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Why competitive people are often dumb and boring
From Daniel Lemire's Blog

Why competitive people are often dumb and boring

People who work hard are typically motivated by either their performance (i.e., they want to look good) or their mastery (i.e., they like being good at their craft)...

The hubris of teachers
From Daniel Lemire's Blog

The hubris of teachers

Today, kids left and right carry the label of some learning disability. Instead of telling kids that they are dumb or lazy, we narrow it down to some problem. It...

Forcefully boring young people is necessary…
From Daniel Lemire's Blog

Forcefully boring young people is necessary…

In many schools, a fifth of all boys are prescribed Amphetamine-related drugs because they have been diagnosed with an attention deficit. But these pills are not...

Bricolage by smart people
From Daniel Lemire's Blog

Bricolage by smart people

Scientific research is fundamentally about learning, about trial and error. Luck and unplanned interactions are a central part of it. Thus research cannot be planned...

Having your cat declawed means having its fingers amputated
From Daniel Lemire's Blog

Having your cat declawed means having its fingers amputated

There are many simple facts that totally escape me for years. For example, though I took biology in college and I knew that plants were made of carbon through photosynthesis...

Coffee is probably not killing your productivity
From Daniel Lemire's Blog

Coffee is probably not killing your productivity

A recent Slate articles warns that coffee makes you less productive. The main claim is that coffee has no cognition enhancement ability but, instead, a range of...

The week-end freedom test
From Daniel Lemire's Blog

The week-end freedom test

In an earlier post, I compared life in academia with life in industry. One recurring argument to favour an academic job over an industry job is freedom. Of course...

Academia or industry?
From Daniel Lemire's Blog

Academia or industry?

I have done three things after my Ph.D.: I have been a (permanent/regular) researcher in a major government laboratory; I have been an entrepreneur in industry...

Referendums and sovereignty
From Daniel Lemire's Blog

Referendums and sovereignty

In a few weeks, the Scots will get to vote to determine whether Scotland becomes its own country. As a middle aged Quebecker, I spent much of my youth hearing about...

Transemployment: creating jobs out of thin air
From Daniel Lemire's Blog

Transemployment: creating jobs out of thin air

Back in the eighties, half of the 16-year-old teenagers were licensed drivers in the US. Evidently, things have changed. Driving is still important, but other activities...

Paper books are the new vinyl records
From Daniel Lemire's Blog

Paper books are the new vinyl records

I have always loved reading. But it is a love that has been constantly frustrated. As a young teenager, I would spend days in the library, but I quickly exhausted...

Though unrefereed, arXiv has a better h-index than most journals…
From Daniel Lemire's Blog

Though unrefereed, arXiv has a better h-index than most journals…

Google provides a ranking of research venue per domain. For databases and information systems, they provide the top 20 venues according to their h-index. As part...

Expert performance and training: what we really know
From Daniel Lemire's Blog

Expert performance and training: what we really know

Movies such as Good Will Hunting tell beautiful stories about young people able to instantly master difficult topics, without any effort on their part. That performance...

Should we train more people as programmers?
From Daniel Lemire's Blog

Should we train more people as programmers?

Lately, the top salaries for computer science graduates have been increasing. Companies like Google are willing to pay what it takes to get their hands on the best...

A culture of envy
From Daniel Lemire's Blog

A culture of envy

Many people are worried about their social status and inequality. We live in what I call a culture of envy. Matt Welsh, a software engineer who previously was a...

The insanity of research grant proposals
From Daniel Lemire's Blog

The insanity of research grant proposals

Most people will never have to write a research grant. That is a good thing. How do you write a successful grant application? Your work should follow established...

Predicting your future performance
From Daniel Lemire's Blog

Predicting your future performance

The Matthew effect says that “the rich get richer and the poor get poorer”. With this sole principle in mind, you would think that the future is easily predicted...

Potentially bogus freelancing advice
From Daniel Lemire's Blog

Potentially bogus freelancing advice

For nearly 20 years, I have been freelancing: selling my skills as a free agent. I do very little freelancing these days, but I still regularly give advice to students...

Extrinsic motivations are harmful…
From Daniel Lemire's Blog

Extrinsic motivations are harmful…

I have argued that when seeking professional success, it is best to avoid zero-sum games (e.g., compete for one prestigious slot). It is more fun, less distracting...

True success is more than winning a zero-sum game
From Daniel Lemire's Blog

True success is more than winning a zero-sum game

Fiction writers used to have to submit their manuscripts to 6 or 7 big corporations. Only these corporations could seriously publish a book. Room on library stacks...
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