Anthony wrote: ↑Thu Jun 16, 2022 9:04 pm
Yeah, fair enough. Although, when I first watched the video, it wasn't JUST that he gave vague answers to memory-based questions. At one point, he answered to a memory-based question with "it doesn't really matter...," which struck me [albeit superficially and probably incorrectly] as revelatory of his orientation to Si in general, that it "just doesn't really matter."
Well, he says that once yeah, and the thing is he isn't even wrong : it
really didn't matter.
On the other hand, he gives the impression that he probably remembers every single person in every single team from every single company he created.
My point here is that both SiFe and SiTe could easily do something like that. TiSe, with Si demonstrative and Ti frame would be more likely to comply and do the math.
He seems so extremely energetically grounded and concrete—a real country-style hick (as he basically says), and pretty much everything he says is of the same nature. I feel like he's about to offer me chewing tobacco and ask me to go deer hunting since the 12-gauge shotgun is already packed in his pick-up truck. I don't think I've ever once seen this with an intuitive, even one that grew up in a similar-ish area.
I agree. Some FeNi might come close-ish, but not quite like that.
It could be. At first, the particular way in which he was "tinkering," along with his speech patterns as I said, seemed potentially revelatory of some natural attentivity to granularity and first principles of 'concrete space,' if you will, giving way to manipulation of the concrete world in the manner seen with SeTi and TiSe. I thought he had a BIT of Elon Musk in him, though once again I probably hallucinated that. It could just be TEchnique; after all, most of what he emphasizes when talking about his technology is just cause and effect, or reaction and response ("when this is the case, just do this," like the math teacher from hell for all Te PoLR people).
Well, it seems to me that he was an "electronics guy" and an engineer before he became a "computer guy" and that he is still more of a nerd than a geek.
Another thing : he got some of his bigger successes at a time where the early internet was still in the process of establishing what became its main
protocols.. After that, the vast majority of the Ti heavy alphas moved quickly and happily to pure coding and algorithms and/or focused on the "end user" aspect of things, rather than on the machine side oof it., He didn't quite did that. @vincent He was building
workstations and contributed to the emergence of 3D modeling (the creation of 3d objects through direct
interfacing). Even now he still has his hands dirty, directly in the hardware. And all that seems Te over Ti to me.
Sure he is also programming. But the irony here is... Bill Gates or Zuck probably don't anymore.
And think about it : the programming he is doing now certainly has nothing to do with what he was doing when he started. It's not only that he is smart, and that he never stopped learning and teaching.
Mmmm, fair enough, but with a successful TeSi for instance, is it not easy to imagine them "branching out" since their success yields more opportunities to capitalize on different stuff and begin other ventures? Nevertheless, I didn't type him as TeSi, but the reasons I thought he was ST basically amounted to "obvious sensor" and "very proficient TInkErer."
Yes with Ne agenda, TeSis are the most likely STs to become serial specialists, so to speak.