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Danish Hussain

@astrodanish11,136 subscribers

Head of Surgery Mechanical Engineering @neuralink. Former aerospace engineer and firefighter. Interested in planes, brains, and flames.

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Travis Pastrana, the greatest stuntman of our generation and the first person to EVER land a double backflip on a motorcycle, realized that the average viewer is so far below his riding skill level that they don’t even know what is and isn’t impressive in his domain. I have no idea how much more difficult a double backflip is compared to a single backflip, or how hard a single backflip is compared to any of Evil Knievel’s jumps. Pastrana realized that he would have to demonstrate his skillset in a domain the common viewer would be familiar with, so he added a segment to Nitro Circus where they started doing stunts on those girly little tricycles we all had when we were little kids. Seeing this video was what really blew me away. For the first time, I really got it. Public support of science & technogy has much the same problem as Freestyle Motocross did in the early 2000’s and we should use the same solutions they came up with. I’m relatively well educated, but I have no idea what a trigger chain is or how hard it is for the LHC to do 60 million collisions (that number means nothing to me- it might as well be 600 or 6 billion). But I can look at a robot solving a rubik’s cube and say “wow das fast”, the same way I can see a guy flipping a tricycle and say “wow he’s way cooler than i ever will be”. In the eyes of a stuntman, the double backflip on the dirtbike may be the better trick, but it’s too far out of the public’s understanding to grasp. Counterintuitively, it’s harder to build something that blows away the common man than it is to dazzle a specialist with specs. Only aerospace dweebs care if you make your airplane 16% more fuel efficient. But even a 10 year old can appreciate a plane going mach 5 or a rocket being caught with chopsticks. In the context of Neuralink, It doesn’t really matter what neat benchtop tests I’ve seen internally or how good our “bitrate” and other technical specs get, unless they translate to immensely useful devices for our users. The only thing that actually matters is providing a safe product that users genuinely love, and making it so amazing that every fourth grader is blown away by it. Only THEN can we be proud of the engineering feats. Travis Pastrana thanks for being an inspiration to me and millions of others, even though I may have broken a couple bones cuz of you…

Danish Hussain

712,822 次观看 • 6 个月前

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