I’m a Sloppy Chip. Are You?
by
James Altucher
Recently
by James Altucher: Multi-Tasking
Will Kill You
Dont
you take any pride in your work? Rob Sansom said to me on
his way to being a billionaire or at least a 100-millionaire. He
called me into his office. I had to write a manual and I did a bad
job at it because I was busy writing a novel in my spare time instead.
He was CEO of Fore Systems, which went public a year or two later.
I was employee number 10 or 11 but long gone when everyone was splashing
around in money.
I didnt
know what to say. The real answer was no, I dont. Its
a technical manual about a computer chip. And I was 22 years
old and stupid. The wrong answer was yes, because if
I took pride in my work then there would not have been so many spelling
and grammar mistakes. (I guess I still dont take pride in
my work).
A few months
later I quit. I then worked on a virtual reality project. I didnt
have much pride in my work there either. I had to help create an
emotional model for the artificial characters in the virtual reality.
But I didnt have any pride in that work either and it only
lasted a few months and maybe cost me some friendships. I thought
I would like it but the only thing I enjoyed doing was writing novels
that never got published.
At the time
I was working for a guy named Joe Bates. He was almost 20 years
older than me but we were good friends. He had gotten his PhD at
something like age 15 from Cornell. He was a genius but there was
a childlike side to him. He wanted to create a simple virtual reality
that he would have fun playing in. With creatures that bounced around
and that would respond via radar to whatever he was doing and express
real emotions.
I want
to evoke the same feelings that I had when I first watched Bambi,
he would say.
I looked up
recently what he was doing. Apparently he had given up on virtual
reality. Hes now at MIT working on something hes inventing
called sloppy chips. A sloppy chip, unlike every other
computer chip, makes mistakes. But thats ok. If youre
doing a billion calculations to do some facial recognition, it doesnt
matter if a few times 1+1=3. You give up 100% accuracy to improve
the speed. And if you get 99% accuracy as a result then thats
pretty good for many things.
Humans are
sloppy chips. But we try so hard to be perfect computers.
We try to do
everything right. We try to never let anyone catch us doing anything
wrong. I sort of blame the blogosphere right now. Everythings
about how to be more productive, smarter, have a better memory,
how to be perfect. I look at all these posts and I might as well
be living in Lord of the Rings world. They seem like for people
from another dimension or reality.
Heres
10 ways its ok if were a little sloppier.
A) Its
ok to fail at a business or at a job. A lot of times in an job
interview people will be asked, why did you leave this job?
and theyll say, my partners went crazy or my
boss was on nuclear steroids. The blame will be someplace
else. But its ok to say, I just wasnt that good
at that job. Or, the business failed and it was my fault
but heres five things I learned.
My last business
that failed I learned these things:
- Dont
chase after a fad (twitter-based businesses. Twitter is certainly
not a fad but businesses that rely on twitter (or Facebook) often
are. Well, at the very least I chased after it in the wrong way).
- Dont
use the same crappy developers you used the first time around.
- Dont
continue with a bad business just because everyone around you
is relying on you to continue with it.
- Online
dating businesses or a dime a dozen and much harder than they
look.
- Someone
who has 100,000 Twitter followers does not equal distribution.
B) Its
ok to fail at a marriage or a relationship. It doesnt
mean someone did something wrong or evil. People are human. They
outgrow each other. To force it might mean you could go awry on
being the best possible human you can be. The sloppy chip approach
(being flexible in your relationships, despite the standards of
society and Time magazine (the annual cover that says Divorce
is bad for kids) might not be right. Or maybe its ok
for you to be imperfect for awhile in order for you to find your
optimal solution. By the way, its hard to realize this in
the moment but when you are looking for the relationship answer
to 1 + 1 = there are a LOT of answers other than just
2. Sometimes 2.1 or even 3.14
is just as good.
C) Its
ok to be unproductive today. Today is a hard day. The markets
might be volatile. Your kids might be sick. You might be feeling
tired. You might not feel inspired. The writer Raymond Chandler
had a great discipline. Even if he had writers block hed
sit in front of a blank piece of paper for three hours. Just to
build the physical discipline of just SITTING there even if he couldnt
write a single world. Half of the writing process is simply being
able to sit down for a long period of time and trying to focus your
mind. Its ok if today didnt work out. But if you make
a little progress (the sloppy chip approach), if you get a little
closer to your answer (even subconsciously) then thats great.
Youre closer to your ultimate revelation, even if its
years away. By the way, hat tip to Haruki Murakami in What
I Talk About When I Talk About Running for the Raymond Chandler
example.
So, in other
words, some days you might be productive. But on other days, slip
into the sloppy chip approach. Get something done. At
least plug in the equation, even if the wrong answer comes out.
But dont beat yourself over the head if its not the
ideal productive day/week/month/year.
A lot of blogs
are in the self help genre. They want to tell you how
to be productive. How to maximize your time. No Facebook!
They say. Or pick one hour a day to answer all emails and
stick to that hour only! Or, Cut a half hour a day from
watching TV!
Read
the rest of the article
July
5, 2012
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© 2012 The
Altucher Confidential
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