Ah, speaking at a convention or a similar environment seems like a good idea, I have opportunities like that I can immediately think of.
Can you elaborate on the usefulness of public speaking, though? You mentioned gaining status, and I could see that as somewhat useful for making myself more well-known → gaining connections → being offered better opportunities, but there’s probably uses for it or consequences of it that I haven’t thought of.
I ended up going in a completely different direction with this: I intend to test my OWN rationality, and I figure that if rationality is about WINNING, about being EFFECTIVE, then I ought to find direct measures of the things I want, and test myself in 6 months or so (timeframe dependent on the toughness/length of the task). This will, in other words, be a test of my ability to understand the territory insofar as that understanding makes me more effective at a given task.
The things in particular, a few subgoals of my personal life-optimization:
artistic endeavors and life enjoyment: engaging in things like art or gamedev or other mediums while aiming for MAXIMUM FUN.
being RESTED, having ENERGY to do things (I have a tendency to burn out due to overworking myself)
studying AI alignment (and the general objective of “actually have a positive effect on whether we’re all going to die or not”)
the tests in question:
for each artistic project (i.e. a drawing, a game, et cetera), I post it to a public forum and, with said post, I add a simple strawpoll asking “would you judge this work as ‘complete’?” I would not be allowed to argue with the results, and I’d be judged by the number of projects I complete, with “complete” defined by the poll being greater than 80%. It’s hard to directly measure fun, but “completing quality projects and showing them to others” seems like a good enough way to achieve it, for me in particular.
I’ve already got a method for measuring this: each day, if I notice that I’m tired during my free time, I force myself to rest until I stop being tired, and I record the time in a spreadsheet. Then, I sum up all the rest time accumulated over a period of a month. The lower it is, the better my sleep patterns hypothetically are. I predict that, if I had myself do this for as long as a month, I’d avoid pushing myself to my productive limit—that would induce burnout, which would eventually FORCE me to rest during free time, and a lot.
A good measure of “you are making quality posts” would be either something like summed upvotes, or maximum upvotes on a post in a given period, or maximum links from other posts made by other users. That last one seems difficult, but also points me in the right direction of “look into what posts got referenced the most, and try to make those kinds of insights.”
I’m a little bit nervous about taking on the 1st or 3rd test—I’m not sure if I could pull them off—but I suppose that’s the right feeling to have, if they’re hard but accurately so.