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Nowt to brag about Gaz. I went to Scumbag College. The test to get on the team was to be able to count your toes with your eyes closed. The questions on the programme were miles easier in them days too. Our team won its first round match but that team would struggle to get 50 points these days. Haven't got a link to it. Which is a shame as I was THE coolest f***er ever to grace the programme.
HoolaIt's not about the division per se. It's about the ability to break down a complex problem into a series of simpler, manageable problems. 40 years ago, I was taught that sort of division problem as a method. I didn't have to understand the fundamentals behind the method. I just had to learn the method. And the method was applicable only to that one type of problem. But if you teach kids to have confidence in using their brains to work out their own methods of attacking problems, that is FAR more powerful.That is what humans can do and machines can't (at least, not easily). But I didn't pick up that sort of skill till I was well into my late 20s. And even then, I picked it up despite my education rather than because of it. The point is that if you have a Google/Wiki generation that don't need to spend years rote learning things, they can instead develop the problem-solving skills that mark us out as human.Richard P Feynman was arguably the greatest scientific genius of the 20th Century. In his book "The Pleasure of Finding Things Out", he wrote a section about how they passed boring evenings at Los Alamos when he was working on the atom bomb. He said that one of his mates would challenge them to work out problems like, "What is 99 squared?" Feynman remembered the standard formula that gets taught in secondary school maths(A-B)^2 = A^2 + B^2 -2ABSo, if A=100 and B=1, A-B=99And so, 99^2= 100^2 + 1^2 - 2*100*1= 10000 + 1 - 200 = 9801The fact that it's a maths problem that you can now do on a calculator in half a second is irrelevant. The point is that it is a human brain, taking a really hard problem and breaking it down into a set of really easy problems.That is what we do and that is how we progress. 20,000 years ago, some humans were crapping themselves at not having enough food to eat. That was the big problem. It was insurmountable. Until some other humans broke that down into:a) Let's gather some straight pieces of woodb) Let's get some pieces of flint and chip them into sharp shapesc) Let's get some bits of animal sinew and tie the sharp bits onto the long bits.d) Let's organise some hunting parties.e) Let's use these weapons that we've made to kill a big f***ing Mammoth and eat the b*****d.That's why we dominate the planet. And it's that sort of thinking that will take us through whatever challenges the planet chucks at us.
Just a note following on from BSTs prediction about internet connectivity.My new car is permanently connected to the internet, that (apparently) is to help me find where it is if I can't remember where I parked it. It does work as well!It also logs all my journeys, tells me if I've locked it and whether any windows are open. In the event of a crash and the air-bags operate the emergency services are called.It wasn't an optional extra, it comes with the car.
Quote from: silent majority on May 11, 2015, 12:12:55 pmJust a note following on from BSTs prediction about internet connectivity.My new car is permanently connected to the internet, that (apparently) is to help me find where it is if I can't remember where I parked it. It does work as well!It also logs all my journeys, tells me if I've locked it and whether any windows are open. In the event of a crash and the air-bags operate the emergency services are called.It wasn't an optional extra, it comes with the car.So you're car is connected, your phone can be tracked via GPS and phone masts, your credit/debit cards are heavily monitored (for dubious spending patterns), CCTV cameras everwhere, laws forcing Google and others to delete historical news/data and smart TV's that can listen in. Add in the Government's forthcoming "Snoopers Charter" and it sounds like 1984 was just a bit premature in its predictions...
DutchFeynman was an utter genius at simplifying problems. I'm convinced that this is the essence of true genius. Not embracing complexity, but cutting through the smoke to see the simple picture inside. It's wonderful to see my kids being taught to have confidence in that sort of thinking. I haven't listened to that song but I'll give it a go. On my side, I'd highly recommend "The Pleasure of Finding Things Out" by Feynman.
And every lad that I have employed doesn't know how to use an A to Z road map because of Google. "Look in the index for the street name""What's an index?"
"University Challenge" = "Spot the virgin"And yes, I do enjoy watching it!