I've been thinking about this for a while:
- There are smart people in tech.
- There are hard problems that need smart people to solve them.
The thing is that a lot of people that I know aren't really looking to solve hard problems right now. I guess we're all too worried about finding a job for when we graduate.
I think that's a shame because when we finally get that email address with the fancy domain name, we spend a lot of our time just putting numbers in databases or optimizing button clicks. I mean, it's essential work. If nobody did this, then Zoom wouldn't be able to support all of our online meetings and enable us to work from home.
But what I want is to work on something cool. I want a program that:
- Finds important problems that need to be solved.
- Recommends problems that would interest me.
But the program can't just output something abstract like "solve world hunger." It needs to be specific. Ideally, it should find someone I can contact that understands a subset of the problem—for example, a researcher who understands the inefficiencies of transportation networks that leads to hunger in Malawi.
Here's how we might find the problems:
- Search through academic papers and contact the experts who wrote the papers.
- Scan through one's work on their Linkedin profile.
- Look for documentaries/solutions crowdfunded on Kickstarter.
Here's how we might pair the problems with people:
- Search through Github to see what skills and interests people have and send a personalized email.
- Ask a couple of the popular programming YouTube channels to promote the problems.
One last thing. A few months ago, I contacted someone working on a problem I wanted to help solve and asked him how he got started. Here was his response: "What matters most is not how you start, but just that you do get started." I think that a program like this will get more people started, even if it's a small contribution.
I'm not sure what this program might look like, but I think that working on it will be very fulfilling because there's an awful lot of smarts that could create immense good when placed on the correct problems. And I look forward to signing up.
I wish you a great week.
- Curtis
#58: A Newsfeed for Your Life | #60: I Think I Know Why I Like You