MIT Announces Top 35 Innovators Under 35
nursegirl writes "MIT's Technology Review has posted their top 35 innovators under the age of 35 for 2006. The 2006 Young Innovator is Joshua Schachter, of del.icio.us fame. The 2006 Young Humanitarian is Christina Galitsky from the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Galitsky has done various projects related to energy efficiency, from introducing energy efficient practices to wineries, to helping bring stoves that use less wood to Sudanese refugees, to working on cheap ways to filter arsenic from wells in Bangladesh. Technology Review has also published a related article, titled 10 Ways To Think about Innovation."
Is actually 300, but since his innovation was a fountain of youth an exception was made.
Beep beep.
I was particularly interested in the E. coli pictoral representation as well as the cheap way to sequence bacterial genomes. I think awards like these are obviously good to encourage interesting new developments among what seems to be mainly grad students ... they don't have to wait until they adopt a "career" to do something useful and important.
Cogito, ergo sum, fosho!
Why am I not surprised to him on this list? =)
Now I feel even worse about my excessive laziness and unwillingness to do anything that even requires the minimum expenditure of energy. Thanks a lot you jerks!
Monstar L
Please tell me why the fuck age should make a difference. Why rank and judge people by age? Praise innovators for being innovators, not because they are young or old.
Table-ized A.I.
This kind of publicity is insidious. It lays the idea in peoples' minds that innovators can only be young.
politicians are like babies' nappies: they should both be changed regularly and for the same reasons
Technology Review has also published a related article, titled 10 Ways To Think about Innovation.
Yeah, well here's a news flash: Corporate America views innovation only as that which can be converted into profit.
Push Button, Receive Bacon
The only difference being that (a) the key is a digitized random laser signal instead of, say, a random number generator (b) the message is encoded bit-by-bit and sent over a wire in real time instead of being sent to a file.
To extract the plain message, you need an identical "white-noise" at the receiving end to cancel the original disguising "white-noise" signal. Therefore, this method will suffer from the same disadvantage as an OTP, that is, if - as a security policy - you need to set a different disguising white-noise signal everyday before sending a message, how do you share it with the receiver so that he/she may decode the message.
The problems with that article are basically as follows:
1. It doesn't say what you seem to think it does. For that matter, it contradicts its own quotes and anecdotes given in support of that idea. If you look at what it does say, it says that the peak of the curve is at 35.4 years old and most inventions are made in a 12 year interval around that. I.e., roughly between 29 and 41.
I.e., pay attention: the actual data says that someone aged 25 is _less_ likely to innovate than someone aged 35 or 40.
In other domains it gets even funnier. If you look at the "age-genius" curve in painters and Jazz musicians, it peaks at 40. For authors it peaks at 50. In fact, if you look at the authors curve, someone aged 25 is about as likely to be a creative genius as someone aged 75.
So it seems to me utter bullshit to take that as evidence that "only the young are innovative/creative/whatever." At best what it says is, basically, "middle-aged people are more creative". I mean, seriously, by what criterion _do_ you define 50 (the peak of creative genius for authors) as "young"? Or take the upper half of the curve there and you get something like 30 to 70 years old when the best novels are written. How _can_ one define that as "young" or supportive of the idea that young people are more creative, is simply mind-boggling.
2. Treating it as "innovators can _only_ be young" is bullshit anyway. Even going by their graphs, they have data going all the way to 90 years old. So even someone that age, yes, _can_ and occasionally did make scientiffic breakthroughs, wrote excellent novels or composed great music.
3. I'm suspicious of studies where they hand-wave in conclusions and explanations unsupported by _any_ data.
E.g., take blaming the decline on marriage and kids. You'd think that most people are married (legally or de-facto by having a stable girlfriend) long before reaching the age of 50. Most authors I can think of were married. Ok, that's just anecdote, but so is their inferrence. That is actually the whole point: where is the data to support that kind of assertion? Where are the graphs correlating marriage/kids/whatever to inventions? If they're going to make that correlation, then show me the data, not just a bogus assertions pulled out of the ass.
Ditto for postulating that it's because of some anti-social tendencies in the teens and 20's, when the peak is anywhere between 35 and 50 depending on the curve, is simply idiotic. Given the age interval where that actually happens, at best you could blame it on mid-life crisis, if anything. But at any rate, if they're going to correlate genius to anti-social tendencies, again: show me the data. See how many of those people got parking tickets, jaywalking fines, speeding tickets, got reprimanded at work, etc. If there actually was an anti-social rebellious tendency driving them, then it can't have been 100% channeled into science or art.
Plus, it's important to know such things. If anti-social rebellious attitudes actually correlate with creativity and genius, then maybe we can simply stop demanding conformity and ties. Encourage them to be non-conformists for longer. Stuff like that. Is it really age, or can you encourage that attitude to stay alive and kicking longer? You can't just handwave it in, handwave in a corelation to age, and have your neatly packed conclusion. Where's the data?
4. It skips over other very important factors. E.g., life expectancy, diseases, etc. If you're going to plot the curve all the way to the 90, then I can tell you that most people would be dead by then, and a lot would be senile by then. So does that tappering of the number of great inventions/songs/novels in the 60's and 70's happen because people lose their creativity _or_ simply because people start to die off? The only way such a graph would be meaningful is if they compensated for that. But they don't do that. Bullshit pseudo-science at its finest, really.
5. It's just one article, and other than the pretty graphs, it's very light on data. E.g., there is no mention of who _are_ the 280 scientists they plot there, and by what criterion were they picked. You can argue or correlate whatever you want, if you can cherry-pick your sample to support it.
A polar bear is a cartesian bear after a coordinate transform.
1) Apostolos Argyris
2) Manolis Kellis
3) Nikos Paragios
4) Paris Smaragdis
And they all seem to have done their Ba or Ms in Greece. In fact Argyris is doing his research at the university of Athens.
Very impressive for a small nation of 11 million people.
Here's an innovative idea: use a spelling or grammar check. I had to give up reading the articles because they're so badly written. For example:
"The challenge is, once you've got all these bookmarks, how do you manage them? The problem were really dealing with is memory and recall, and using technology to make your memory more scalable."
What the heck does that mean? (Yes, it's probably meant to be "we're", but, sheesh, what happend to editing?) I am not a grammar-monkey, but poorly written articles do tend to make be question their credibility.
The cool people know what I'm talking about. Cheers,
A lot of the stuff these people worked on is doomed to economic failure or pretty lame. Let's face it, the most unique thing about del.icio.us is Schachter was very clever in coming up with a domain name. The description of Galitsky read more like that of a consultant and manager rather than an inventor. Kohler has a better chance of winning the lottery than his Asbestos OS taking off. Dingledine set up a chain of email routers that break the rules of SMTP in an obvious way and will most likely cause any email sent through it to go into your spam folder unless you explicitly allow the sender.
There were definitely some real gems amongst the winners, especially the work bought out or funded by mega-corps.
2006 Young Innovators Under 35 ..
.. and Kohler hopes that within a few years, Asbestos will be an alternative to server operating systems such as Linux and Windows."
Eddie Kohler
A better operating system
"Asbestos keeps personal data secure by "tagging" it with information about which programs or users can access it
"(NSA) worked with Secure Computing Corporation (SCC) to develop a strong, flexible mandatory access control architecture based on Type Enforcement, a mechanism first developed for the LOCK system."
"AppArmor security policies, called "profiles", completely define what system resources individual applications can access, and with what privileges."
davecb5620@gmail.com
marco...
? Cand=T&TRID=428 that's a .wav, or something useable? I'd be curious to hear it.
marco...
marco...
In all seriousness, does anybody have a link to the podcast referenced http://www.technologyreview.com/TR35/Profile.aspx
BTW, digital musicians might recognize Paris' name from CSound (http://www.csounds.com/).
-yb
Roughly counting the number of researchers not based in the states I count something like 5 people. Of course the same goes for the judges, but still I always hoped that science had a somewhat more international community. So much for globalisation. Or could it be that for example europe is not producing many innovators at the moment (except for Greece perhaps).
I guess I shouldn't start wondering about the gender distribution...
It seems that Web 2.0 (tagging, folksonomy, etc. etc.) has been endorsed by the selection of the del.icio.us founder as the top innovator. Although I agree that del.icio.us is a really useful site (I use it myself quite a bit), I have a question about the general Web 2.0 philosophy.
Once user-generated tags start driving revenue on the web (and I'm sure its nearing that stage), what's to stop bots from creating "Web 2.0" spam? Is it going to be as simple as asking users to type in garbled text?
Linux as you know is essentially a Unix clone and Unix was created by a corporation, so I don't think it has much relevence to this discussion.
Having not RTFA, I assume there is a total lack of representation by any F500 company
There is no right to feel safe thru security vaudeville at the expense of everyone's freedom, privacy and tax money.
5 of indian origin and 4 of greek origin. which means more than 20% from 2 countries. wow.
the world is spherical
Technology Review Names Joshua Schachter of Del.icio.us Innovator of Year Check it out: http://techaddress.wordpress.com/2006/09/09/techno logy-review-names-joshua-schachter-of-delicious-ya hoo-innovator-of-the-year/
What pretty young body? All I see is the stereotypical man-hating Berkeley dyke.
At first glance, I thought the list is about top 35 inventors. But this is about innovators, and *innovation is not an invention*. There will be a confustion unless you sort it out.