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  3. I'm OK being left behind, thanks!

I'm OK being left behind, thanks!

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cryptofuturetechnology
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  • blog@shkspr.mobiB This user is from outside of this forum
    blog@shkspr.mobiB This user is from outside of this forum
    blog@shkspr.mobi
    wrote last edited by
    #1

    I'm OK being left behind, thanks!

    https://shkspr.mobi/blog/2026/03/im-ok-being-left-behind-thanks/

    Many years ago, someone tried to get me into cryptocurrencies. "They're the future of money!" they said. I replied saying that I'd rather wait until they were more useful, less volatile, easier to use, and utterly reliable.

    "You don't want to get left behind, do you?" They countered.

    That struck me as a bizarre sentiment. What is there to be left behind from? If BitCoin (or whatever) is going to liberate us all from economic drudgery, what's the point of "getting in early"? It'll still be there tomorrow and I can join the journey whenever it is sensible for me.

    Part of the crypto grift was telling people to "Have Fun Staying Poor". That weaponisation of FOMO was an insidious way to get people to drop their scepticism.

    I feel the same way about the current crop of AI tools. I've tried a bunch of them. Some are good. Most are a bit shit. Few are useful to me as they are now. I'm utterly content to wait until their hype has been realised. Why should I invest in learning the equivalent of WordStar for DOS when Google Docs is coming any-day-now?

    If this tech is as amazing as you say it is, I'll be able to pick it up and become productive on a timescale of my choosing not yours.

    I didn't use Git when it first came out. Once it was stable and jobs began demanding it, I picked it up. Might I be 7% more effective if I'd suffered through the early years? Maybe. But so what? I could just as easily have wasted my time learning something which never took off.

    I wrote my MSc on The Metaverse. Learning to built VR stuff was fun, but a complete waste of time. There was precisely zero utility in having gotten in early.

    Perhaps there are some things for which it is sensible to be on the cutting edge. I took part in a vaccine trial because I thought it might personally benefit me and, hopefully, humanity.

    But I'm struggling to think of anyone who has earned anything more than bragging rights by being first. Some early investors made money - but an equal and opposite number lost money. For every HTML 2.0 you might have tried, you were just as likely to have got stuck in the dead-end of Flash.

    There are a 16,000 new lives being born every hour. They're all starting with a fairly blank slate. Are you genuinely saying that they'll all be left behind because they didn't learn your technology in utero?

    No. That's obviously nonsense.

    It is 100% OK to wait and see if something is actually useful.

    #AI #crypto #future #technology
    infrapink@mastodon.ieI jimfl@hachyderm.ioJ timwardcam@c.imT noomsh@mastodon.socialN fandasin@social.linux.pizzaF 18 Replies Last reply
    3
    0
    • blog@shkspr.mobiB blog@shkspr.mobi

      I'm OK being left behind, thanks!

      https://shkspr.mobi/blog/2026/03/im-ok-being-left-behind-thanks/

      Many years ago, someone tried to get me into cryptocurrencies. "They're the future of money!" they said. I replied saying that I'd rather wait until they were more useful, less volatile, easier to use, and utterly reliable.

      "You don't want to get left behind, do you?" They countered.

      That struck me as a bizarre sentiment. What is there to be left behind from? If BitCoin (or whatever) is going to liberate us all from economic drudgery, what's the point of "getting in early"? It'll still be there tomorrow and I can join the journey whenever it is sensible for me.

      Part of the crypto grift was telling people to "Have Fun Staying Poor". That weaponisation of FOMO was an insidious way to get people to drop their scepticism.

      I feel the same way about the current crop of AI tools. I've tried a bunch of them. Some are good. Most are a bit shit. Few are useful to me as they are now. I'm utterly content to wait until their hype has been realised. Why should I invest in learning the equivalent of WordStar for DOS when Google Docs is coming any-day-now?

      If this tech is as amazing as you say it is, I'll be able to pick it up and become productive on a timescale of my choosing not yours.

      I didn't use Git when it first came out. Once it was stable and jobs began demanding it, I picked it up. Might I be 7% more effective if I'd suffered through the early years? Maybe. But so what? I could just as easily have wasted my time learning something which never took off.

      I wrote my MSc on The Metaverse. Learning to built VR stuff was fun, but a complete waste of time. There was precisely zero utility in having gotten in early.

      Perhaps there are some things for which it is sensible to be on the cutting edge. I took part in a vaccine trial because I thought it might personally benefit me and, hopefully, humanity.

      But I'm struggling to think of anyone who has earned anything more than bragging rights by being first. Some early investors made money - but an equal and opposite number lost money. For every HTML 2.0 you might have tried, you were just as likely to have got stuck in the dead-end of Flash.

      There are a 16,000 new lives being born every hour. They're all starting with a fairly blank slate. Are you genuinely saying that they'll all be left behind because they didn't learn your technology in utero?

      No. That's obviously nonsense.

      It is 100% OK to wait and see if something is actually useful.

      #AI #crypto #future #technology
      infrapink@mastodon.ieI This user is from outside of this forum
      infrapink@mastodon.ieI This user is from outside of this forum
      infrapink@mastodon.ie
      wrote last edited by
      #2

      @blog

      A little while ago I gave a presentation on AI at my job, where I explained in detail exactly why it's useless. A manager who has a sentiment similar to yours asked how I would respond to "But we can't be left behind!" I managed to quip "It's perfectly fine to be left behind when everybody else is running towards a cliff".

      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • blog@shkspr.mobiB blog@shkspr.mobi

        I'm OK being left behind, thanks!

        https://shkspr.mobi/blog/2026/03/im-ok-being-left-behind-thanks/

        Many years ago, someone tried to get me into cryptocurrencies. "They're the future of money!" they said. I replied saying that I'd rather wait until they were more useful, less volatile, easier to use, and utterly reliable.

        "You don't want to get left behind, do you?" They countered.

        That struck me as a bizarre sentiment. What is there to be left behind from? If BitCoin (or whatever) is going to liberate us all from economic drudgery, what's the point of "getting in early"? It'll still be there tomorrow and I can join the journey whenever it is sensible for me.

        Part of the crypto grift was telling people to "Have Fun Staying Poor". That weaponisation of FOMO was an insidious way to get people to drop their scepticism.

        I feel the same way about the current crop of AI tools. I've tried a bunch of them. Some are good. Most are a bit shit. Few are useful to me as they are now. I'm utterly content to wait until their hype has been realised. Why should I invest in learning the equivalent of WordStar for DOS when Google Docs is coming any-day-now?

        If this tech is as amazing as you say it is, I'll be able to pick it up and become productive on a timescale of my choosing not yours.

        I didn't use Git when it first came out. Once it was stable and jobs began demanding it, I picked it up. Might I be 7% more effective if I'd suffered through the early years? Maybe. But so what? I could just as easily have wasted my time learning something which never took off.

        I wrote my MSc on The Metaverse. Learning to built VR stuff was fun, but a complete waste of time. There was precisely zero utility in having gotten in early.

        Perhaps there are some things for which it is sensible to be on the cutting edge. I took part in a vaccine trial because I thought it might personally benefit me and, hopefully, humanity.

        But I'm struggling to think of anyone who has earned anything more than bragging rights by being first. Some early investors made money - but an equal and opposite number lost money. For every HTML 2.0 you might have tried, you were just as likely to have got stuck in the dead-end of Flash.

        There are a 16,000 new lives being born every hour. They're all starting with a fairly blank slate. Are you genuinely saying that they'll all be left behind because they didn't learn your technology in utero?

        No. That's obviously nonsense.

        It is 100% OK to wait and see if something is actually useful.

        #AI #crypto #future #technology
        jimfl@hachyderm.ioJ This user is from outside of this forum
        jimfl@hachyderm.ioJ This user is from outside of this forum
        jimfl@hachyderm.io
        wrote last edited by
        #3

        @blog https://fomocoin.org/

        1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • blog@shkspr.mobiB blog@shkspr.mobi

          I'm OK being left behind, thanks!

          https://shkspr.mobi/blog/2026/03/im-ok-being-left-behind-thanks/

          Many years ago, someone tried to get me into cryptocurrencies. "They're the future of money!" they said. I replied saying that I'd rather wait until they were more useful, less volatile, easier to use, and utterly reliable.

          "You don't want to get left behind, do you?" They countered.

          That struck me as a bizarre sentiment. What is there to be left behind from? If BitCoin (or whatever) is going to liberate us all from economic drudgery, what's the point of "getting in early"? It'll still be there tomorrow and I can join the journey whenever it is sensible for me.

          Part of the crypto grift was telling people to "Have Fun Staying Poor". That weaponisation of FOMO was an insidious way to get people to drop their scepticism.

          I feel the same way about the current crop of AI tools. I've tried a bunch of them. Some are good. Most are a bit shit. Few are useful to me as they are now. I'm utterly content to wait until their hype has been realised. Why should I invest in learning the equivalent of WordStar for DOS when Google Docs is coming any-day-now?

          If this tech is as amazing as you say it is, I'll be able to pick it up and become productive on a timescale of my choosing not yours.

          I didn't use Git when it first came out. Once it was stable and jobs began demanding it, I picked it up. Might I be 7% more effective if I'd suffered through the early years? Maybe. But so what? I could just as easily have wasted my time learning something which never took off.

          I wrote my MSc on The Metaverse. Learning to built VR stuff was fun, but a complete waste of time. There was precisely zero utility in having gotten in early.

          Perhaps there are some things for which it is sensible to be on the cutting edge. I took part in a vaccine trial because I thought it might personally benefit me and, hopefully, humanity.

          But I'm struggling to think of anyone who has earned anything more than bragging rights by being first. Some early investors made money - but an equal and opposite number lost money. For every HTML 2.0 you might have tried, you were just as likely to have got stuck in the dead-end of Flash.

          There are a 16,000 new lives being born every hour. They're all starting with a fairly blank slate. Are you genuinely saying that they'll all be left behind because they didn't learn your technology in utero?

          No. That's obviously nonsense.

          It is 100% OK to wait and see if something is actually useful.

          #AI #crypto #future #technology
          timwardcam@c.imT This user is from outside of this forum
          timwardcam@c.imT This user is from outside of this forum
          timwardcam@c.im
          wrote last edited by
          #4

          @blog WordStar (on CP/M rather than DOS) was a seriously big deal at the time and made an enormous difference. You could type your own documents and didn't have to be frightened of what the typist would say when you went to them with corrections.

          the5thcolumnist@mstdn.caT 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • blog@shkspr.mobiB blog@shkspr.mobi

            I'm OK being left behind, thanks!

            https://shkspr.mobi/blog/2026/03/im-ok-being-left-behind-thanks/

            Many years ago, someone tried to get me into cryptocurrencies. "They're the future of money!" they said. I replied saying that I'd rather wait until they were more useful, less volatile, easier to use, and utterly reliable.

            "You don't want to get left behind, do you?" They countered.

            That struck me as a bizarre sentiment. What is there to be left behind from? If BitCoin (or whatever) is going to liberate us all from economic drudgery, what's the point of "getting in early"? It'll still be there tomorrow and I can join the journey whenever it is sensible for me.

            Part of the crypto grift was telling people to "Have Fun Staying Poor". That weaponisation of FOMO was an insidious way to get people to drop their scepticism.

            I feel the same way about the current crop of AI tools. I've tried a bunch of them. Some are good. Most are a bit shit. Few are useful to me as they are now. I'm utterly content to wait until their hype has been realised. Why should I invest in learning the equivalent of WordStar for DOS when Google Docs is coming any-day-now?

            If this tech is as amazing as you say it is, I'll be able to pick it up and become productive on a timescale of my choosing not yours.

            I didn't use Git when it first came out. Once it was stable and jobs began demanding it, I picked it up. Might I be 7% more effective if I'd suffered through the early years? Maybe. But so what? I could just as easily have wasted my time learning something which never took off.

            I wrote my MSc on The Metaverse. Learning to built VR stuff was fun, but a complete waste of time. There was precisely zero utility in having gotten in early.

            Perhaps there are some things for which it is sensible to be on the cutting edge. I took part in a vaccine trial because I thought it might personally benefit me and, hopefully, humanity.

            But I'm struggling to think of anyone who has earned anything more than bragging rights by being first. Some early investors made money - but an equal and opposite number lost money. For every HTML 2.0 you might have tried, you were just as likely to have got stuck in the dead-end of Flash.

            There are a 16,000 new lives being born every hour. They're all starting with a fairly blank slate. Are you genuinely saying that they'll all be left behind because they didn't learn your technology in utero?

            No. That's obviously nonsense.

            It is 100% OK to wait and see if something is actually useful.

            #AI #crypto #future #technology
            noomsh@mastodon.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
            noomsh@mastodon.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
            noomsh@mastodon.social
            wrote last edited by
            #5

            @blog
            Right out of school, I got a job as a VR developer. Just under two years in, I had to leave. They could claim they were using VR to study and practice complex cases, but in reality, most of my work ended up as a novelty, shown post-surgery at talks or conferences.
            A few years later, I’m really glad I left. Some things are all hype and no substance and they never change, at least not for the better.

            troutgirl@hachyderm.ioT 1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • blog@shkspr.mobiB blog@shkspr.mobi

              I'm OK being left behind, thanks!

              https://shkspr.mobi/blog/2026/03/im-ok-being-left-behind-thanks/

              Many years ago, someone tried to get me into cryptocurrencies. "They're the future of money!" they said. I replied saying that I'd rather wait until they were more useful, less volatile, easier to use, and utterly reliable.

              "You don't want to get left behind, do you?" They countered.

              That struck me as a bizarre sentiment. What is there to be left behind from? If BitCoin (or whatever) is going to liberate us all from economic drudgery, what's the point of "getting in early"? It'll still be there tomorrow and I can join the journey whenever it is sensible for me.

              Part of the crypto grift was telling people to "Have Fun Staying Poor". That weaponisation of FOMO was an insidious way to get people to drop their scepticism.

              I feel the same way about the current crop of AI tools. I've tried a bunch of them. Some are good. Most are a bit shit. Few are useful to me as they are now. I'm utterly content to wait until their hype has been realised. Why should I invest in learning the equivalent of WordStar for DOS when Google Docs is coming any-day-now?

              If this tech is as amazing as you say it is, I'll be able to pick it up and become productive on a timescale of my choosing not yours.

              I didn't use Git when it first came out. Once it was stable and jobs began demanding it, I picked it up. Might I be 7% more effective if I'd suffered through the early years? Maybe. But so what? I could just as easily have wasted my time learning something which never took off.

              I wrote my MSc on The Metaverse. Learning to built VR stuff was fun, but a complete waste of time. There was precisely zero utility in having gotten in early.

              Perhaps there are some things for which it is sensible to be on the cutting edge. I took part in a vaccine trial because I thought it might personally benefit me and, hopefully, humanity.

              But I'm struggling to think of anyone who has earned anything more than bragging rights by being first. Some early investors made money - but an equal and opposite number lost money. For every HTML 2.0 you might have tried, you were just as likely to have got stuck in the dead-end of Flash.

              There are a 16,000 new lives being born every hour. They're all starting with a fairly blank slate. Are you genuinely saying that they'll all be left behind because they didn't learn your technology in utero?

              No. That's obviously nonsense.

              It is 100% OK to wait and see if something is actually useful.

              #AI #crypto #future #technology
              fandasin@social.linux.pizzaF This user is from outside of this forum
              fandasin@social.linux.pizzaF This user is from outside of this forum
              fandasin@social.linux.pizza
              wrote last edited by
              #6

              @blog

              Lately I'm enjoying JOMO - "Joy of missing out" on so many things.

              So anytime anyone tries FOMO on me, I'm "I'll be reading book while you enjoy you [insert your MUST TRY poison of choice]".

              1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • blog@shkspr.mobiB blog@shkspr.mobi

                I'm OK being left behind, thanks!

                https://shkspr.mobi/blog/2026/03/im-ok-being-left-behind-thanks/

                Many years ago, someone tried to get me into cryptocurrencies. "They're the future of money!" they said. I replied saying that I'd rather wait until they were more useful, less volatile, easier to use, and utterly reliable.

                "You don't want to get left behind, do you?" They countered.

                That struck me as a bizarre sentiment. What is there to be left behind from? If BitCoin (or whatever) is going to liberate us all from economic drudgery, what's the point of "getting in early"? It'll still be there tomorrow and I can join the journey whenever it is sensible for me.

                Part of the crypto grift was telling people to "Have Fun Staying Poor". That weaponisation of FOMO was an insidious way to get people to drop their scepticism.

                I feel the same way about the current crop of AI tools. I've tried a bunch of them. Some are good. Most are a bit shit. Few are useful to me as they are now. I'm utterly content to wait until their hype has been realised. Why should I invest in learning the equivalent of WordStar for DOS when Google Docs is coming any-day-now?

                If this tech is as amazing as you say it is, I'll be able to pick it up and become productive on a timescale of my choosing not yours.

                I didn't use Git when it first came out. Once it was stable and jobs began demanding it, I picked it up. Might I be 7% more effective if I'd suffered through the early years? Maybe. But so what? I could just as easily have wasted my time learning something which never took off.

                I wrote my MSc on The Metaverse. Learning to built VR stuff was fun, but a complete waste of time. There was precisely zero utility in having gotten in early.

                Perhaps there are some things for which it is sensible to be on the cutting edge. I took part in a vaccine trial because I thought it might personally benefit me and, hopefully, humanity.

                But I'm struggling to think of anyone who has earned anything more than bragging rights by being first. Some early investors made money - but an equal and opposite number lost money. For every HTML 2.0 you might have tried, you were just as likely to have got stuck in the dead-end of Flash.

                There are a 16,000 new lives being born every hour. They're all starting with a fairly blank slate. Are you genuinely saying that they'll all be left behind because they didn't learn your technology in utero?

                No. That's obviously nonsense.

                It is 100% OK to wait and see if something is actually useful.

                #AI #crypto #future #technology
                darkoptimism@mstdn.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
                darkoptimism@mstdn.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
                darkoptimism@mstdn.social
                wrote last edited by
                #7

                @blog Highly recommend #BrettScott's exceptional piece on this:

                Link Preview Image
                Tech doesn’t make our lives easier. It makes them faster

                Supposedly technologies like AI and digital payments make our lives easier. In reality convenience is an illusion used to sell us automation-driven acceleration

                favicon

                (www.asomo.co)

                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • R relay@relay.an.exchange shared this topic
                • noomsh@mastodon.socialN noomsh@mastodon.social

                  @blog
                  Right out of school, I got a job as a VR developer. Just under two years in, I had to leave. They could claim they were using VR to study and practice complex cases, but in reality, most of my work ended up as a novelty, shown post-surgery at talks or conferences.
                  A few years later, I’m really glad I left. Some things are all hype and no substance and they never change, at least not for the better.

                  troutgirl@hachyderm.ioT This user is from outside of this forum
                  troutgirl@hachyderm.ioT This user is from outside of this forum
                  troutgirl@hachyderm.io
                  wrote last edited by
                  #8

                  @noomsh @blog My husband worked on the team at MSFT that made the Hololens software. The whole team got laid off a couple years ago. I have a friend who worked on the Meta Quest and after his team got laid off they reformed as a VR game studio. Now they're pivoting again to Steam and mobile.

                  noomsh@mastodon.socialN 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • blog@shkspr.mobiB blog@shkspr.mobi

                    I'm OK being left behind, thanks!

                    https://shkspr.mobi/blog/2026/03/im-ok-being-left-behind-thanks/

                    Many years ago, someone tried to get me into cryptocurrencies. "They're the future of money!" they said. I replied saying that I'd rather wait until they were more useful, less volatile, easier to use, and utterly reliable.

                    "You don't want to get left behind, do you?" They countered.

                    That struck me as a bizarre sentiment. What is there to be left behind from? If BitCoin (or whatever) is going to liberate us all from economic drudgery, what's the point of "getting in early"? It'll still be there tomorrow and I can join the journey whenever it is sensible for me.

                    Part of the crypto grift was telling people to "Have Fun Staying Poor". That weaponisation of FOMO was an insidious way to get people to drop their scepticism.

                    I feel the same way about the current crop of AI tools. I've tried a bunch of them. Some are good. Most are a bit shit. Few are useful to me as they are now. I'm utterly content to wait until their hype has been realised. Why should I invest in learning the equivalent of WordStar for DOS when Google Docs is coming any-day-now?

                    If this tech is as amazing as you say it is, I'll be able to pick it up and become productive on a timescale of my choosing not yours.

                    I didn't use Git when it first came out. Once it was stable and jobs began demanding it, I picked it up. Might I be 7% more effective if I'd suffered through the early years? Maybe. But so what? I could just as easily have wasted my time learning something which never took off.

                    I wrote my MSc on The Metaverse. Learning to built VR stuff was fun, but a complete waste of time. There was precisely zero utility in having gotten in early.

                    Perhaps there are some things for which it is sensible to be on the cutting edge. I took part in a vaccine trial because I thought it might personally benefit me and, hopefully, humanity.

                    But I'm struggling to think of anyone who has earned anything more than bragging rights by being first. Some early investors made money - but an equal and opposite number lost money. For every HTML 2.0 you might have tried, you were just as likely to have got stuck in the dead-end of Flash.

                    There are a 16,000 new lives being born every hour. They're all starting with a fairly blank slate. Are you genuinely saying that they'll all be left behind because they didn't learn your technology in utero?

                    No. That's obviously nonsense.

                    It is 100% OK to wait and see if something is actually useful.

                    #AI #crypto #future #technology
                    asprinkleofsage@mastodon.socialA This user is from outside of this forum
                    asprinkleofsage@mastodon.socialA This user is from outside of this forum
                    asprinkleofsage@mastodon.social
                    wrote last edited by
                    #9

                    @blog schrödinger's ai is extremely easy to use and utterly intuitive but also if you dont start using it now now now youll get left behind!

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • blog@shkspr.mobiB blog@shkspr.mobi

                      I'm OK being left behind, thanks!

                      https://shkspr.mobi/blog/2026/03/im-ok-being-left-behind-thanks/

                      Many years ago, someone tried to get me into cryptocurrencies. "They're the future of money!" they said. I replied saying that I'd rather wait until they were more useful, less volatile, easier to use, and utterly reliable.

                      "You don't want to get left behind, do you?" They countered.

                      That struck me as a bizarre sentiment. What is there to be left behind from? If BitCoin (or whatever) is going to liberate us all from economic drudgery, what's the point of "getting in early"? It'll still be there tomorrow and I can join the journey whenever it is sensible for me.

                      Part of the crypto grift was telling people to "Have Fun Staying Poor". That weaponisation of FOMO was an insidious way to get people to drop their scepticism.

                      I feel the same way about the current crop of AI tools. I've tried a bunch of them. Some are good. Most are a bit shit. Few are useful to me as they are now. I'm utterly content to wait until their hype has been realised. Why should I invest in learning the equivalent of WordStar for DOS when Google Docs is coming any-day-now?

                      If this tech is as amazing as you say it is, I'll be able to pick it up and become productive on a timescale of my choosing not yours.

                      I didn't use Git when it first came out. Once it was stable and jobs began demanding it, I picked it up. Might I be 7% more effective if I'd suffered through the early years? Maybe. But so what? I could just as easily have wasted my time learning something which never took off.

                      I wrote my MSc on The Metaverse. Learning to built VR stuff was fun, but a complete waste of time. There was precisely zero utility in having gotten in early.

                      Perhaps there are some things for which it is sensible to be on the cutting edge. I took part in a vaccine trial because I thought it might personally benefit me and, hopefully, humanity.

                      But I'm struggling to think of anyone who has earned anything more than bragging rights by being first. Some early investors made money - but an equal and opposite number lost money. For every HTML 2.0 you might have tried, you were just as likely to have got stuck in the dead-end of Flash.

                      There are a 16,000 new lives being born every hour. They're all starting with a fairly blank slate. Are you genuinely saying that they'll all be left behind because they didn't learn your technology in utero?

                      No. That's obviously nonsense.

                      It is 100% OK to wait and see if something is actually useful.

                      #AI #crypto #future #technology
                      the5thcolumnist@mstdn.caT This user is from outside of this forum
                      the5thcolumnist@mstdn.caT This user is from outside of this forum
                      the5thcolumnist@mstdn.ca
                      wrote last edited by
                      #10

                      @blog

                      Saying you will regret being left behind is an admission it is a Ponzi Scheme where only early adopters benefit and everyone else gets screwed.

                      dogfox@kpop.socialD 1 Reply Last reply
                      2
                      0
                      • R relay@relay.infosec.exchange shared this topic
                        R relay@relay.mycrowd.ca shared this topic
                      • timwardcam@c.imT timwardcam@c.im

                        @blog WordStar (on CP/M rather than DOS) was a seriously big deal at the time and made an enormous difference. You could type your own documents and didn't have to be frightened of what the typist would say when you went to them with corrections.

                        the5thcolumnist@mstdn.caT This user is from outside of this forum
                        the5thcolumnist@mstdn.caT This user is from outside of this forum
                        the5thcolumnist@mstdn.ca
                        wrote last edited by
                        #11

                        @TimWardCam @blog

                        And perhaps the only word processor actually designed for people who knew how to type, AKA touch typists.

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        2
                        0
                        • troutgirl@hachyderm.ioT troutgirl@hachyderm.io

                          @noomsh @blog My husband worked on the team at MSFT that made the Hololens software. The whole team got laid off a couple years ago. I have a friend who worked on the Meta Quest and after his team got laid off they reformed as a VR game studio. Now they're pivoting again to Steam and mobile.

                          noomsh@mastodon.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
                          noomsh@mastodon.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
                          noomsh@mastodon.social
                          wrote last edited by
                          #12

                          @troutgirl @blog
                          And that’s the second reason I’m glad I left VR. Though it would be incredibly naive to think my current job is safe from layoffs :cries-in-still-have-mortgage-to-pay:

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • blog@shkspr.mobiB blog@shkspr.mobi

                            I'm OK being left behind, thanks!

                            https://shkspr.mobi/blog/2026/03/im-ok-being-left-behind-thanks/

                            Many years ago, someone tried to get me into cryptocurrencies. "They're the future of money!" they said. I replied saying that I'd rather wait until they were more useful, less volatile, easier to use, and utterly reliable.

                            "You don't want to get left behind, do you?" They countered.

                            That struck me as a bizarre sentiment. What is there to be left behind from? If BitCoin (or whatever) is going to liberate us all from economic drudgery, what's the point of "getting in early"? It'll still be there tomorrow and I can join the journey whenever it is sensible for me.

                            Part of the crypto grift was telling people to "Have Fun Staying Poor". That weaponisation of FOMO was an insidious way to get people to drop their scepticism.

                            I feel the same way about the current crop of AI tools. I've tried a bunch of them. Some are good. Most are a bit shit. Few are useful to me as they are now. I'm utterly content to wait until their hype has been realised. Why should I invest in learning the equivalent of WordStar for DOS when Google Docs is coming any-day-now?

                            If this tech is as amazing as you say it is, I'll be able to pick it up and become productive on a timescale of my choosing not yours.

                            I didn't use Git when it first came out. Once it was stable and jobs began demanding it, I picked it up. Might I be 7% more effective if I'd suffered through the early years? Maybe. But so what? I could just as easily have wasted my time learning something which never took off.

                            I wrote my MSc on The Metaverse. Learning to built VR stuff was fun, but a complete waste of time. There was precisely zero utility in having gotten in early.

                            Perhaps there are some things for which it is sensible to be on the cutting edge. I took part in a vaccine trial because I thought it might personally benefit me and, hopefully, humanity.

                            But I'm struggling to think of anyone who has earned anything more than bragging rights by being first. Some early investors made money - but an equal and opposite number lost money. For every HTML 2.0 you might have tried, you were just as likely to have got stuck in the dead-end of Flash.

                            There are a 16,000 new lives being born every hour. They're all starting with a fairly blank slate. Are you genuinely saying that they'll all be left behind because they didn't learn your technology in utero?

                            No. That's obviously nonsense.

                            It is 100% OK to wait and see if something is actually useful.

                            #AI #crypto #future #technology
                            billysmith@social.coopB This user is from outside of this forum
                            billysmith@social.coopB This user is from outside of this forum
                            billysmith@social.coop
                            wrote last edited by
                            #13

                            @blog

                            One mentor told me that working in technology means that you are always having to guess which new technology will take off, and which will crash.

                            Wait till it hits the commodity end of the hype cycle and, while you won't win the lottery, you won't lose as you didn't play. 😄

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • blog@shkspr.mobiB blog@shkspr.mobi

                              I'm OK being left behind, thanks!

                              https://shkspr.mobi/blog/2026/03/im-ok-being-left-behind-thanks/

                              Many years ago, someone tried to get me into cryptocurrencies. "They're the future of money!" they said. I replied saying that I'd rather wait until they were more useful, less volatile, easier to use, and utterly reliable.

                              "You don't want to get left behind, do you?" They countered.

                              That struck me as a bizarre sentiment. What is there to be left behind from? If BitCoin (or whatever) is going to liberate us all from economic drudgery, what's the point of "getting in early"? It'll still be there tomorrow and I can join the journey whenever it is sensible for me.

                              Part of the crypto grift was telling people to "Have Fun Staying Poor". That weaponisation of FOMO was an insidious way to get people to drop their scepticism.

                              I feel the same way about the current crop of AI tools. I've tried a bunch of them. Some are good. Most are a bit shit. Few are useful to me as they are now. I'm utterly content to wait until their hype has been realised. Why should I invest in learning the equivalent of WordStar for DOS when Google Docs is coming any-day-now?

                              If this tech is as amazing as you say it is, I'll be able to pick it up and become productive on a timescale of my choosing not yours.

                              I didn't use Git when it first came out. Once it was stable and jobs began demanding it, I picked it up. Might I be 7% more effective if I'd suffered through the early years? Maybe. But so what? I could just as easily have wasted my time learning something which never took off.

                              I wrote my MSc on The Metaverse. Learning to built VR stuff was fun, but a complete waste of time. There was precisely zero utility in having gotten in early.

                              Perhaps there are some things for which it is sensible to be on the cutting edge. I took part in a vaccine trial because I thought it might personally benefit me and, hopefully, humanity.

                              But I'm struggling to think of anyone who has earned anything more than bragging rights by being first. Some early investors made money - but an equal and opposite number lost money. For every HTML 2.0 you might have tried, you were just as likely to have got stuck in the dead-end of Flash.

                              There are a 16,000 new lives being born every hour. They're all starting with a fairly blank slate. Are you genuinely saying that they'll all be left behind because they didn't learn your technology in utero?

                              No. That's obviously nonsense.

                              It is 100% OK to wait and see if something is actually useful.

                              #AI #crypto #future #technology
                              semitones@tiny.tilde.websiteS This user is from outside of this forum
                              semitones@tiny.tilde.websiteS This user is from outside of this forum
                              semitones@tiny.tilde.website
                              wrote last edited by
                              #14

                              @blog Also by using them you're a participating in their theft of writers and artists' work so there's that too.

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • blog@shkspr.mobiB blog@shkspr.mobi

                                I'm OK being left behind, thanks!

                                https://shkspr.mobi/blog/2026/03/im-ok-being-left-behind-thanks/

                                Many years ago, someone tried to get me into cryptocurrencies. "They're the future of money!" they said. I replied saying that I'd rather wait until they were more useful, less volatile, easier to use, and utterly reliable.

                                "You don't want to get left behind, do you?" They countered.

                                That struck me as a bizarre sentiment. What is there to be left behind from? If BitCoin (or whatever) is going to liberate us all from economic drudgery, what's the point of "getting in early"? It'll still be there tomorrow and I can join the journey whenever it is sensible for me.

                                Part of the crypto grift was telling people to "Have Fun Staying Poor". That weaponisation of FOMO was an insidious way to get people to drop their scepticism.

                                I feel the same way about the current crop of AI tools. I've tried a bunch of them. Some are good. Most are a bit shit. Few are useful to me as they are now. I'm utterly content to wait until their hype has been realised. Why should I invest in learning the equivalent of WordStar for DOS when Google Docs is coming any-day-now?

                                If this tech is as amazing as you say it is, I'll be able to pick it up and become productive on a timescale of my choosing not yours.

                                I didn't use Git when it first came out. Once it was stable and jobs began demanding it, I picked it up. Might I be 7% more effective if I'd suffered through the early years? Maybe. But so what? I could just as easily have wasted my time learning something which never took off.

                                I wrote my MSc on The Metaverse. Learning to built VR stuff was fun, but a complete waste of time. There was precisely zero utility in having gotten in early.

                                Perhaps there are some things for which it is sensible to be on the cutting edge. I took part in a vaccine trial because I thought it might personally benefit me and, hopefully, humanity.

                                But I'm struggling to think of anyone who has earned anything more than bragging rights by being first. Some early investors made money - but an equal and opposite number lost money. For every HTML 2.0 you might have tried, you were just as likely to have got stuck in the dead-end of Flash.

                                There are a 16,000 new lives being born every hour. They're all starting with a fairly blank slate. Are you genuinely saying that they'll all be left behind because they didn't learn your technology in utero?

                                No. That's obviously nonsense.

                                It is 100% OK to wait and see if something is actually useful.

                                #AI #crypto #future #technology
                                vicarvernon@mastodon.me.ukV This user is from outside of this forum
                                vicarvernon@mastodon.me.ukV This user is from outside of this forum
                                vicarvernon@mastodon.me.uk
                                wrote last edited by
                                #15

                                @blog there's a reason the cutting edge of something, say technology, is often called the bleeding edge. It's far too often expensive and hurts.

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • blog@shkspr.mobiB blog@shkspr.mobi

                                  I'm OK being left behind, thanks!

                                  https://shkspr.mobi/blog/2026/03/im-ok-being-left-behind-thanks/

                                  Many years ago, someone tried to get me into cryptocurrencies. "They're the future of money!" they said. I replied saying that I'd rather wait until they were more useful, less volatile, easier to use, and utterly reliable.

                                  "You don't want to get left behind, do you?" They countered.

                                  That struck me as a bizarre sentiment. What is there to be left behind from? If BitCoin (or whatever) is going to liberate us all from economic drudgery, what's the point of "getting in early"? It'll still be there tomorrow and I can join the journey whenever it is sensible for me.

                                  Part of the crypto grift was telling people to "Have Fun Staying Poor". That weaponisation of FOMO was an insidious way to get people to drop their scepticism.

                                  I feel the same way about the current crop of AI tools. I've tried a bunch of them. Some are good. Most are a bit shit. Few are useful to me as they are now. I'm utterly content to wait until their hype has been realised. Why should I invest in learning the equivalent of WordStar for DOS when Google Docs is coming any-day-now?

                                  If this tech is as amazing as you say it is, I'll be able to pick it up and become productive on a timescale of my choosing not yours.

                                  I didn't use Git when it first came out. Once it was stable and jobs began demanding it, I picked it up. Might I be 7% more effective if I'd suffered through the early years? Maybe. But so what? I could just as easily have wasted my time learning something which never took off.

                                  I wrote my MSc on The Metaverse. Learning to built VR stuff was fun, but a complete waste of time. There was precisely zero utility in having gotten in early.

                                  Perhaps there are some things for which it is sensible to be on the cutting edge. I took part in a vaccine trial because I thought it might personally benefit me and, hopefully, humanity.

                                  But I'm struggling to think of anyone who has earned anything more than bragging rights by being first. Some early investors made money - but an equal and opposite number lost money. For every HTML 2.0 you might have tried, you were just as likely to have got stuck in the dead-end of Flash.

                                  There are a 16,000 new lives being born every hour. They're all starting with a fairly blank slate. Are you genuinely saying that they'll all be left behind because they didn't learn your technology in utero?

                                  No. That's obviously nonsense.

                                  It is 100% OK to wait and see if something is actually useful.

                                  #AI #crypto #future #technology
                                  numodular@c.imN This user is from outside of this forum
                                  numodular@c.imN This user is from outside of this forum
                                  numodular@c.im
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #16

                                  @blog Here's some sustainable math:

                                  If an opposite doesn't have a minimum Phi/Pi root in a middle range; it's 'brief art'.

                                  Soft money/value has to have long-term rooting in middle Hard metrics, in order to avoid wild swings that lack the mitigating, stabilizing middle - especially when you consider the vast use of money in local~global value systems.

                                  See: Value Theory, Systems Theory, Set Theory

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • the5thcolumnist@mstdn.caT the5thcolumnist@mstdn.ca

                                    @blog

                                    Saying you will regret being left behind is an admission it is a Ponzi Scheme where only early adopters benefit and everyone else gets screwed.

                                    dogfox@kpop.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
                                    dogfox@kpop.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
                                    dogfox@kpop.social
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #17

                                    This is the only correction I could offer to OP: some people who got in early on crypto wound up loaded, which happens to some people who get in early on Ponzi schemes.

                                    @the5thColumnist @blog

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • blog@shkspr.mobiB blog@shkspr.mobi

                                      I'm OK being left behind, thanks!

                                      https://shkspr.mobi/blog/2026/03/im-ok-being-left-behind-thanks/

                                      Many years ago, someone tried to get me into cryptocurrencies. "They're the future of money!" they said. I replied saying that I'd rather wait until they were more useful, less volatile, easier to use, and utterly reliable.

                                      "You don't want to get left behind, do you?" They countered.

                                      That struck me as a bizarre sentiment. What is there to be left behind from? If BitCoin (or whatever) is going to liberate us all from economic drudgery, what's the point of "getting in early"? It'll still be there tomorrow and I can join the journey whenever it is sensible for me.

                                      Part of the crypto grift was telling people to "Have Fun Staying Poor". That weaponisation of FOMO was an insidious way to get people to drop their scepticism.

                                      I feel the same way about the current crop of AI tools. I've tried a bunch of them. Some are good. Most are a bit shit. Few are useful to me as they are now. I'm utterly content to wait until their hype has been realised. Why should I invest in learning the equivalent of WordStar for DOS when Google Docs is coming any-day-now?

                                      If this tech is as amazing as you say it is, I'll be able to pick it up and become productive on a timescale of my choosing not yours.

                                      I didn't use Git when it first came out. Once it was stable and jobs began demanding it, I picked it up. Might I be 7% more effective if I'd suffered through the early years? Maybe. But so what? I could just as easily have wasted my time learning something which never took off.

                                      I wrote my MSc on The Metaverse. Learning to built VR stuff was fun, but a complete waste of time. There was precisely zero utility in having gotten in early.

                                      Perhaps there are some things for which it is sensible to be on the cutting edge. I took part in a vaccine trial because I thought it might personally benefit me and, hopefully, humanity.

                                      But I'm struggling to think of anyone who has earned anything more than bragging rights by being first. Some early investors made money - but an equal and opposite number lost money. For every HTML 2.0 you might have tried, you were just as likely to have got stuck in the dead-end of Flash.

                                      There are a 16,000 new lives being born every hour. They're all starting with a fairly blank slate. Are you genuinely saying that they'll all be left behind because they didn't learn your technology in utero?

                                      No. That's obviously nonsense.

                                      It is 100% OK to wait and see if something is actually useful.

                                      #AI #crypto #future #technology
                                      dvshkn@social.treehouse.systemsD This user is from outside of this forum
                                      dvshkn@social.treehouse.systemsD This user is from outside of this forum
                                      dvshkn@social.treehouse.systems
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #18

                                      @blog I really dislike the mentality that crypto cemented in the minds of the general public, that if you are simply a FAN of a thing early that it will make you rich.

                                      I think this is a lot of what is behind the AI spam problem as people have had to come to terms with the fact that they do not in fact hold a claudecoin that will reward them for sitting on their ass. That claude sub is actually the reverse, where they are paying for the privilege of feeling like they are early.

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • blog@shkspr.mobiB blog@shkspr.mobi

                                        I'm OK being left behind, thanks!

                                        https://shkspr.mobi/blog/2026/03/im-ok-being-left-behind-thanks/

                                        Many years ago, someone tried to get me into cryptocurrencies. "They're the future of money!" they said. I replied saying that I'd rather wait until they were more useful, less volatile, easier to use, and utterly reliable.

                                        "You don't want to get left behind, do you?" They countered.

                                        That struck me as a bizarre sentiment. What is there to be left behind from? If BitCoin (or whatever) is going to liberate us all from economic drudgery, what's the point of "getting in early"? It'll still be there tomorrow and I can join the journey whenever it is sensible for me.

                                        Part of the crypto grift was telling people to "Have Fun Staying Poor". That weaponisation of FOMO was an insidious way to get people to drop their scepticism.

                                        I feel the same way about the current crop of AI tools. I've tried a bunch of them. Some are good. Most are a bit shit. Few are useful to me as they are now. I'm utterly content to wait until their hype has been realised. Why should I invest in learning the equivalent of WordStar for DOS when Google Docs is coming any-day-now?

                                        If this tech is as amazing as you say it is, I'll be able to pick it up and become productive on a timescale of my choosing not yours.

                                        I didn't use Git when it first came out. Once it was stable and jobs began demanding it, I picked it up. Might I be 7% more effective if I'd suffered through the early years? Maybe. But so what? I could just as easily have wasted my time learning something which never took off.

                                        I wrote my MSc on The Metaverse. Learning to built VR stuff was fun, but a complete waste of time. There was precisely zero utility in having gotten in early.

                                        Perhaps there are some things for which it is sensible to be on the cutting edge. I took part in a vaccine trial because I thought it might personally benefit me and, hopefully, humanity.

                                        But I'm struggling to think of anyone who has earned anything more than bragging rights by being first. Some early investors made money - but an equal and opposite number lost money. For every HTML 2.0 you might have tried, you were just as likely to have got stuck in the dead-end of Flash.

                                        There are a 16,000 new lives being born every hour. They're all starting with a fairly blank slate. Are you genuinely saying that they'll all be left behind because they didn't learn your technology in utero?

                                        No. That's obviously nonsense.

                                        It is 100% OK to wait and see if something is actually useful.

                                        #AI #crypto #future #technology
                                        chuff@bark.wolp.chatC This user is from outside of this forum
                                        chuff@bark.wolp.chatC This user is from outside of this forum
                                        chuff@bark.wolp.chat
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #19

                                        @blog@shkspr.mobi

                                        This speaks to me, this is my approach to just about anything that's being sold to me, whether the latest thing like crypto or AI, or even more basic stuff like food or clothing or phones

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • blog@shkspr.mobiB blog@shkspr.mobi

                                          I'm OK being left behind, thanks!

                                          https://shkspr.mobi/blog/2026/03/im-ok-being-left-behind-thanks/

                                          Many years ago, someone tried to get me into cryptocurrencies. "They're the future of money!" they said. I replied saying that I'd rather wait until they were more useful, less volatile, easier to use, and utterly reliable.

                                          "You don't want to get left behind, do you?" They countered.

                                          That struck me as a bizarre sentiment. What is there to be left behind from? If BitCoin (or whatever) is going to liberate us all from economic drudgery, what's the point of "getting in early"? It'll still be there tomorrow and I can join the journey whenever it is sensible for me.

                                          Part of the crypto grift was telling people to "Have Fun Staying Poor". That weaponisation of FOMO was an insidious way to get people to drop their scepticism.

                                          I feel the same way about the current crop of AI tools. I've tried a bunch of them. Some are good. Most are a bit shit. Few are useful to me as they are now. I'm utterly content to wait until their hype has been realised. Why should I invest in learning the equivalent of WordStar for DOS when Google Docs is coming any-day-now?

                                          If this tech is as amazing as you say it is, I'll be able to pick it up and become productive on a timescale of my choosing not yours.

                                          I didn't use Git when it first came out. Once it was stable and jobs began demanding it, I picked it up. Might I be 7% more effective if I'd suffered through the early years? Maybe. But so what? I could just as easily have wasted my time learning something which never took off.

                                          I wrote my MSc on The Metaverse. Learning to built VR stuff was fun, but a complete waste of time. There was precisely zero utility in having gotten in early.

                                          Perhaps there are some things for which it is sensible to be on the cutting edge. I took part in a vaccine trial because I thought it might personally benefit me and, hopefully, humanity.

                                          But I'm struggling to think of anyone who has earned anything more than bragging rights by being first. Some early investors made money - but an equal and opposite number lost money. For every HTML 2.0 you might have tried, you were just as likely to have got stuck in the dead-end of Flash.

                                          There are a 16,000 new lives being born every hour. They're all starting with a fairly blank slate. Are you genuinely saying that they'll all be left behind because they didn't learn your technology in utero?

                                          No. That's obviously nonsense.

                                          It is 100% OK to wait and see if something is actually useful.

                                          #AI #crypto #future #technology
                                          crazyeddie@mastodon.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
                                          crazyeddie@mastodon.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
                                          crazyeddie@mastodon.social
                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #20

                                          @blog "I could just as easily have wasted my time learning something which never took off."

                                          I purposefully choose this option if I can find it.

                                          1 Reply Last reply
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