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RE: Complexity kills consumer engagement

in Splinterlands2 months ago

There's pedagogy that strongly suggests that to teach students that there are no mistakes, only learning opportunities. Gone are the days you tell kids they have brains like sieves or cabbages (my applied maths teacher). If you are taught that mistakes are necessary and valuable, you encourage risk taking and confidence and eventually, it is hoped, success. This is real world learning, and of course extends to business.

I still remember going to the DVD shop and spending an hour choosing ten videos for the week, usually a combo of arthouse and thriller. Streaming as a concept sounded so radical and futuristic. Imagine if they'd quit at the first mistake. I guess I wouldn't be moaning that there was nothing on any of the ten odd streaming services we have access to here. By the same token, maybe we'd still have arthouse films instead of streaming services supplying films based on what the majority of consumers seem to want, and then we go ahead and watch those things because there's nothing else to watch, which means apparently we want just them.

Damn I miss wierd arthouse films.

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I had my fair share of spankings from teachers back in the days at school. It was normal then. Most people dealt with it okay, but I have seen quite a few who couldn't and their lives were destroyed.

First forward 40 years and now my kids are going to school in a different country and I must say a lot has changed for the better. Is it perfect? No. But it is definitely far better.

Regarding the DVD rental, my wife and I was working on our PHD at Norman, OK when Netflix started the mail order DVD rental. We were some of the first customers and we still are quarter century later. We can seen how they took over the evil business by blockbuster! I also remember their slips along the way. We stayed with them over the years. Held their stock over the years too. All helped us handsomely to financial freedom.

That's the rub, hey - teachers are just as influential as parents sometimes. I can see how many people are resentful of them as they have such awful memories of the bad ones. I was lucky really - even that Maths teacher said such things tongue in cheek and was a good guy. My literature teacher was so passionate and kind she made me become one. And like in any profession, there's people really good at their job and those who should not be teaching, though the majority wouldn't do it if they didn't like kids.

Now of course there are laws to stop you being cruel to kids (mostly) and it's swung sooo far that teachers are blamed for everything. Kid never works, misbehaves and fails? Teachers fault. Government enforced curriculum not to parents liking? Teachers fault. It's a really tough profession.

Oh God I entirely forgot about the DVD by post thing!!! We started doing that too. Gosh that must have taken some doing. That's cool you profited from their stock!

I'll check out Roma. I love Alfonso Cuaron, but for some reason I missed this one.

Roma!