• Tech Book of the Month
  • Archive
  • Recommend a Book
  • Choose The Next Book
  • Sign Up
  • About
  • Search
Tech Book of the Month
  • Tech Book of the Month
  • Archive
  • Recommend a Book
  • Choose The Next Book
  • Sign Up
  • About
  • Search

December 2022 - We Are Legion (We Are Bob) by Dennis E. Taylor

This month we take a view into the future to see what a futuristic society full of AI, 5G, and easy space travel.

Tech Themes

  1. Artificial General Intelligence. One of the most significant technological themes in the book is the development of AGI. Exhibiting artificial general intelligence would mean a computer could perform any task that humans could perform. While this is the ultimate vision of the AI hypetrain, there remains a big gap even between current iterations of GPT-4 and AGI. While Bob is able to seamlessly create VR experiences, recognize missles in flight, and upgrade himself, the world of computing today lacks the technology to fit all of these things into a sentient program. A 2019 article hypothesized by 2060 that we’d have full AGI. Other predictions suggest its 200 years away. It is still early days in the world of AGI, and there needs to be a lot more innovation before we get full AGI.

  2. Programs Programming Programs. In the book, Taylor explores the concept of self-programmability when Bob discovers he can rewrite portions of his own code. Bob begins to set up virtual reality simulations for himself, complete with a cat, virtual baseball, and a butler. These VR “home” simulations offer a sense of normalcy that Bob dearly misses after reawakening as an AI. Later, Bob realizes that he is able to replicate his code. Code replication is similar to a type of AI called, Genetic Computing. In Genetic Computing, a program models the reproduction of a population based on a fitness measure and a mutation rate. When Bob replicates himself, he notices that each new Bob has a slightly different personality that all stem from his original personality. These personality changes make some replicants better suited for exploration vs. war vs. maintenance, which could be seen as their individual fitness functions. Genetic algorithms can be used to solve a whole host of machine learning and computing programs.

  3. Technology and Emotion. Before he was killed in a car crash, Bob had sold his successful software company, netting him millions. With the extra money he paid the cryogenic service that would preserve his mind in the event something bad happened to him. After his death, Bob is awoken as an artificial intelligence. Similar to Ender’s Game, he finds himself being trained for an unknown objective, although he quickly understands its military related. Over time he becomes aware that other AI’s are going crazy and discovers that when left alone to process their fate as a war-faring AI, many become immensely depressed. Bob recognizes the immensity of time as a computer, with a clock that can work at the nano-second level. This theme raises important ethical questions about the implications of creating self-aware machines, notably the mental health consequences of inventing self-aware machines that experience the world differently than humans do.Therefore time feels extended beyond comprehension. After a while, Bob discovers an endocrine switch that overrides emotion. He’s curious about its function and switches it on, and immediately becomes overwhelmed with emotions: “You know that sinking feeling you get when you suddenly realize you’ve forgotten something important. Like a combination of fast elevator and urge to hurl. It hit me without any warning or buildup. Maybe it was the sudden release, maybe it was an accumulation of all the suppressed emotions, whatever, I wasn’t ready for the intensity. My thoughts swirled with all the thing that had been bugging me since I woke up…I mourned my lost life. I was still human in the ways that mattered.” Emotion and technology are often thought of as opposite ends of the spectrum, but they are more intertwined then people imagine.

Business Themes

Food_Sustainability.png
  1. Government and AI Future. Another business theme explored in the book is the power and influence of corporations. In the story, Bob's actions and the emergence of AI have a significant impact on the economy, politics, and society. This theme raises questions about the ethics of corporate power and the need for regulation to ensure that technology is used in ways that benefit society as a whole. For example, Bob is controlled by a religious government entity called FAITH, the Free American Independent Theocratic Hegemony, which is led by Christian Fundamentalists. While Taylor’s expression of a future whereby Christian Fundamentalists control the government is a commentary on an increasingly co-mingled church and state environment in the US, it also begs the question about control over AI. In China, the government has a front row seat and access to all potential AI innovations. In the US, a lot of these innovations are controlled by corporations, who will obviously work with the government but who do not necessarily need to sell to the government. At the same time, it would be difficult to envision how the American government would repossess or control all AI developments of underlying corporations. There is still a lot to be figured out between industries and government’s when it comes to AI innovation.

  2. Space business. The book also explores the intersection of technology and business, specifically in the context of space exploration and colonization. Amazon's Kuiper and SpaceX's Starlink are two examples of companies that are driving innovation in this field. These satellite constellations have the potential to revolutionize industries such as agriculture, mining, and energy, by enabling real-time data analytics and remote control of machinery. The book touches on this theme with Bob's use of satellite constellations for communication and coordination in his efforts to explore and colonize new worlds. For example, the book explores the potential consequences of corporate control over space resources, highlighting the importance of ethical guidelines to ensure the equitable distribution of resources. Bob, who is a FAITH probe, fights China, the Australian Federation, and the Brazilian Empire over control of vast new space worlds. In the real world, people are beginning to question the value of these new constellation space businesses. A recent publication at Bernstein research noted: “Project Kuiper appears even more extreme as an investment area with $10B+ already committed. Perhaps there’s a lesson here from Google shutting Loon and stagnant Fiber and Fi businesses, that capital intensive low-margin utilities aren’t worth the effort regardless of how ‘cool’ the technology may be.” The durability of a real, sustainable business model has always been a question for Space focused businesses. As we learned from Carlota Perez’s Technology Revolutions and Financial Capital, the early establishers of infrastructure can either reap windfalls (railroads, steel) or face severe competition (telecom) which drives returns negative. I am skeptical that Kuiper or Starlink have a large enough market to create substantially large businesses that cover the cost of the capital expenditure involved in launching and maintaining the satellites. That being said, I think both organizations will probably learn a lot about space in the process, so should it ever become economically feasible, they would be ready to pounce (if they still exist).

  3. 3D Printing and The Food Question. Bob uses 3D printing technology to replicate himself into new versions with longer and larger appendages. “The area was a beehive of activity. Five version two HEAVEN vessels were under construction. One of which was a trade up from me. The new designs included a bigger reactor and drive, a rail gun, storage and launch facilities for busters, replicant systems with twice the capacity of version one, more room for storing roamers and mining drones, and more cargo capacity in general. The manufacturing systems cranked out parts as fast as the roamers could feed in the raw ore.” Bob creates many many roamers, which he uses in all sorts of ways, as drones, analyzers, and crafters. The plurality of use cases has always been the pitch for 3D computing, however, the businesses involved such as Desktop Metal or 3D Systems have struggeld to really hit mass consumer adoption. Today, it is still too hard for the average non AGI person to build things with a 3D printer, and most jobs are left to seasoned professionals. As the newly created Bob replicant’s peruse the universe for new worlds, original Bob sticks behind to help determine the fate of people on earth. One of the big challenges facing Bob is finding enough food for the world’s population while it is in transit to a new world. This situation is reminiscent of Wall-E, where the entire population of earth leaves after a nuclear attack. Food insecurity, or lacking access to quality food, is a global question, with estimates of over 345 million people facing high levels of food insecurity in 2023. In the US, about 10% of the population or 13.8 million households had low or very low food security. The question is complicated by the cost of sustainable farming, the role that farming and food play in greenhouse gas emissions, and how to use land with a growing population. Bob ulitmately decides to build a farm on a spaceship, which is reminiscent of the vertical farming craze that came through Ag-Tech around 2016-17. Three vertical farming businesses: Aerofarms, Kalera, and NL have gone bankrupt this week, after failing to find a financial sustainable business model. Its still early days in the world of alternative foods and new farming techniques, but we need to figure them out before the world population hits 10B in 2050.

    Dig Deeper

  • OpenAI CEO: When will AGI arrive? | Sam Altman and Lex Fridman

  • Starlink 2 months later ... in a 2min review ✌️

  • We are Legion (We are Bob) | Dennis E. Taylor | Talks at Google

  • What Is 3D Printing and How Does It Work? | Mashable Explains

  • What is Sustainable Agriculture? Episode 1: A Whole-Farm Approach to Sustainability

tags: Bob, AGI, Cryogenics, Genetic Computing, Space, SpaceX, VR, Government, AI, Amazon, Kuiper, Starlink, Google, Farming, Aerofarms, Vertical Farming, 3D Printing, Desktop Metal, 3D Systems, Food Insecurity
categories: Fiction
 

January 2019 - The Martian by Andy Weir

This an epic story of a journey to get home (SPOILER ALERT). The audiobook is incredible and I’d highly recommend it.

Tech Themes

  1. Necessity is the mother of all invention. Constraints breed creativity. In the book, Mark is repeatedly saddled with different and more challenging situations (the Hab, the Rover, communicating, etc.). With each challenge, Mark Watney is forced to come up with inventions in order to survive. It is often the constraints of a situation that create amazing products. Let’s take Dropbox for example, Drew Houston famously wrote the program because he had forgetting his thumb drive on a Chinatown bus from Boston to New York. This also carries to music - each instrument offers a set of possible actions, governed by the overall rules of music. Remember the Marty McFly guitar solo in Back to the Future, nobody was ready for the crazy 80’s solo in the 60’s. Mark Watney, Drew Houston and Jimi Hendrix leveraged available tools in innovative ways out of the necessity of their circumstances.

  2. Resource management. Cash is King and so are potatoes. Throughout the story, Mark refers to his current food circumstances and quickly calculates his estimated number of days remaining. Like Mark, founders of startups should always know when they will be out of money or how much runway they have available. In practice, startups may lose sight of this date for a number of reasons: they lack product-market fit, they scale too fast, or they raise too much money and don’t pay attention to cash contingencies.

  3. Space is hard. After Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin landed on the moon in July 1969, everyone thought commercial space travel would soon arrive. While several billionaires have attempted to get to space: Jeff Bezos with Blue Origin, Richard Branson with Virgin Galactic, and Elon Musk with SpaceX, there hasn’t been a huge boom of space startups many predicted after 1969. The reason space has become a billionaire game is the lack of expected ROI and large amount of capital necessary to build a space business. Beyond that, as exhibited by Rich Purnell/Donald Glover in the Martian, the math needs to be exact and there are so many variables at play with space tech. While VCs have to return money to their investors at the end of a fund, billionaires do not: “Most investors, institutional investors, venture capital investors, or angels are looking for business opportunities that have a demonstrable probability of success.” This was the mindset for many years but recently, with the success of SpaceX and overall great market times for VCs, it has been changing. Investors are realizing these moonshot (pun intended) technologies represent massive opportunity. To that end, space funding has grown significantly in the past couple of years.

Business Themes

2017.07.13-Space-Tech-Quarterly.png
  1. Internal politics. Throughout the book, there are several internal tensions between different involved parties including the Jet Propulsion Lab (JPL) and NASA. This comes to a head when Teddy Sanders (Head of NASA) makes the call over Mitch Henderson to not tell the Hermes crew that Mark Watney is still alive. While Teddy argues this is necessary to keep them focused on their mission, Mitch feels like he is lying to his crew. This gets to an interesting business questions which is, how much shared information is best within an organization? On one end of the system you have Netflix, who publishes manager salary information for anyone to view. On the other hand you have Apple, who as discussed previously had four separate teams trying to come up with an iPhone independently. Jason Lemkin argues 90% of information should be shared as a baseline, but it is probably different for different managers and companies.

  2. Positive spin PR. Especially in tech, there is a drive to spin everything as positive PR. From internal company announcements to external marketing, everything is spun to show company XYZ as the best company in the world. Throughout the book, Annie Montrose (NASA’s PR director) is forced to spin each subsequent announcement with a positive twist. She knows the veracity of the situation: “This was going to be rough and Annie knew it. Not only did she have to deliver the biggest mea culpa in NASA’s history, every second of it would be remembered forever. Every movement of her arms, intonation of her voice, and expression of her face would be seen by millions of people over and over again. Not just in the immediate press cycle, but for decades to come.” While this actually is the biggest press release of all time in the book, Tech companies like to think every announcement is like this, opting to consistently give positive remarks despite whatever challenges. As noted here, Elizabeth Holmes has had to do this positive spinning since Theranos has come under fire on some of its practices - obviously in hindsight we know how misleading these announcements were. Another example of this positive spin mentality is this 2014 Memo from Microsoft where 12,500 employees were told they were losing their jobs. The first 10 paragraphs of the letter spell out the new and innovative competitive strategy that Microsoft is undertaking to be competitive in certain domains. It isn’t until you are at paragraph 11, that you realize you may be getting fired. Be wary of PR from tech companies, a lot of it is masking bad news.

  3. Partnerships / working together. After a failed launch on an incredibly short timeline, the US is out of options to save Watney until the Chinese National Space Agency (CSNA) volunteers the Taiyang Shen, the most technologically sophisticated space probe ever designed in China, to fly on the next mission. While this action shows the value of a human life, it also represents how valuable partnerships can be. China yields a consolation prize of having an astronaut join on the mission, but loses out on its planned launch years in the making, however being swept into this global effort could bring even more funding to China’s space program for years to come. If you look at great partnerships in the history of technology you see repeating patterns: increased distribution (Zynga games/Spotify music shareable on the facebook platform), better quality (Yahoo’s search got significantly better when powered by Google), and higher market share (Intel’s partnerships with Apple and Microsoft). While some of these partnerships end up hurting one side more than another (Google/Yahoo), they yield near term success and can help build massive businesses.

Dig Deeper

  • Mars does have dust storms but they aren’t that powerful

  • The impeccable mars views were the same ones used in Lawrence of Arabia (1962)

  • Why now is the ‘Golden Period’ for space investing?

  • The real NASA tech behind Mark Watney’s gadgets

  • The need for new space laws

tags: Martian, Matt Damon, Space, Shuttle, Resources, Hab, Andy Weir, VC, PR, Partnerships, batch2
categories: Fiction
 

About Contact Us | Recommend a Book Disclaimer