Monday, August 27, 2018

Unleash `Unthinking` to boost creative performance


Unthinking is the ability to apply years of learning at the crucial moment by removing your thinking self from the equation. Its power is not confined to sport: actors and musicians know about it too, and are apt to say that their best work happens in a kind of trance. Thinking too much can kill not just physical performance but mental inspiration. Bob Dylan, wistfully recalling his youthful ability to write songs without even trying, described the making of “Like a Rolling Stone” as a “piece of vomit, 20 pages long”. It hasn’t stopped the song being voted the best of all time.

In less dramatic ways the same principle applies to all of us. A fundamental paradox of human psychology is that ...Read More


Saturday, January 31, 2015

Becoming An Engineering Manager | TechCrunch


"Becoming An Engineering Manager Posted Jan 26, 2015 by Noah Brier (@heyitsnoah) 1,350 SHARES Next Story Editor’s Note: Noah Brier is the co-founder of Percolate, a New York-based marketing technology start-up, and is a member of the World Economic Forum Global Agenda Council on Social Media.  


 Over the last few years I’ve gotten the pleasure to work with a large number of really talented engineers — some of whom I’ve asked to make the leap into management. Like any individual contributor moving into a new role, they’re asked to fundamentally change the way they approach their day. As I’ve done my best to coach them through this experience, I wrote down a few ideas on how to best translate their engineering skills into management skills. Some of these are very specific to managing engineers, but most are general observations that should be applicable to managing just about anyone in a growing company."

Read more here : Becoming An Engineering Manager | TechCrunch

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Wednesday, January 28, 2015

Why does the heart beat?



1. Why does the heart beat - Historical discovery/ies
http://circ.ahajournals.org/content/113/23/2775.full#ref-26

2. Why does the heart beat - with pictures and lay man explanation

3. Sino Atrial Action Potential 

From the above 2 links you will see that the heart beat originates in the SA node. This link goes deeper into what is behind that impulse that originates here (from the SA node)

Friday, December 12, 2014

How to Choose an Air Travel Search Site - NYTimes.com

 "Which airline booking sites offer the cheapest airfares? If your answer was Expedia — or any of the other dozens of online travel agencies — you’re wrong. If it was “They’re all the same,” you’re definitely wrong. “It’s so overwhelming, I have no idea”? You’re getting close. The real solution is finding the sites that best fit your specific travel needs — all the more true for the heavily budget-conscious. Each has different strengths offered through different interfaces that use different functions and produce different results. But where to go for what? Even for people like me who live on these sites, it’s not always clear. So I designed a test — from Europe, as it turned out, where I was reporting on the road. I selected 15 online travel agencies, from the old stalwarts like Travelocity to an excellent (and increasingly robust) group of upstarts like Routehappy, which are more likely to take into account niche specifics like seat pitch. Then I put them through the wringer, shopping for six itineraries, from basic domestic to overseas-only to elaborately multicity: Miami-Chicago, Louisville-Portland, Los Angeles-Paris, Dallas-Singapore, Shanghai-Chengdu in China and, finally, New York-Guadalajara-Bogotá-Charlotte (presumably a Mexican-Colombian-American visiting family and the Nascar Hall of Fame)."

Read  more at...How to Choose an Air Travel Search Site - NYTimes.com:

Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Demis Hassabis, Founder of DeepMind Technologies and Artificial-Intelligence Wunderkind at Google, Wants Machines to Think Like Us | MIT Technology Review

Demis Hassabis, Founder of DeepMind Technologies and Artificial-Intelligence Wunderkind at Google, Wants Machines to Think Like Us | MIT Technology Review:



"Hassabis founded DeepMind with fellow AI specialist Shane Legg and serial entrepreneur Mustafa Suleyman. The company hired leading researchers in machine learning and attracted noteworthy investors, including Peter Thiel’s firm Founders Fund and Tesla and SpaceX founder Elon Musk. But DeepMind kept a low profile until December 2013, when it staged a kind of debutante moment at a leading research conference on machine learning.

At Harrah’s Casino on the shores of Lake Tahoe, DeepMind researchers showed off software that had learned to play three classic Atari games - Pong, Breakout and Enduro - better than an expert human. The software wasn’t programmed with any information on how to play; it was equipped only with access to the controls and the display, knowledge of the score, and an instinct to make that score as high as possible. The program became an expert gamer through trial and error.

No one had ever demonstrated software that could learn to master such a complex task from scratch. DeepMind had made use of a newly fashionable machine learning technique called deep learning, which involves processing data through networks of crudely simulated neurons (see “10 Breakthrough Technologies 2013: Deep Learning”). But it had combined deep learning with other tricks to make something with an unexpected level of intelligence.

“People were a bit shocked because they didn’t expect that we would be able to do that at this stage of the technology,” says Stuart Russell, a professor and artificial intelligence specialist at University of California, Berkeley. “I think it gave a lot of people pause.”

DeepMind had combined deep learning with a technique called reinforcement learning, which is inspired by the work of animal psychologists such as B.F. Skinner. This led to software that learns by taking actions and receiving feedback on their effects, as humans or animals often do.

Artificial intelligence researchers have been tinkering with reinforcement learning for decades. But until DeepMind’s Atari demo, no one had built a system capable of learning anything nearly as complex as how to play a computer game, says Hassabis. One reason it was possible was a trick borrowed from his favorite area of the brain. Part of the Atari-playing software’s learning process involved replaying its past experiences over and over to try and extract the most accurate hints on what it should do in the future. “That’s something that we know the brain does,” says Hassabis. “When you go to sleep your hippocampus replays the memory of the day back to your cortex.”

A year later, Russell and other researchers are still puzzling over exactly how that trick, and others used by DeepMind, led to such remarkable results, and what else they might be used for. Google didn’t take long to recognize the importance of the effort, announcing a month after the Tahoe demonstration that it had acquired DeepMind."



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Saturday, May 14, 2011

Visualizing 1 Trillion dollars


It’s official, trillion is the new billion. No longer is government spending talked about in terms of a mere ten digits. With the recent flurry of government spending, we are going to need another three zeros to make sense of it all.
One trillion dollars; it’s a number that few people can comprehend, let alone your standard nine digit calculator. There have been attempts to put this number into perspective before. A trillion dollar bills laid end to end would reach the sun or you spend a dollar per second for 32,000 years or one trillion dollars in pennies would weigh as much as 2,755,778 Argentinosauruses (the largest known dinosaur). Fanciful as this may be, the real story behind one trillion dollars is in its economic impact. Let’s investigate what one trillion dollars can do.



Wednesday, May 4, 2011

The eternal philosophy of Life.

Apparently every philosophical question boils down to "What's life and what is its purpose"...and each member of the homo sapiens community has its own answer; Each walking the path to attain what he answered makes one path. Put all the paths together; some will match, some collide and some will cross each other. The net of all these paths after the ones that have ended (or met) or canceled forms the world view which changes constantly with the frivolous spirit of the homo sapiens. There is nothing else to Life. In short you give meaning to your own life and start walking down the path. Thats why they say who so ever you meet, never fight with, make friends with and save time that could get consumed in wasteful battles and to walk your path you are limited by the ultimate resource 'time'.

If you really think life was meant to be spiritual then walk down the path to attain that! 

All in all I can it sum up as 

"Life is a path walked down in order to attain something ad infinitum or non-attainment  at all.
If Life is all about non-attainment which would imply achieving spiritual bliss which would not be possible without consuming materials from your surrounding. This again makes it a case of attainment.

Absolute non-attainment could only be true for you if you lived in denial of every material thing around you and your life would be walking that path until it ceases to exist. You set your own journey through your own needs and wants that are formed solely not by you but evolved through your surroundings. Inter-dependence on each other and the surrounding is the eternal truth. Hence, the one who helps most of us around you achieve what we want will always have more than the rest of us to live with until your body ceases to exist."