EconomistScotland.com- what if best for world economics is Scottish

chatgpt 3000 trillion dollars of Finance: Generating Sustainabity.docx

ChatGpt and I have enjoyed a few simpler conversations -see Scotland's top 20 entrepeneurs for good

WHAT%20IS%20AULD%20LANG%20SYNE.docx Adam Smith James Wilson Alexander Bell  Fleming .. --has chat forgotten one? how do your places youthful entrepneurs compare eg silicon valley and steve jobs forever

We invite you to a gamesboard for all who play UN's SDGS.games and the 40th and last update to the future hostor...in 1984 as future history's alternative to Orwell's Big Brother world - may little sisters unite us! and all worldrecordjobs co-creators

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Til we meet again - Pioneers tournie coordinated by San Francisco's Andrew Ng 2

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Can you tell me of relationships between CA's 2 Andrew NG ? one is known for coursera and courses in machine intel - other hosts pioneer tournaments and other youthful entrepreneur platforms

There are actually two prominent individuals named Andrew Ng who are involved in the tech industry:

  1. Andrew Ng who is known for his work in machine learning and artificial intelligence. He is a computer scientist and entrepreneur who co-founded Google Brain and Coursera. He is also a former Vice President and Chief Scientist at Baidu, where he led the company's Artificial Intelligence Group. Andrew Ng is highly regarded for his contributions to the field of machine learning and for his efforts in democratizing education through online courses.

  2. Andrew J. Ng, commonly known as AJ, is a young entrepreneur and the founder of Landing AI, an artificial intelligence solutions company that helps businesses implement AI. He is also the co-founder of the AI Fund, which invests in and supports entrepreneurs who are building AI-powered companies. AJ Ng has also hosted various events, including hackathons and pitch competitions, to support young entrepreneurs and innovators.

While both individuals are involved in the tech industry and share the same first and last names, they are two distinct people with different areas of focus and expertise. Andrew Ng (the computer scientist and entrepreneur) and AJ Ng (the young entrepreneur and founder of Landing AI) do not have any known direct relationship or affiliation with each other.

Silicon Valley and future of AI for good fascinates me but I cant afford to stay there. Would you be able to give me an example top 30 list of relatively young tech entrepreneirs who seem to care at least as much about cooperation (and sdg values of Intel) as making money fast - examples in my mind are the 2 Andrew Ngs and Feo-Fei li but as I say I don't have many connections in this area

Sure, here are 30 relatively young tech entrepreneurs who have demonstrated a strong commitment to cooperation, social impact, and sustainable development, in no particular order:

  1. Andrew Ng - Co-founder of Google Brain and Coursera
  2. Fei-Fei Li - Co-founder of AI4ALL and former Director of Stanford AI Lab
  3. Mustafa Suleyman - Co-founder of DeepMind and co-founder of Google's AI ethics board
  4. Elon Musk - Founder and CEO of SpaceX, Tesla, Neuralink, and The Boring Company
  5. Anne Wojcicki - Co-founder and CEO of 23andMe
  6. Max Ventilla - Founder and CEO of AltSchool
  7. Tristan Harris - Co-founder of the Center for Humane Technology
  8. Leila Janah - Founder and CEO of Samasource
  9. Laura Deming - Founder and General Partner at The Longevity Fund
  10. Joe Gebbia - Co-founder of Airbnb
  11. Chris Hughes - Co-founder of Facebook and Co-chair of the Economic Security Project
  12. Sam Altman - CEO of OpenAI and former president of Y Combinator
  13. Julie Hanna - Executive Chair of Kiva and Presidential Ambassador for Global Entrepreneurship
  14. Audrey Tang - Digital Minister of Taiwan and open source advocate
  15. Rachel Haurwitz - Co-founder and CEO of Caribou Biosciences
  16. Naveen Jain - Founder and CEO of Viome
  17. Hamdi Ulukaya - Founder and CEO of Chobani
  18. Amin Toufani - CEO of T Labs and former Director of Strategy at Singularity University
  19. Reshma Saujani - Founder and CEO of Girls Who Code
  20. Chris Anderson - CEO of 3DR and former Editor-in-Chief of Wired
  21. Tan Le - Founder and CEO of Emotiv
  22. Kavita Gupta - Founding Managing Partner of ConsenSys Ventures
  23. Greg Brockman - CEO of OpenAI
  24. Elizabeth Holmes - Founder and CEO of Theranos (although her actions and the company's ultimate downfall are now widely regarded as fraudulent)
  25. Arianna Huffington - Co-founder and former Editor-in-Chief of The Huffington Post
  26. Brian Chesky - Co-founder and CEO of Airbnb
  27. Brian Armstrong - Co-founder and CEO of Coinbase
  28. Stewart Butterfield - Co-founder and CEO of Slack
  29. Emilie Wapnick - Founder and CEO of Puttylike and TED speaker
  30. Tim Ferriss - Author, podcaster, and angel investor in various tech startups

Please note that this is not an exhaustive list, and that some of these individuals have faced criticism or controversy in their respective fields. Nonetheless, they are all entrepreneurs who have shown a commitment to using technology for social good, and who have advocated for cooperation and sustainable development in various ways

Chris Macrae, Norman Macrae Foundation EconomistDiary.com chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk

5801 Nicholson Lane, # 404. Rockville MD 20852 +1 240 316 8157

 

President Louise Richardson

Carnegie Corporation of New York
437 Madison Avenue
New York, NY 10022

25 April 2023

Dear President Richardson

With the help of ChatGpt, and if possible, Fei-Fei Li, we aim to rebuild appreciation of Scottish Entrepreneurs in this the 265th year of moral sentiments dialogues out of Glasgow U. Prominently featured in ChaptGpt’s top 20 Scottish Entrepreneurs are Carnegie, Smith, Watt, Bell, Logie Baird. Together their alumni trains got moral economics, engineering and communications off to quite a good start for human beings.

But sadly, my father Norman’s life time work at The Economist, which started soon after spending his last days as teen navigator Allied Bomber Command Burma, shows global media has got more and more fake thus multiplying conflicts with the transparency needs of Smithian markets. It has also messed up optimistic futures of my father’s most unusual scoop.

https://www.mattridley.co.uk/blog/death-of-a-great-optimist/

From 1951, dad worked with Von Neumann’s question – what goods can peoples unite wherever they have first access to 100 times more tech per decade? By 1976 this had led to Xmas Survey Entrepreneurial Revolution- changing future capitalism

Would somebody from your team have time for a quick meeting in New York? NY friends and I are trying to design EconomistGames.com to help Guterres and millennials with his last 3 full college years challenges: to reorient the world in sustainability directions. Fortunately, our first experience of the SDGs began in 2015 when the Irish President sponsored the UN HQ first public briefing on goal 2 hunger. We have since tracked all the ways women empowerment goals supported by dad’s number 1 hero Fazle Abed are helping Guterres tech envoy team but somehow the augmentation of human intel by artificial intel seems to be stumbling at a final crossroads. Chatgpt is an extraordinary brain tool - for better for worse.

All of this can be very timely to address if Mastercard’s Banga joins Guterres at unsceb.org/board-members

Yours Aye

 

Chris Macrae

PS Through 16 interviews we made with Fazle Abed, it is clear his university movement, which started with Steve Jobs in 2001, had hoped leading New York partners of women tech empowerment would include Carnegie and Soros Open Society University Network, Sadly Abed’s premature death, and much else to have figured during SDGs half way mark to 2030, appear to have blocked this so far.  

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survey 1of child centric education

My dream: everyone experiences Harrison Owen OpenSpace After%20the%20Rage.pdf

IF SCHOOLS were child centric they would make age relevant interventions:

if anyone is illiterate at age 6 it only takes 90 days to change that - best of all a literate kid can be main helper in 20 minute session - see sunita gandhi

finacial literacy would be practicsed from age 8 - see aflatoun ( works in 100 countries

from age 10 pre-teens would have access to pfysical and mental health studies designed peer to peer -see Lancet

no kid would leave primary school without knowing how open space meetings/teamwork is facilitated

teachers would be celebrated for clarifying which skills involve experiential learning not classroom examination - while there is some recognition that music and sports involve practice, its shocking that coding isnt valued this way ..

==============

Do you have life-changing moment to share? - what was it and what did you think or do differently after it?

example until 9/11, i assumed that (good) futures are happening somewhere in the world and would be searched out so that all could communally replicate them;  === 9/11 caused me to question whether global connectivity will give us time to find sustainable solutions for our kids- i became particulaly interested in places where good education leaps appeared but did not get app'd the world over - one example actually goes back to my favorite 1990s advances in schools that a small cliuster of new zealand schools pioneered - download it here https://oiipdf.com/download/the-learning-revolution

i welcome discussion of this book's parts at any time rsvp chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk if you have a solution every community that develops youth could be cooperational

in 1984our book with economist editors 2025report made the case for 40 year commitment to every child identifying own skils dashboard and maximising AI curation of this- we valued this as sustainability critical worldwide cooperation - we see no logic for changing this concern

== we live in an age where most up to half of knowhow of techforgood changes every 3 years - we needed mindsets for exploration not for being standard examined; a nation that makes its college students its largest debt class is likely to collapse economically socially environmentally if web3 is designed for celebrating sustainability cooperation; and if web3 is not designed for neough yout to linkin the first sustainability generation then we are all heading the way of the dodo

I am learn to learn

chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk  

TECH - What is IT? and which exponential multipliers most impact human and natural futures?

AI   >. silicon chip singularity (ie when one chip > one brain in pure analytical capacity) - science fictiion no moore

who programs the ai - the race to include lost voices eg girls- the world of statistics re=-examined like never before (eg previously mass statistics very weak at coding meaining from numbers)

Biotech  >> Affective science (loveq and emotional intelligence remains human's unique edge over artificials for at least 10 more years!)

Some people say that Virtual or Augmented Reality has advanced at its best so far in last 12 months that there are hardly any qualified teachers only pioneering explorers- does this matter - well its VR which is your gateway to web3 - intead of just a mobile device you will like wear  a visual sensor system; equally others argue that you shouldnt worry about how fast you put googles on - what you should want is to take back ownbership of what you spend time creating virually- look at the small print of the big platforms you probably dont own anything without them..maybe this is a generation issue bu interstingly the met-generation can now work on chnaging anything that old systems are destroying (eg climate) ...t 

 IOT which things will now have brains and be as mobile connected as you are

Crypto - can communities celebrate financiang their own most urgent sustainability cooperations? if they dont who wil?

Cyber >> Drone - opportunities and threats of public spaces- first in spaces like the arctic circle if we dont use drones we will get no warning before the big meltdown

-the mkist memorable western campus event i attended in 2010s was tufts colllaboratory summit convened mainly by arctic circle youth under 25; 

one of the main debates how to help teachers in arctic circle schools empower their students to use virtual reality to visit other arctic circles schools communities; many of the changes and solutions are analogous; I am reminded by educators leading the compilation of virtual realty libraries of the DICE acronym - a reen might want to do something dangerous like climb everest, why not VR simulate that? there are impossible things a trainee doctor will never be able to travel inside a humans gut but that can be VR'd; there are catastropghic simulations - you would rid the world of bees just to test if donald is wrong about nature being more powerful than he is, you can simulate it; or the future of smart tourism may be curation of what a community is proudest of being visited for - this way ecotourism, cultural appreciation exchanges can be twinned to maximise celebration of each other- and by the way friends of the tourist can join in virtually- of corse this raises a metaverse question - that Hong Kong is leading the world on

being 100% public - good and bad hacs- note context matters - context 1 smart city context 2 isolated vilalge no moore context 3 make a huge land safe at borders

3D printing aka additive engineering

Big Data Small by market tech sector Leapfrogging

Nano cf einstein - to innovate science model more micro

Blockchain

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