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Brian's avatar

It's funny to me that tech VCs are talking about "acceleration". Isn't it well-understood in our industry that picking the right problems to solve is even more important than executing with velocity on those problems? Instead of effective accelerationism, why aren't we talking about effective problem-identification-ism?

Regarding "wanting to give humans what they want", I'd observe the word "want" conflates urges with intentions. Giving humans what they *intend for* is fraught enough (paving the road to hell and all that); but often that's not even what we're doing in tech. Instead we're optimizing for clicks, for satisfying humans' immediate impulses. Is this really what we want to accelerate?

Sure, maybe that's the "effective" part of "effective accelerationism", but I think the "accelerate" part is 1000x easier than the "effective" part and if we are promoting any kind of accelerationism we're much more likely to accelerate *something* that will probably be the wrong thing.

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Brand Anatomy's avatar

Very interesting piece, thank you. Indeed true that a lot of the goods and services we consume today are becoming tech-enabled / based. I recently wrote about how every company is becoming / converging to a X-as-a-Services model (x being a good / service).

Is Every Company Becoming a Software Business?

https://brandanatomy101.substack.com/p/is-every-company-becoming-a-software

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