot more typing, initially.

Analysis

Software code is a form of written communication for humans, as much as it is for computers.

Paying attention to these small details makes a massive difference in the face of any code beyond 100 lines.

You cannot really develop reliable software without this.

What to do differently

People who are able to understand why they need to pay attention to these details and then automatically execute based on these principles are invaluable to any team, at least in the programmer/developer role.

Intended outcome

Now trying to get my team to join it!

Saturday 15 April 2017

Mattresses and Life

Has it ever occurred to you that if you live to be 90, you will spend around 30 years on mattresses?

So invest in a good pillow, mattress and high thread-count sheets that feel great,
ideally one without flame retardants and other toxic stuff.

Monday 3 April 2017

How a meaningful life works?

1.

Life is fundamentally about meanings meaning meanings.

2.

To live meaningfully, one needs to cultivate virtuous cycles where one activity cultivates the next thing cultivates the next thing, which eventually cycles back on itself to enhance it.

Together, they form a dependency graph.

1. You go to work in X so that you gain satisfaction, happiness and money so that...
2. You can have a family.
3. You can have a "life".
4. You can have free time.
5. You can have hobbies.

You can expand Points 2,3,4,5 as much as you wish, hopefully until you can link it back to neighbors.

The more it loops onto itself, the more meaningful you will feel your life is. Of course, each thing requires a "profit" - an intrinsic value (eg. happiness, or anticipation, representing potential happiness) gained solely from that activity itself.

Of course, it depends on the amount of working memory you have and many other psychological factors, but the general principle is this.

An interesting case (and not necessarily exception) is the monolithic life. People who live, sleep and eat so that they can work so that they can live, sleep and eat. This is all well and fine if your work is meaningful or your food tastes great or you love sleeping. The moment you don't enjoy your work or you don't get paid enough, the whole cycle breaks down and one's life is thrown into chaos.

And that's when it helps for one to understand how it all works.

Living wisely is about having the foresight required to plan, build and align the future to create these virtuous cycles.

And all meanings that make us feel that life is meaningful are fundamentally tied to positive feelings.

Many people start off with good templates for these. And as much as I'd like to believe that the world is somewhat fair, that's almost as good as a head-start in life gets.

3.

I feel that my own life is somewhat working. In fact, instead of offering a supporting example, you'll see an exception to the rule. But I believe I can do much better.

Here's mine.

1. I work because I like my work and work environment. I also like some pay, which I invest for the future. Honestly I'd work without pay too, but the world runs on money and I need it.

2. I swim because I love the feeling of water enveloping me. It makes me feel loved. As I'm aware of the people (read bodies) around me, I'm aware of the kind of bodies and fitness standards that society generally likes. And my biological drives then persuade me to do it for that. Conscious me hates that but my biology loves it.

3. I run because I love the sound of wind whistling past my face and into my ears. It is a kind of connection to the prehistoric hunters that I originated from.

One regularity when attempting to see my life through the lens of meaning is that I do a thing because I like doing it. The side effect is almost always because the world requires this or that.

Which begs the question.

Where did meaning come from?

Like any evolutionary psychologist would answer, the reasons for all psychological things is that it facilitates the passing of one's genes to the next generation.

Putting that into context here, meaning is really a soft framework for the highly flexible human (in comparison to animals) to find their way around the world, while still serving the interests of gene propagation.

Certain schools of thought in Eastern philosophy don't think that way. They think life doesn't necessarily need to be meaningful (across time). What matters is the present. Feeling happy in the present. This is basically a call to return to our animal past, when we weren't able to cognitively understand the past and future.

I used to think this was really anti-human. But maybe in the end, a time we will all come to face, the now is really all that matters. And so, perhaps living a meaningful life is more important to the young than the old.

But as always, whatever you say about life, the opposite is often true too.

Does this make sense to you?

Saturday 25 March 2017

Quote of the Day, by Epicurus



Nothing is enough for the man to whom enough is too little - Epicurus

Friday 24 March 2017

Thought of the Day: The Battle for AI Talent.

The Battle for AI is the battle for the next century and beyond.

For example, Intel wants its monopoly over computing hardware back. And they better be quick about it.
https://www.wired.com/2017/03/intel-just-jumped-fierce-competition-ai-talent/

I still think it is crazy how much the variance is between top talent and your average worker, researcher.

Wednesday 22 March 2017

Deep Quote of the Night, By The Einstein

“If most of us are ashamed of shabby clothes and shoddy furniture, let us be more ashamed of shabby ideas and shoddy philosophies.”

Thursday 16 March 2017

The meaning of life

I think the standard meaning of life is to be happy.

Which is an awfully vague kind of meaning, which in turn, feels like no meaning at all. What is happy? How much of it is enough? What if you don't get it? Does that mean your life becomes meaningless?

So I prefer something like the standard Christian meaning of life - to serve and glory God.
Which for the less religious, would be to serve and glorify life.

What's the difference between a genius and an avg person?

https://www.quora.com/Whats-the-difference-between-a-genius-and-an-average-person

 "An average person learns, a Genius thinks."


That's one of my major concerns about IT jobs. There is a lot to learn, but as for thinking... if you have to think, you're not very effective at your job. 

If you can follow algorithms well and have excellent short/mid-term memory (technical details requiring memorisation are rarely useful in the long run), you can make a decent career in IT.

As much as the image of IT seems to include bright minds and smart people, not that much room for geniuses.

Meaningful Conversations

"Most people may live 70,80,90 years, but only live meaningfully for, maybe, hours."

Never miss a chance to have meaningful conversations.

Pass down the life lessons. Allow others to pass down life lessons.
Those could be the most meaningful days of your life.

TODO
More videos of grandparents so I can show their great-grandsons and daughters (if any) what major periods of Chinese history were like.

Saturday 11 March 2017

What is Thought?

1. Thinking is the interplay between emptiness and non-emptiness.

If one's mind is full, one does not think.

Thinkers are between worlds, transitioning in some way from emptiness to non-emptiness.

A classic example would be the optimization problem. Trying to figure out the optimum combination that most satisfies the criteria.

Perhaps when we are thinking, we are training those neural networks too.
Neural networks training other neural networks.

Just what Google's doing too.

2. When it gets complicated enough, consciousness emerges. When side-effects cannot fail to cause other effects, which cause those side-effects themselves, until the entity cannot find the origin.

But that's cliched.

When the entity cannot detect the origin, consciousness no longer exists. So consciousness is the fleeting moments of achieving this state of wholeness.

3. What is the link between thinking and consciousness?

They are analogous in that both are fleeting moments between emptiness to fullness. In thinking this is from no solution to finding a solution. In consciousness, it is going from the change of a piece of data not being able to cause itself, to being able to cause itself, the process in which its components come together.

Both are about fulfilment, a journey to a certain end.

But technically, what does it mean? How are they related in the mind?

Is all thinking conscious?

This is like asking "if a tree falls in the forest and no one is there to hear it, does it still exist?". Yes. We know for certain that some of the energy must be converted to sound. In the same way, we can know that thinking occurs anytime we are alive.

4.

Thinking: Training a network, trying things randomly specifically to reach a specific goal. It is triggered by some other process.

Consciousness: Involuntary, natural process which naturally occurs in the mind if all the pieces are available.


Sunday 5 March 2017

A Most Philosophical joke

One of the most memorable jokes I have ever heard is this:

Q: What is the most philosophical job?
A: Security Guard. Because he gets to ask "Who are you?", "What are you doing here?" and "Where are you going?"

The Result of Tech Society

"Someday, the default option of almost everything will exceed even average expectations.

When machines can predict what we want before we want something, let alone have expectations."

Thursday 2 March 2017

Friendships are based on something common.

Without something common, they will fall apart.

What are we keeping in common?

Monday 27 February 2017

"I believe in free will because life demands it."

"I believe in free will because life demands it. Nature abhors the truth of its own determinism."

Sunday 26 February 2017

A Cure For Wellness: A Cult Classic



A puzzling gothic fantasy, horror with social satire at heart, with a bit of Pirates of the Caribbean action sprinkled on top. 

Our protagonist is a kind of managing director at an I Bank, responsible for a lot of money. He lives only for one thing - making more money. At the top of a castle in the Swiss Alps, he realizes his true place in the world.

The meaning is fundamentally this. There's an elite group of people at the very top, lording over everyone, milking everyone of their water - which is metaphorically a kind of life essence, represented by their "bodily fluids" and money.

Nobody ever leaves alive, because that metaphor is life.
The movie gives us a happy ending, but it feels like a fairy tale. I feel that most of the audience got out without realizing this meaning, choosing perhaps to focus on the fairy tale/horror/mystery parts.

The Good

- The main symbolism is water. The symbolism is marvellous. The shots are slow and smooth. It doesn't rely on sudden appearances to scare one. It knows that the audience will eventually scare themselves.

Water is money, water is life, water is rebirth, water is time. This movie plays on great themes.

- The movie is well-casted. 

The protagonist. DeHaan has just the right look to play the main character, Lockhart, a corrupt young East Coast WASP who travels to Switzerland to find a missing company executive but ends up trapped at a “wellness clinic” run by a German-accented doctor named Heinrich Volmer (Jason Issacs).

And of course, you just can't go wrong with the actor who played Malfoy in the Harry Potter series. He's got the right mix of masculine charm (tall rectangular face, clear jaw angles) and smooth persuasiveness that keeps the audience trying to figure out what's really wrong with the place.

The doctor's daughter is played by Mia Goth (of Nymphomaniac Vol 2 fame), who's perfectly suited to play the strange light-footed, anaemic, naive girl who doesn't age.

The nurses and orderlies have a stone-cold expression that balances professionalism and evil minion.

- The dull color tone is perfectly suited to the dark mood of the movie. Whether it's the dark looming skyscrapers that stick to the top or the indoor lighting in the castle. There is no missing what the movie wants to say about the

- The references to other films.

I can't help but notice the similarities to The Shining. The winding path to the castle, the hauntingly spirit-like girl in the blue dress, the confusing maze in the sauna, the hallucination 

- The tempo.

The film takes great delight in peeling back the evil to its core. 146 minutes is a lot of time.

The Bad

There's nothing really bad about this movie. I thought the movie was fine but the audience may not be mature or understanding enough. I thought the reviews are rather cruel with it. I think the mix of comedic action and brief sequences of psychological horror is funny. There's some rewatch value in this movie.

Remarkable Quotes

Volmer: Do you know what the cure for the human condition is? Disease. Because that's the only way one could hope for a cure.


Thursday 2 February 2017

Idea: The Way We Use Computers

Is there software that, given a task, can guess and automatically bring up the relevant software, data needed to start (or even complete) the task?

Monday 30 January 2017

Is there anything left for us humans to do?

Or can human freedom be so advanced that technology can never be a weapon used by humans against other humans ever again? Or is it doomed to be a cudgel in human conflicts?

Can we become the true masters of nature, shifting the inevitable pains of growth and evolution to the machines?

These are the issues at stake in our millennium.

Saturday 14 January 2017

The Circle - Trailer out.

When I was reading the book, I was imagining the main character being played by Emma Watson too. To me, Watson represents what the majority of evolutionarily successful females have always represented throughout history - the mainstream of society.

Today, the mainstream society is about staying connected everywhere and all the time, with technology, and what this movie is a prediction for.

http://fandom.wikia.com/videos/circle-trailer-silicon-valley-horror?li_source=LI&li_medium=wikia-rail