Yesterday, I was tidying up my Japanese travel notes and took note of the following two instances of great Proof of Work:
  1. One set of Wakasa-nuri-bashi chopsticks from Fukui prefecture takes one whole year to produce as it involves as many as twenty stages in a painstaking process powered by highly skilled human labour.
  2. Another great example of PoW. The Fukui Agricultural Experiment Station takes about 14 or 15 years just to create one variant of Koshihikari rice, arguably Japan’s best-known rice.
Learning this humbled me. I have always admired the Japanese for their strong work ethics, but still…spending one year on a single pair of chopsticks? spending 14-15 years to develop a novel rice variant? Note that hands probably will change along the way as people retire or leave their position, so they will hand over the baton to newly minted employees who have to take over the research and development process.
What’s your most prominent manifestation of Proof of Work? The one where you invest your blood, sweat and tears consistently for years on end?
Your college degree doesn’t quite count ah. Because society has conditioned us that a degree is integral to success in the workplace.
Parenting doesn’t quite count either hor. Because it is a one-way ticket once you sign up for it. I mean, technically, you can leave your family and shirk your responsibilities. But the thing is, you can’t quit parenting, so you are compelled to go all in.
I look forward to your responses!
75 sats \ 6 replies \ @Satosora 7h
My car. I have owned it for 12 years. I do all the maintenance myself. Except put tires on the car. Everyone else has a newer car,l am still driving my first one.
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My car is 2005 model
It’s in decent shape but it’s time to retire the car
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31 sats \ 3 replies \ @Satosora 6h
Mine is a 92. I think they were just built a bit differently. Mine was built to last longer.
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Mine is mini SUV that I inherited. Terrible fuel efficiency
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Did you go to some funky places with this SUV though?
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @Nuttall 2h
Be careful. Do a cost analysis before selling. Even if gas prices are $5 per US Gallon it might be cheaper to maintain it than to:
  1. Buy a new or late model and pay $1,000 a year on property tax
  2. A $30,000 new car financed is a $45,000 car with personal property tax and financing that now goes into and up to 7 years!
  3. You will pay less to service your older vehicle and cost will average for a new vehicle
  4. In my state we actually pay a penalty for a new car that is fuel efficient because I'm not buying enough gas that's taxed to cover road expenses
An example is that in 2008 my wife had a Nissan Maxima and it required premium has which was heading to $4.50 a gallon. It was not so efficient at 25 mpg on the highway. The car was stolen and we got it back and I decided to sell it and get a new economic car.
After analysis of taxes, new car price, taxes, maintenance... I could have saved $12,000 in 8 years and bought Bitcoin at a lot less.
That's hindsight but the lesson learned is that I have an old Ford Truck, My now older 2008 Nissan and I'm spending not too much, about $1000 a year on maintenance for each car (soon to be $2000 a year) and still still cheaper than buying a new car or newer used.
Personal Property taxes are the big killer.
My wife wanted a new car and we bought one for her and in 10 years I could have bought 2 for the taxes alone! We even paid up front, no financing. Furthermore I told my wife that we could have bought Bitcoin at $16,000 instead.
Lol...
So be it.
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Who drove your car while you were teaching in Taiwan?
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Parenting doesn’t quite count either hor. Because it is a one-way ticket once you sign up for it. I mean, technically, you can leave your family and shirk your responsibilities. But the thing is, you can’t quit parenting, so you are compelled to go all in.
I wish everyone thought this way, but many don't. Many give up on their families and their children. Loving parents shouldn't be taken for granted, and society should praise parents who stick together and sacrifice their own personal goals for the sake of their kids.
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I’m patting myself on the should right now!
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have some zaps for your efforts!
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34 sats \ 2 replies \ @zapsammy 3h
martial arts training, knowledge of human anatomy & physiology, as well as bitcoin skills were my longest commitments, with thousands of hours invested into each discipline. not quite the 10,000 hrs allegedly necessary to become a "master," according to some scholar.
next would be random feats of strength, guitar (classical, electric, bass, ukelele), and rock-climbing: hundreds of hours invested into each.
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Cool. I’m sure your experience in martial arts blended with your knowledge of physiology to lend you a unique perspective
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i have seen some crazy shit, that's my perspective =P
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34 sats \ 1 reply \ @kepford 4h
  • My faith
  • My family (You can quit this. Many do)
  • Music
  • My Drupal Newsletter
  • Software Engineering
  • Self improvement
All have been very rewarding.
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I’m intrigued by your Drupal newsletter. What topics do you usually cover?
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I have dedicated myself to my family for over 30 years. I made sure my 3 sons could make it in the world honorably. I guess I am able to start on the sons’ kids, now. It looks like the dedication to my family will run for another 15 years. Then I look forward to a well deserved rest. Since parenting doesn’t count, my next most invested situation was in computers. I administer networks, Windows Workstations, Linux Workstations and do Cybersecurity. Linux since Slack and Yggisdrill distributions. I guess you could say I am dedicated to screen time. I even wear blue-blocking glasses.
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My wife rants a lot about the inefficiencies of the IT infrastructure in Singapore. Is Japanese IT infrastructure superior in your experience?
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I haven’t been to Singapore. The closest I got was Thailand. My experience of Japanese IT predates the internet for the most part. Is ran a 386 Windows3.0 laptop by using batch files to compress and uncompressed the programs on the computer to use them, due to the small disk and no math counter. I was on the FIDONet bulletin board system using a very slow modem. I don’t think you would want me to compare that to today’s IT experience!! I did not get on to the internet until ‘97. I was working for a large company with multiple sites connected by the internet using SunSolaris machines. I cannot compare the two IT systems.
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34 sats \ 1 reply \ @gnilma 4h
Knife sharpening, see video, 'nuff said.
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Yes I have read about your dedication to knife sharpening before
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Almost 17 years at my current employment a lot of time and effort to get this far and knowledge and friendships made
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At the same job with the same company? 17 years is a lot of commitment!
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Yeah been a long time in different towns and jobs
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34 sats \ 1 reply \ @bief57 6h
I've been thinking about the question for minutes. I think and think and I realize that I haven't dedicated myself to anything, either that or I didn't understand the question. In a funny way but it's not really, I just felt useless, thinking about it, I've dedicated myself to watching a lot of series and movies, how horrible, not useful or talented.
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I actually think that’s a cool way of interpreting my question. I invested years of my life into watching FRIENDS and Sex and The City and reading Harry Potter. I think pursuing our hobbies is a worthwhile pursuit in itself - not every activity needs to be optimised for productivity and self improvement!
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @aljaz 57m
besides bitcoin and computers (i've been working in IT since i was 16) I also have 1155 days long duolingo streak.
I also have a life long commitment to learning and reading - as I kid i've had periods when I read book shelves, not books. I've mostly hated most of my formal education but I've ended up studying most of the hated topics in uni later on in life when my interests needed them.
I still try to read at least 2 books a month no matter what, tho I more calmer years I would do one a week.
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @Nuttall 2h
Since 1988 I've studied Sanskrit, Yoga and Indian Philosophy which has helped me to circle back to Western Ideas and philosophy, religion and culture.
I've also wasted a lot of time doing nonsense which also pays off in a negative way.
I've spent many years since 1986 writing. I'm not going to say that I'm good but I've been paid to do it for other people and even in work scenarios.
I've been mostly vegetarian since 1986. I'm 54 and I don't take any medicines. I can work for 10 hours without eating and this is building things like piers, concrete formwork or other outside activities.
I've spent many years in the Linux world since 1998/99. Every laptop or desktop I've bought since 2004 I've removed Microsoft Windows and installed Ubuntu, and now mostly Linux Mint.
Did I stake also I've spent a lot of time doing stupid shit?
If I could do it all again I would not change anything.
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