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R**R
unusual and excellent
I have just read Venkatesh Rao’s book Crash Early, Crash Often.This crashing advice sounds like that given in a startup incubator. I subscribe to his blog and I think the book was given to me without cost. NeitherAmazon nor Venkatesh Rao know who I am, other than a name on a subscription list.The book caused me to think in ways that books typically do not.It was almost a book about me for this reason. There are many liststhat one can position oneself on. Two of these lists are:Time travel: If you could travel in time for 5 minutes1. Would you choose to travel to the future or the past?2. If you choose the past, would you attempt to changethe course of history to make your present better, or wouldyou use it to participate in an experience that has alwaysfascinated you, like the cowboy era?3. If you went to the future, would you spend your timein the future memorizing stock prices or shopping for thingsto bring back to your own time, or would simply wander around,trying to see as much as possible?4. Would you find a time-machine that allowed for ghostly,non-participatory observation, but no intervention (with futurestock prices and sports results being beeped from your memory after),almost as interesting, or uninteresting, because of itspractical uselessness?5. If both kinds of time machines were available,how much more would you be willing to pay for a trip onthe first kind? Would you rather take two non-interventionist trips on thesecond machine, or one interventionist trip on the first kind?--------------There are at least 13 ways to own a backpack:1. Own it like a satisfier, while it does the job <— me2. Own it like you’re acting dead, made of recycle materials, and recyclable, and use it tattered3. Own it while it feels new, until something newer andnicer catches your eye.4. Own it like a geek, with OCD attention to materials and construction; inhabit backpack forums5. Own it optimally, with great attention to how efficientlyit holds the things you might carry6. Own it fashionably, with a view to tribal affiliations it can signal7. Own it like a 1%er, paying as much as you can,for the most prestigious kind you can get8. Own it as an extension of your social identity, ashipsters sporting 1970s canvas backpacks do9. Don’t own one, pointedly choosing a messenger bag or briefcase instead10. Own it thoughtlessly and obliviously, so it becomes a sourceof serious friction in your life11. Own it spiritually and mindfully, being all wabi-sabi about it.12. Own it like an heirloom, with a provenance worthknowing and a story worth telling13. Own it like a behaviorist, with an eye onpacking/unpacking rituals and airline carry-on rules.For completeness let me say that I would probablytravel to the past to the time when Christopher Marlowe wassupposedly killed in a tavern brawl. I would not interfere. Ifhe acknowledged my presence I would assure him that “Shakespeare”would be known as our greatest writer.As far as backpacks go, mine is utilitarian and simple.Functionality was my chief concern.Venkatesh Rao is brilliant – you should avail yourselfof his insights.
C**S
Self-help for disillusioned intellectuals
There are no writers like Venkatesh Rao, something that cannot be said of about 99.5% of writers. Venkat's perspective is one of a person who is able to conceive and turn structures, concepts, and the distinctions between them over in his head until they are tumbled into shiny, legible gems for the benefit of those whose minds are not yet so great at polishing. Though one can taste the vague flavors of his influences, the insights themselves are deliciously new.As the title of this review implies, the ideal reader of this book has iterated through all the major self-help themes - learning social skills, a la How to Win Friends and Influence People, freeing oneself from bad economic bargains, a la Four-Hour Workweek or Rich Dad Poor Dad, and meaning-making/strategic detachment, a la some kind of meditation practice. Only then will you be prepared for something like this. Attempting to read it sooner will likely result in confusion or disgust.If you have read anything at all on Ribbonfarm, his blog, and enjoyed it, you are also very likely to enjoy this book. Though I cannot project which of the essays will or will not do the same for you, reading the essay "A Dent in the Universe" was especially shocking, painful, and enlightening for me personally. In fact, when I've made a habit of reading Venkat's work often, I have tended to lose sleep; for relentless seekers of answers, attempting to parse his conclusions can lead to a great deal of mental hyperactivity and angst.To read Venkat's writing is to watch what you once thought were pure and good truths (and their associated pursuits) become hollow echoes of wishful thinking. At first this will taste like ashes in your mouth, but, given time, it will transform into a creeping sense of freedom.
Z**K
A highly interesting juxtaposition of weirdness and truth
Mr. Rao is quietly paving important neural and social cowpaths. I am convinced that future history will remember his work better than most. His ability to draw (and defend) surprising conclusions is balanced by the fact that he never takes himself too seriously. In other words, he's a very approachable intellectual.The structure of the book is perhaps my favorite part. It's easier to define it by what it's not. It's not a Gladwellian novel, making a contrarian statement early and slowly building the narrative using seemingly unconnected case studies. It doesn't promise life hacks like a four hour work week or a simple guide to better habits. Instead, it's a bunch of essays that are kind of related to each other. It's structured more like DaVinci's diary, a collection of curated thought. In this way it mimics the human mind, oscillating between humor and existentialism, deep thought and casual conclusions.It encourages you to think differently, which might lead to contrarian/ surprising insights. And if you are brave enough to pursue those insights you may end up expediting your way up Maslow's hierarchy (which is the Ultimate life hack).In other words, the Gladwell's of the world want you to think like them, while Ferris and company want to you act like them.Rao wants you to think for yourself and act like yourself. And he shows you how to do that by example.
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