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British SAS Operator Ranks Delta Force ABOVE SEAL Team 6 and Explains Exactly Why 🇬🇧 🇺🇸 ⚔️ w/ Michael (Mick) Hawkes He’s old school. Things have changed but I understand what he is saying. Most SEALs don’t have a strong infantry background like Delta, or Rangers. Marine Infantry (GRUNT)...

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In education, are we more focused on what school will look like 10 years from now, or asking the question, what are we doing with students today, and how will that affect them in 10 years? I also wonder how many students truly care about our “10 Year” plans in education. What matters most to them is what we are doing today. I was having a conversation with my daughter Kallea this past week and sharing about an opportunity that I wanted and how it didn’t work out. That was a teachable moment and I asked her, “What do you think your dad is going to do now?” Without hesitating she said, “Work harder.” This is something that I have talked about with her a lot, but hopefully, it is also something that I model. Sometimes things don’t work out because life isn’t fair. And sometimes, things don’t work out because we are not ready and haven’t done the work to get the accomplishment. It is easy to make the fault of others, and sometimes, that is even true. But I know that I always can control my own actions and if you complain about a problem, once you are finished complaining, it is still a problem. Only action creates future opportunities. My actions are the only things I can control. I hope this sticks with her and my kids because I know it is something my parents instilled in me. Of course, we need to focus on what school and learning can look like in the future, but we also have to understand that the future is also very dependent on what we install in our children today.

George Couros

16,598 views • 2 years ago

Satya Nadella was asked directly: in two years, will Microsoft have more engineers or fewer ? He didn't answer with a headcount. He answered with a job description that doesn't exist yet. In the 1980s, if someone had predicted 3.5 billion people would spend their days typing, the world would have laughed. Nobody needs 3.5 billion typists. Except that's exactly what happened and every one of them had a wage, a title, and a career built around it. Now here's where it gets interesting. The software developer of the future isn't writing code. They're managing 100 agents, 1,000 agents and doing something Nadella's team just named for the first time. "One of the new things that we are learning is what I'll call cognitive coverage." His point: when your entire codebase is written by agents, the human job becomes comprehending what was built. Auditing it. Understanding the decisions the agent made and why. That is not a task AI can replace because the AI is the thing being understood. So do the math on what that means. The workflow changed. The artifact changed. The input output format of software development changed. And the job changed with it not away, but upward. "That's the job of a software developer. In order to do that you've got to go to school. You've got to learn computer science and have cognitive coverage." Nadella is not saying jobs are safe. He's saying the jobs that survive are the ones AI cannot verify. And the unverifiable part of human work the meeting observations, the judgment calls, the things that leave no trace is exactly what no model can be trained on. I wonder why nobody in San Francisco is talking about that.

Vikram M

96,897 views • 21 days ago