Agree with this in particular as a good symptom of the "tectonic shifts". I usually blame the Baumol effect, i.e., the increasing difficulty of the inherently human task: keeping science education/science educators up-to-date. Especially when faced with the returns on optimizing more "mechanical" processes (including the impressive short term returns on "merely" improving bean-counting or, in Bell Lab's/IBM's later eras, shifting info-processing away from paper)
I doubt AI or VCs* have any significant role to play in reducing the friction in the college-to-self-selling-breakthrough pipeline, but they should certainly channel most of their efforts to improving the "ecosystem" first
TFA has right ideas such as
>Make sure people talk to each other every day.
Which already happens here on HN!
(Although it's mostly different daily sets of people but.. the same old sets of ideas?)
*Not if the main marketable usecase for college students is to game existing metrics. And I don't see no Edtech in the RFS either
Update: apologies! I see Edtech in YC's latest RFS. They probably think that Edtech targeted at (self-)teachers would be less controversial & more likely to gain organic traction as well!
Agree with this in particular as a good symptom of the "tectonic shifts". I usually blame the Baumol effect, i.e., the increasing difficulty of the inherently human task: keeping science education/science educators up-to-date. Especially when faced with the returns on optimizing more "mechanical" processes (including the impressive short term returns on "merely" improving bean-counting or, in Bell Lab's/IBM's later eras, shifting info-processing away from paper)
I doubt AI or VCs* have any significant role to play in reducing the friction in the college-to-self-selling-breakthrough pipeline, but they should certainly channel most of their efforts to improving the "ecosystem" first
TFA has right ideas such as
>Make sure people talk to each other every day.
Which already happens here on HN! (Although it's mostly different daily sets of people but.. the same old sets of ideas?)
*Not if the main marketable usecase for college students is to game existing metrics. And I don't see no Edtech in the RFS either