Yeah. This prompts me to make a brief version of a post I’d had on my TODO list for awhile:
“In the 21st century, being quick and competent at ‘orienting’ is one of the most important skills.”
(in the OODA Loop sense, i.e. observe → orient → decide → act)
We don’t know exactly what’s coming with AI or other technologies, we can make plans informed by our best-guesses, but we should be on the lookout for things that should prompt some kind of strategic orientation. @jacobjacob has helped prioritize noticing things like “LLMs are pretty soon going to be affect the strategic landscape, we should be ready to take advantage of the technology and/or respond to a world where other people are doing that.”
I like Robert’s comment here because it feels skillful at noticing a subtle thing that is happening, and promoting it to strategic attention. The object-level observation seems important and I hope people in the AI landscape get good at this sort of noticing.
It also feels kinda related to the original context of OODA-looping, which was about fighter pilots dogfighting. One of the skills was “get inside of the enemy’s OODA loop and disrupt their ability to orient.” If this were intentional on OpenAI’s part (or part of subconscious strategy), it’d be a kinda clever attempt to disrupt our observation step.
Yeah. This prompts me to make a brief version of a post I’d had on my TODO list for awhile:
“In the 21st century, being quick and competent at ‘orienting’ is one of the most important skills.”
(in the OODA Loop sense, i.e. observe → orient → decide → act)
We don’t know exactly what’s coming with AI or other technologies, we can make plans informed by our best-guesses, but we should be on the lookout for things that should prompt some kind of strategic orientation. @jacobjacob has helped prioritize noticing things like “LLMs are pretty soon going to be affect the strategic landscape, we should be ready to take advantage of the technology and/or respond to a world where other people are doing that.”
I like Robert’s comment here because it feels skillful at noticing a subtle thing that is happening, and promoting it to strategic attention. The object-level observation seems important and I hope people in the AI landscape get good at this sort of noticing.
It also feels kinda related to the original context of OODA-looping, which was about fighter pilots dogfighting. One of the skills was “get inside of the enemy’s OODA loop and disrupt their ability to orient.” If this were intentional on OpenAI’s part (or part of subconscious strategy), it’d be a kinda clever attempt to disrupt our observation step.