Not everyone is a hacker.<p>I see this in some of my co-workers who only code for a living, not for a passion. They go home to their TVs and Netflix and raise their families. They could care less about Hacker News and the signal/noise ratio of the content.<p>I see this nowadays - people just expect things to work - my niece (under 6 yrs of age) will go to photo frames and swipe across them, expecting something to happen. From a very early age, she expects touch screen interfaces.<p>I see this in my parents when I have to do technical support (they refuse to move from Windows - Go Microsoft!) - and have to explain to them that a computer operating system is a dynamic system and, yes, the printer will stop working- just because it worked yesterday doesn't mean it will work today.<p>When I try explaining to my dad the process for fixing something on the computer, he just doesn't want to do it or can't. He wants a step by step by step process. But I can't give it to him. Because the process is finding out the process.<p>Isn't that what hacking is?<p>I would argue, based on a non-scientific sample of some of my friends talking about TV shows they watch and the restaurant food they go to, that the world is divided into producers and consumers. The catch here is that everyone is a producer and everyone is a consumer.<p>Pre-digital distribution, it was very hard for someone to produce at scale (the Gutenberg press revolutionized information access - previously books were <i>hand-copied</i>, a process taking months if not years).<p>Now, with digital distribution, people who can produce works that can be copied (sometimes illegally, to detriment of the author's profit) can make a profit off their creativity and hard work. They can produce at scale (software, CDs). Mozart died broke because he lived in an age before distribution, before he could reach an audience that would appreciate and pay - concerts were the only means of distribution - couldn't load his tunes on your iPod.<p>As hackers, we can produce something that can be copied digitally and distributed digitally. From Youtube Instant search to TwitterVision - people can consume (even if just for free) - what we can hack. Hacking isn't always fun though - it's not easy (my dad, potential CS students who drop out because it isn't as easy as they thought) which is a subject for another time.<p>I'm a hacker - though not a great one - I love being able to modify and create things. To create is to live, for me.
If only life was so simple. Most problems are not so one-dimensional. Problems in life are typically not math problems - they usually are complex situations with multiple solutions that have numerous impacts with degrees of good and bad.<p>For example, we would all like our roads well paved at all times but you'd also have to take into consideration the environmental impacts of upping the frequency of putting tar on all of our roads across society. On top of it you'd most likely have higher incidences of road worker deaths. etc. etc.<p>I'd agree that we need more people attempting to solve problems and that there are many things that could be vastly improved -- but I think the dynamics of true social problems are somewhat misrepresented in the article.
I'd like slightly disagree. I do think more people needs to be analytical but without empathy and morality all hacker qualities would be rendered meaningless and pointless.<p>As a hacker without empathic skills I could pick any goal and ruthlessly implement it:
Goal: Need more organ donors
1. People are unwilling to donate organs
2. Force all prisoners on death row to give away they organs for staying in death row accommodation
3. Kill them in ways that doesn't hurt the organs (they might suffer some inconvenience)
4. Harvest organs<p>As Charlie Chaplin in Great Dictator said:
"More than machinery we need humanity, more than cleverness we need kindness and gentleness, without these qualities life would be violent and all would be lost."
Sorry this deserves dramatic pose. Hackers are not immune from the human condition. What of the irrational triumphs? Of serendipity and of chance? To believe all things solvable through logic, science, and engineering is hubris. Emotions matter. Manipulation matters. Hackers excel at local optimization, but without the turbulence, the conflict, and the occasional "kick" delivered by those that think differently, we would face a gradual descent into extinction.
The conclusion I come to from some of the points made almost equate to: "To make everyone a millionaire print more money".<p>Increasing taxes and the average income really does little in the scheme of things other than create/abolish a disparity. The talk of money offers no real solutions, throwing money to fix US education has done next to nothing.<p>I have been in places where most people had very little money and it was wonderful, while in some rich places it was anarchy with people living behind razor wire and armed guards.<p>There are a lot of books that have been written about how to fix things in poorer countries. Take a look at William Easterly or if you like Bono try Jeffrey Sachs. Whatever your politics there is no easy answer. Try reading some books and see the mess that has been made by people trying to make things better, and all they've done is make it worse.
I agree. It is all too natural to accept things as they are--just go with the flow. The world would benefit having more people take a hard look at systems and situations we take for granted, call out short comings, and take action to improve things. The trouble is that hackers are more apt at noticing these deficiencies than the laymen. How do you encourage this heightened awareness in everybody? Entrepreneurs have profits and hackers have their curiosity. What motivations are there for everyone else?
I believe that's the second part, there is a first part although: realizing there is a problem. For example, you may not see cancer as a problem and not try to find a cure as you may see this as a special destiny.<p>And to help people to realize problems you need to teach them to doubt. And not only doubting about religion, but also science (didn't Eistein somehow prove Newton wrong?) and their life choises and everything basicaly.<p>Who is good at doubting? I believe usually really good scientists or people that have a grasp of good philosophy (the greeks, Popper, etc.).<p>So, as it's not even that difficult to learn, I believe the world needs more (good) philosophy...