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What I’m watching
The nightly news is a no go zone in our home.
There’s too much blood and guts (and autocue).
However, Wednesday was a historic night, so after the kids were in their jim jams, we allowed them (and their teddy bears) to watch a few minutes of the news.
The nightly news is a no go zone in our home.
There’s too much blood and guts (and autocue).
However, Wednesday was a historic night, so after the kids were in their jim jams, we allowed them (and their teddy bears) to watch a few minutes of the news.
Big mistake.
The first thing they showed was a highlight reel of the US election campaign.
“Dad, why did he get shot?”
‘Well … America is a complicated place’.
“Do people really eat cats and dogs?”
‘No they don’t’.
“What is he doing to that microphone?”
‘Alright kids, it’s BEDTIME!’
Truth-be-told the only news our kids watch is the ABC’s Behind The News (BTN) – a national treasure – and Landline, which gives them an understanding of how the food makes it onto their plate each night.
Yet when I’ve tucked the kids safely in bed, here’s a couple of shows that I’ve been watching lately:
Bitconned
Netflix
This documentary follows a 22 year old kid who set up his own crypto coin to get rich quick.
The opening line gets to the guts of it:
"We lied, we cheated, we made millions of dollars. And now I’m facing over 100 years in prison."
There’s a lot of bro-ness: Lambos, drugs, and wads of cash being thrown around. Yet what makes this doco so revolting (and compelling) is that it is not framed as the typical ‘road to redemption’ story, where the lead character works out that stealing hundreds of millions of dollars is bad.
I won’t spoil it for you, but there’s a twist at the very end that will leave you shaking your head.
What’s Next? The Future with Bill Gates
Netflix
Gates teams up with film maker James Cameron – who created the Terminator – to investigate both the opportunities and threats of Artificial Intelligence (AI).
Look, there’s way too much hype and bulldust around AI.
And that’s kind of what I liked about Gates’ approach, it’s a nerd’s view of the technology. He explains how it works, with the help of Cameron (who jokes about how writing sci-fi is getting tricky when reality keeps catching up), and none other than the founders of ChatGPT.
This short episode gives you a good overview of where AI is at the moment (the doco was released in late September), and points to where one of the richest men in the world thinks it will head.
Oh, and this is just one of five in the series. If you have time you should also watch his episode titled ‘Misinformation’. Bill looks at the spread of false information on the web, and the threat that has to democracy …
Tread Your Own Path!
Barefoot Christmas Books!
Here are the three books that will be in my Santa sack this year (apart from Barefoot Kids, of course):
Here are the three books that will be in my Santa sack this year (apart from Barefoot Kids, of course):
Poor Charlie’s Almanack: The Essential Wit and Wisdom of Charles T. Munger
By Charlie Munger
The world lost an investment legend this year when Charlie Munger passed away at age 99. For the uninitiated, Charlie was Warren Buffett’s right-hand man, and together they spent decades running the world’s greatest compound interest machine, Berkshire Hathaway.
Charlie was rich enough to say whatever the hell he wanted, which he did – railing against the greed of Wall Street, Bitcoin Bros (he famously called crypto ‘rat poison’), and giving wise advice on living a decent life. Despite being a multi-billionaire, Munger – like Buffett – chose to live in the same humble home for 70 years.
“There are answers worth billions of dollars in a $30 history book”, writes Munger.
And this is one such book.
Outlive: The Science & Art of Longevity
By Peter Attia
I didn’t want to like this book.
After all, I’m highly cynical of best-selling how-to books (hello, Barefoot Investor).
Surely it couldn’t be as good as everyone says it was?
Actually, it was better.
Attia is a super-smart quack, and he’s produced the definitive guide to living a long, healthy life. Yet what sets this book apart from other health and diet books is that I gave it to my editor, Wally, a man who knows his way around a sausage roll, and it totally changed the way he approaches his health.
Much like the shoeless book, it’s good because it works.
The Coming Wave: Technology, Power, and the Twenty-first Century’s Greatest Dilemma
By Mustafa Suleyman
So this one comes with a warning: it totally stressed me out. And not just me. A member of my unofficial book club told me he couldn’t get past the third chapter: “It was just too scary, I couldn’t cope.”
Suleyman isn’t some blow-hard author trying to sell some books by frightening the pants off us. He’s totally got the chops, having co-founded one of the world’s most successful artificial intelligence (AI) companies, Deepmind Technologies, which was bought by Google a decade ago for $750 million.
AI is going to fundamentally change the world, and sooner than we think.
He writes about the latest ‘litmus test’ for AI, which is to give it the instruction to “make me $1 million selling stuff on Amazon”. The AI bot will scan Amazon for the most profitable products, have it made in China, list it online, write all the ad copy, manage fulfilment and customer service … and then deposit $1 million into your bank account.
Crazy, huh?
In the coming decade AI will infiltrate our lives, driven by the fact that it will get smarter and faster, and it won’t get drunk and make an arse of itself at the office Christmas party.
This bloke knows what’s coming down the tunnel. Read it to find out what (maybe) happens next.
Tread Your Own Path!