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Time and Tide

Reading a couple of books in parallel that oddly seem to connect. In When: The Scientific Secrets of Perfect Timing, the author describes our executive function and quality of decision making is slave to the individual's chronotype. Generally we do better work before noon and things slide after. To build from that concept, we could in theory have a personal decision making bot that would use our chronotype and other data points to ping us to take certain actions at certain times of day. The email you need to write to an irate customer maybe around 10 am. The meeting about a new business opportunity that you are not too serious about at 2 pm and so on. A personal assistant that understands what makes perfect timing for you. 

In his book 21 Lessons for the 21st Century, the author talks about the tsunami of change that is about it hit us as biotech and infotech start to meld. The chronotype personal assistant is only one of the myriad innovations that would become possible. Good and bad decisions have consequences well beyond the decision-maker so until the tooling to be mostly right all the time is generally available to all, there will be a new kind of underclass. These would be the people who make disproportionately bad decisions and suffer and cause suffering for it.

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