We're now in an age of giant leaps, not incremental steps. Focus less on picking up new skills and incremental projects, and more on finding innovative ways to apply what they already know. One's identity and value shouldn't be tied to specific tools or well-scoped projects. The age of incrementalism, of neat little contained experiments, is over. The path forward is to use what you already know in novel ways. Judge yourself by the boldness of your ideas and the progress you can make, not by a narrow set of technical skills.
@c_valenzuelab Would love to see/hear you and @halecar2 have a long format discussion about the current state of art, tech or anything really. You both have some of the most enlightening and inspiring thoughts, and have no doubt that would be a super interesting convo.
@c_valenzuelab Agreed but it not always obvious how this translates to stable enough income
@c_valenzuelab Great point @c_valenzuelab, Beyond thinking about the scope, I'd add to anchor your imagination around how the ecosystem should feel around an idea vs. thinking of todays limits That will set your compass to the correct North. The rest is just experimenting with orchestration.
@c_valenzuelab is this the context? europarl.europa.eu/news/es/press-…
@c_valenzuelab "Judge yourself by the boldness of your ideas" Cannot agree more, @c_valenzuelab
@c_valenzuelab Same energy from @sama - direction and magnitude are what count - take big leaps! x.com/sama/status/12…
@c_valenzuelab Same energy from @sama - direction and magnitude are what count - take big leaps! x.com/sama/status/12…
@c_valenzuelab Agreed, but what if we want to slowly and steadily want to narrow/broaden the skillset??