Do you disagree with the fact that eco-chambers are getting bigger and louder? This in turn crowds out the true subcultures and emerging behavior.
If content marketing, meta-verse, tokenization of everything, short-form video, and meme investing are overrated, what seems underrated but high impact in the future?
What real problems are worth solving today with computers?
But it's limited by the handicapped mobile platforms, who are nothing more than ad clients.
All it takes is to create an open (as in user has full access, no limits), responsive platform and current status quo will disappear overnight, nobody will look back. Same code running on your high-powered desktop and you "phone" or tablet, making no distinction between them other than to adapt to screen size. What programs you use on either device will solely depend on the actual program's resource requirements, nothing else.
Your AAA game will make no sense to be run on your phone (which can be attached to a screen), unless the game is engineered to scale to such low extremes. Your code editor, on the other hand, can be run wherever.
If the goal is to support a project which will improve the world, I'd support existing projects to either make clean water more accessible or help the world's poorest people become more self-sufficient (eg, Heifer International).
https://www.ibisworld.com/united-states/industry-trends/indu...
Profit is the most reliable signal of what people need. If they're paying extra, it means they get even more value out of it.
Not allowing profit is when economies fall.
I would take about 20% and plan to squander it. Vacations, car, cloths.
I would put 80% in something with a time lock of about a year. Something with a penalty for early withdraw. This would provide 2 features:
1) Time to think about it
2) Protection from 'newly discovered' relatives and friends who want a piece. "Sorry I would love to help, but the money is invested, and there are SEVER penalties for early withdraw, you do not want me severely penalized do you?"
Now if you are talking about how I would invest a million dollars, that would be different. Short term I like lampshades idea of Wheat. Anything natural gas. Anything to protect against inflation.
$1 million for investment, but otherwise free-and-clear? I'd form an LLC and then buy into local cash-flow businesses like laundromats, equipment rentals, and apartment rentals. Then I would use the cash flow from those business to pursue more exploratory business ideas.
A new system for procurement and allocation could save trillions of dollars of waste. A couple economists and game theory specialists might be able to crack it. It’d be worth a million to try.
A million dollars is not a lot but applied well, it can reshape a life.
Personally, something that would really help me, is that I make very irrational stupid decisions and waste time. I would like to create some piece of software that prevents that. Something that prompts me, with messages like "What should you be doing?" or helps me make decisions.
Also, I would like it if it presented news articles that are not obviously biased, and then you have a quiz that asks questions about if you know what the bias was, or if the conclusion of the article was correct.
The big roadblock is I don't know how to drive a dump truck, excavator, or bucket truck though. :)
I would love to spend an hour a week reading a newsletter about what's going on in the world. Especially if it lets me ignore the hype and advertising-led news cycle.
To answer your question - $1 million would fund two or three skilled people full time for a year. So the problem has to be relatively small. I'd maybe spend it on an ad blitz to try to find homes for dogs and cats currently in shelters in a small number of cities.
Is not as high-impact that save the earth, but I think is important to give real alternatives to the excess of "cloud-dependent" tech that exist. Local-first, truly personal, etc.
A million dollars is not enough to guarantee you can improve the lives of many but it's certainly enough to do it for a few.
Are true subcultures like true scotsmen?
1 million dollars would solve one problem: buying myself a house. I can handle the transaction using a computer.
But in all seriousness, I don't think $1mm is enough to move the needle in the grand scheme of things. I would save it for retirement, maybe buy a new car.
Depends on who you ask, but I'm going with "wheat".