Your pre-Gulch job? Your job in the Gulch?
One of the most entertaining parts of the book is the part at the beginning of the chapter on Atlantis where everyone talks about their jobs outside the Gulch vs. within the Gulch.
Before I read AS, I was both a professor of chemical engineering and materials science, particularly nanotechnology, as well as the co-founder of small biosensors and biofuels companies. After reading AS, I sold the businesses to not feed the looters. I kept the professorship because I was not doing things contradictory to Galtish values. Recently I just got an appointment as a biomedical engineering professor, too.
Within the Gulch it appears my job is to be discussion facilitator.
Welcome to Atlantis,
jbrenner
Before I read AS, I was both a professor of chemical engineering and materials science, particularly nanotechnology, as well as the co-founder of small biosensors and biofuels companies. After reading AS, I sold the businesses to not feed the looters. I kept the professorship because I was not doing things contradictory to Galtish values. Recently I just got an appointment as a biomedical engineering professor, too.
Within the Gulch it appears my job is to be discussion facilitator.
Welcome to Atlantis,
jbrenner
Previous comments... You are currently on page 5.
My idea of "Going Galt" was to blend into a very small community and become relatively invisible. My neighbors know I'm a foreigner but I don't look or act wealthy (my 20 year old Peugeot reinforces this image).
I wrote more about this in this topic:
http://www.galtsgulchonline.com/posts/2f...
http://www.element14.com/community/group...
I'd love to set up a new studio in the valley's art district.
I'm always interested if there's something to do with technology. I'm happy to be fully busy right now, but I'm always looking for a way to do more stuff with technology.
There's nothing wrong with doing work for money. I don't know if biofuels will ever scale up, but supposedly they're carbon neutral. There's an off chance the technology will lead to some way to harness energy that doesn't destroy our environment. That would be a huge creation of value, solving one of the biggest problems of our time. Even if it doesn't scale up, you've tried something new and done something to reduce the costs of damage to the environment.
I am doing 3D printing of tissue scaffolding, and soon I am going to be 3D printing metals, too. Python is actually the language of 3D printers. My daughter took a course in Python as part of the Florida Virtual School (online).
I have two printers from http://www.3dstuffmaker.com. Interested in working collaboratively?
Re: Didn't the Gulch do almost no trade with the outside world?
I actually questioned myself about my previous ethics of taking money to convert plant and animal waste into biofuels, energy, and chemicals from environmentalists. It was a fair trade, and I took a peculiar joy in looting the looters, but it felt odd dealing with people outside the Gulch.
A major part of my purpose in this thread is to have everyone find out who does what so that we can do commerce with our Gulch colleagues.
I really hope someone creates a micronation like the Gulch BUT not cut off from the world. My wife could attend a legal conference on the seastead and my kids could go to a one-day hackerspace classes on UAVs or Python. They could also have a waterpark for kids in the evening, and rooftop bar with Indian developers drinking tea, some Israeli program managers who license software from a firm on the seastead, a bunch of attorneys there for the conference, and a few rich kids from Germany sipping drinks with Ketamine talking about Herman Hesse.
The type of Gulch you're talking about, though, is about a thousand miles northeast of Irkutsk. In that kind of place, you have to learn to be jack of all trades and enjoy borscht and cucumbers-- no indulgent tourists with the vacation/conferences.
In the Gulch I perform home and landscape maintenance, tend my garden, cook for myself and friends, and work on a "script" (for a stage play) about "Going Galt" in Argentina