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Re: Japs Not Strong In IT
The rest of you, sorry for the digression. Many of these so-called dropouts dropped out from great schools. Larry Ellison dropped out from U of Illinois, a good school. Michael Dell dropped out from U of Texas Austin, also a good school. Point is not so much whether they dropped out. Of course dropping out was the right decision for them in the end. But they dropped out not because they were failing classes. They dropped out because they decided to pursue dreams that did not require them to have a degree.
I think it's not only that our academics are not well rewarded. By and large, our engineers are not well rewarded. We ahve a system where people just want to fuck the engineers by pushing them out of the door by replacing them with cheaper PMETs from India and Philippines. We don't put a large premium on innovation. I think Japan had a large premium on innovation, but for some reason their innovation culture disappeared. Their work culture was not good - people worked hard, but they discouraged you from speaking your mind, or saying what you really believed. Everybody became yes men. I believe it is that yes man culture which screwed up Japan. Cost of land became so high as to discourage start-ups from forming. (Sounds familiar, Singapore?)
After that, the big company became dinosaurs. All the big Japanese brands of yesteryear got wiped out because their costs became too high. Your Sony, your Sharp, your Olympus.
Don't look at the CEO or those few people at the top. They will teach you nothing. Look instead at the general system, at what's happening on the middle management level. Obviously the CEO's job is very important, because he makes a lot of the decisions and he shapes the culture of the company. But if his company is in a place where the people are not good at innovation, then it doesn't matter how brilliant he is. Steve Jobs is not really a tech guy. He's a designer guy and he's lucky because he's in a part of the world where there are plenty of great engineers, and he can make good use of them. Don't look at the individuals. Look at the system.
Our academics are not well rewarded. They are treated as high class technicians in Singapore ? The exodus must be huge. Some became sales people instead.
I don't know why Japanese aren't interested in computers except robots.![]()
The rest of you, sorry for the digression. Many of these so-called dropouts dropped out from great schools. Larry Ellison dropped out from U of Illinois, a good school. Michael Dell dropped out from U of Texas Austin, also a good school. Point is not so much whether they dropped out. Of course dropping out was the right decision for them in the end. But they dropped out not because they were failing classes. They dropped out because they decided to pursue dreams that did not require them to have a degree.
I think it's not only that our academics are not well rewarded. By and large, our engineers are not well rewarded. We ahve a system where people just want to fuck the engineers by pushing them out of the door by replacing them with cheaper PMETs from India and Philippines. We don't put a large premium on innovation. I think Japan had a large premium on innovation, but for some reason their innovation culture disappeared. Their work culture was not good - people worked hard, but they discouraged you from speaking your mind, or saying what you really believed. Everybody became yes men. I believe it is that yes man culture which screwed up Japan. Cost of land became so high as to discourage start-ups from forming. (Sounds familiar, Singapore?)
After that, the big company became dinosaurs. All the big Japanese brands of yesteryear got wiped out because their costs became too high. Your Sony, your Sharp, your Olympus.
Don't look at the CEO or those few people at the top. They will teach you nothing. Look instead at the general system, at what's happening on the middle management level. Obviously the CEO's job is very important, because he makes a lot of the decisions and he shapes the culture of the company. But if his company is in a place where the people are not good at innovation, then it doesn't matter how brilliant he is. Steve Jobs is not really a tech guy. He's a designer guy and he's lucky because he's in a part of the world where there are plenty of great engineers, and he can make good use of them. Don't look at the individuals. Look at the system.