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Weekly Dose of Optimism #4

 1 year ago
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Weekly Dose of Optimism #4

Brain-Computer Interface, Mars Mission, Climate, Hard Work, Kim Stanley Robinson

6 hr ago

Come for the Optimism, stay for the in-depth analyses of tech companies and trends:

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Hi friends šŸ‘‹,

Happy Friday! Welcome to our 4th Weekly Dose of Optimism, where we celebrate the incredible accomplishments humans manage to pull off and the progress that weā€™re ā€” unsteadily and windingly ā€” making.

Letā€™s get to it.

(1) Brain-Computer Interface Startup Implants First Device in US Patient

Ashlee Vance for Bloomberg

I feel like we are at the beginning of a renaissance around brain decoding.

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Synchron CEO Thomas Oxley, Bryan Anselm for Bloomberg Businessweek

In early July, a startup called Synchron implanted a device into the brain of a patient with ALS that will let the patient use the internet, text, and email, just by thinking. This is sci-fi happening in real-time, and benefiting people afflicted with crippling diseases first. Synchron has already implanted devices in Australian patients, and thereā€™s a long way to go before we live in the world Tim Urban described in Neuralink and the Brainā€™s Magical Future, but itā€™s an incredible step.

(2) Two Companies Aim to Beat SpaceX to Mars With ā€˜Audaciousā€™ Landing

Kenneth Chang for The New York Times

Timothy Ellis, the chief executive and a founder of Relativity, said the way that SpaceX aspired to do things ā€œat the edge of crazy and ambitious and audaciousā€ was an inspiration.

ā€œThose kinds of goals attract the best people to work on them,ā€ Mr. Ellis said. ā€œWe are more audacious than some of the other companies.ā€

ā€œI feel like if itā€™s not something thatā€™s challenging and that people think is difficult and you may not be able to do it, itā€™s not hard enough,ā€ [Impulse Space Founder] Mr. [Thomas] Mueller said. ā€œWe need to do stuff that people think canā€™t be done.ā€

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Screenshot of animatorā€™s interpretation from Relativity Space/Impulse Space

Two startups, Relativity Space and Impulse Space, announce that theyā€™ve teamed up to attempt the first private space mission to Mars, which they hope to launch as soon as two and a half years from now, when Earth and Mars line up next. An announcement ā‰  a successful mission, and a lot needs to go right for the two companies to pull it off, but I love the audacity of the plan.

Free version of the announcement at businesswire

(3) How We Will Fight Climate Change

Noah Smith

It is now time to conclude that the ā€œscare people into making a big pushā€ strategy that climate activists and leftists have been using over the last few years has decisively, utterly failed. People ought to be scared. They ought to support a big push. But this is simply a thing that is not going to happen in the time frame we need it to happen.

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Generated by DALLā€¢E 2

I enjoy Noah Smithā€™s writing because heā€™s a pragmatic optimist who proposes realistic solutions to the problems at hand. In this piece, he rails against the degrowth, anti-capitalism, and doomerism of much of the environmental movement before proposing a path forward: ā€œA technology-focused, bottom-up, whole-of-society effort.ā€ Fighting climate change, and creating abundant energy, will require both capitalist efforts and government subsidies, national, state, and local action, and individual efforts, coming together in what Robinson Meyer calls a ā€œgreen vortexā€: ā€œhow policy, technology, business, and politics can all work together, lowering the cost of zero-carbon energy, building pro-climate coalitions, and speeding up humanityā€™s ability to decarbonize.ā€

Smithā€™s climate plan is a piece of what Derek Thompson calls the Abundance Agenda: a non-partisan push to create more of all of the things that we need, including housing, healthcare, and of course, energy. What I love about both Smith and Thompsonā€™s approaches is that they focus on benefits instead of fear.

Pair with: What Joe Manchin Cost Us by Leah C. Stokes in The New York Times

(4) What I Miss About Working at Stripe

Brie Wolfson in Every

Itā€™s more about missing that universal agreement that itā€™s really, really cool to devote yourself fully to your work. And to expect that from your colleagues in a way that makes you feel that ā€œweā€™re all really, really, really in this togetherā€ kind of way.

Over the weekend, I started writing a piece, inspired by The Bear, about the importance of working really hard and giving a shit about the quality of your work.

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Chef Carmy Scrubbing the Floor, The Bear

Simply put: achieving great things ā€” like building Stripe, running a world-class restaurant, or pulling off anything that weā€™ve linked to in Weekly Dose of Optimism ā€” requires passion bordering on obsession and a boatload of hours.

Wolfsonā€™s piece is a celebration of the magic that comes from being a part of a team thatā€™s working incredibly hard together and a good reminder that great progress requires great effort.

(5) A Weird, Wonderful Conversation With Kim Stanley Robinson (šŸŽ§)

The Ezra Klein Show

In our culture, to say youā€™re optimistic is maybe not the right thing, but hope, optimismā€¦ this attitude is a necessary political stance to take because we are in a position of privilege and the situation can be saved and given those two, itā€™s dereliction of duty to be pessimistic, to be cynical. Itā€™s just a chicken thing to do.

We need to be strong in a moment of crisis by saying, yes, it can be done. And if weā€™re in a race between bad catastrophe and some kind of beginning prosperity for all ā€” when youā€™re in a race that intense, you donā€™t want to sit down on the ground and start crying. Oh, weā€™ve lost already. That would be a bad thing to do, because youā€™re in a race.

You actually need to run as hard as you can. If you lose the race, well, that is a dystopian novel. And I donā€™t really want to go there. If we lose the race, weā€™re in terrible trouble, and weā€™ll be in emergency mode for years. But if we win the race, itā€™s a big win for the biosphere, for the other creatures, for humanity. So itā€™s worth pretending to be optimistic, or using optimism as a club, and beating it with people. Yes, we can succeed. Bang, bang, bang.

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Kim Stanley Robinson hiking, Adventure Sports Journal

Kim Stanley Robinson is the author of The Mars Trilogy and The Ministry for the Future, and is quickly becoming one of my favorites. His near-future sci-fi paints imaginable worlds. His conversation with Ezra Klein is delightful, and while I donā€™t agree with him on everything, few people have used writing to help create a better future as beautifully as KSR has. A great podcast for a little weekend walk outside.

Bonus: Roots of Progress is Looking for a CEO

Jason Crawfordā€™s Roots of Progress is one of the progress studies movementā€™s home bases. Its mission is to ā€œestablish a new philosophy of progress for the 21st century and beyondā€”one based on the ideas of humanism and agency, and one that puts forth a bold, ambitious vision for the technological future.ā€ The organization is expanding beyond its blogging roots to become a non-profit research organization and career accelerator for public intellectuals in progress studies. If you like what youā€™re reading in the Weekly Dose of Optimism, this is a chance to go study and do the kind of work that we talk about here!

Double Bonus: The Metaverse: And How It Will Revolutionize Everything

Matthew Ball is my favorite Metaverse writer, and his new book is the deepest dive yet into the what, how, why, and when of the Metaverse. Early in the book, Ball writes ā€œThe Program is More Optimistic Than the Penā€ ā€” while the Metaverse typically appears in novels as a dystopia, the reality will likely be that we spend time in the Metaverse not to escape a hellish meatspace, but to replace TV and 2D screen time with something more useful, richer, more connective, and more fun.

This Weekly Dose of Optimism was brought to you byā€¦ Athletic Greens

Itā€™s a lot easier to be optimistic when you start your day on the right foot. Every morning, I take Athletic Greensā€™ AG1 (with some almond butter, olive oil, and chia seedsā€¦ because Iā€™m weird). Itā€™s the easiest way to make sure I get my nutrition in with a blend of 9 products: a multivitamin, minerals, probiotics, adaptogens and more. Not Boring readers can get a free one-year supply of Vitamin D and 5 travel packs when you use the special Not Boring link.

Thanks to Dan for editing, and to all of you who submitted optimistic content!

Humans are pulling off some pretty incredible things every week. Whenever you find examples, share them here and weā€™ll feature some in the newsletter.

Have a great weekend, and see you on Monday!

Packy


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