Advice for young people: Learn things deeply | John Carmack and Lex Fridman
Ғылым және технология
Lex Fridman Podcast full episode: • John Carmack: Doom, Qu...
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GUEST BIO:
John Carmack is a legendary programmer, co-founder of id Software, and lead programmer of many revolutionary video games including Wolfenstein 3D, Doom, Quake, and the Commander Keen series. He is also the founder of Armadillo Aerospace, and for many years the CTO of Oculus VR.
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Podcast website: lexfridman.com/podcast
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Пікірлер: 142
"You can't know everything, but you should convince yourself that you can know anything." Inspirational. Legend
@ya_boj
2 күн бұрын
I also liked: "Weaponized curiosity: You can deploy your curiosity to make things useful and valuable to you, even if they don't immediately appear that way."
That combination of charisma and intelligence is really something else. So much fun to listen to this guy
"weaponize curiosity" - John Carmack
@brandonroque2226
9 ай бұрын
Doom 3 main theme main chorus plays
I love carmack. I remember listening to the masters of doom as an audio book back in college and just being fascinated by this legend. Guy has preoccupations with things like pizza, games, and an overpowering fascination with complex systems. What a combination.
I remember seeing my physics teacher's study room it was full of so many books. It seemed like a library, it was hella inspiring to just look at them and know what's it like to be balls deep into something
Revisiting this snippet after months into my career always makes me confirm how truthful the whole thing is. "Weaponize curiosity".
I have experienced this on a personal level. Learning to deconstruct ELF format executable on Linux. It was during one of these exercises that I found how the "main" function of any program gets invoked. Tracing system calls through strace and library calls through ltrace to understand the internal implementation of user space processes.
Two of my Heros. Thank you!
awesome. Great nugget from 5+ hour conversation
Reminds me of Richard Feynman walking about seeing the beauty in all the parts. The surface level beauty doesn't go away, and you also get all the extra beauty of all the parts, how they go together and how they work etc.
I know and believe that every and each of us has it own path that should follow . The most important thing is to live in harmony with yourself . Then you are also honest with others .
@blo0m1985
Жыл бұрын
and when circumstances around you allow you to be yourself.
@blo0m1985
Жыл бұрын
sometimes even to push ahead as tank is not enough, no money, no time, no health.
@krox477
Жыл бұрын
Your path in this world is largely determined by where you're spawned
Such an innocence for learning and digging deep into things is just a work ethic of a Monk master .His wisdom is for long term success in tech
great advice 👍
Definitely one of my favorite interviews
@mareklukl2271
Жыл бұрын
Yaa totally changed my life and purpose of my life as a young dump kiddo💯 please make more of these🙏🙏🤗 Love you guys 🔥🔥
Reading is a good foundation.
Man, I really needed this today
so refreshing.
Inspiration legend! Legend! Inspirational! (But without jokes Carmack is very inspirational).
Great advice, great perspective on life.I just became aware of this at 40 yrs looking back
One of the best advice ever
If you know something, you don't have to remember it
@shravangulvadi
2 жыл бұрын
Very well put!
@Moreoverover
2 жыл бұрын
Not true, I have deeply understood many things, only to forget the understanding.
@leastimnotarepublican
2 жыл бұрын
@@Moreoverover "the last man to know everything died in the 18th century". I'd rather be an absent minded professor than be absent of a mind. Not many statements are absolute. Generally speaking, and with special consideration to the methods of my own countries educational system, it's a truish statement.
@Moreoverover
2 жыл бұрын
@@leastimnotarepublican I think a more absolute statement would be "If you know something, you will only have to remember how you knew it".
@DarkGT
Жыл бұрын
One my teachers was saying "Don't remember code, understand the algorithm."
Sound advice with a sound caveat. What was best for him is not for everyone. Consuming knowledge at such a pace and such a deep level require a very special mindset and intellect.
true explorer of everchanging universes. and then the creator of them.
i fell in love with john carmack ..
what carmack is describing is growth oriented thinking that Sal Kahn talks about. Sadly most university CS programs are the opposite of growth oriented thinking. Instead, it's a filter to identify students that are candidates for grad school.
Amazing human being!!
You can drive a nail through a layer cake problem space, and learn a cross section there. What a unique quote.
@deussivenatura5805
Жыл бұрын
Could you please explain what that means?
@OpenGL4ever
Жыл бұрын
@@deussivenatura5805 The volume of a piece of wood is much larger than the hole hammered in with a nail. And it is the volume of the hole that you can study intensely.
This guy is great
do everything deeply
I agree with pretty much everything he says
I like you guys.
I just wonder if he found the time to play all the video games he bought. And which of them did he play intensively or even play through?
I always wanted to learn things deeply, it just happens when I am using a tool I want to know how it really works underneath not at the surface level. I want to be able to write my own compiler, virtual machine and so on. These kind of things is want I want to do. I need direction. Anyone out there who can give few tips to get down on this path. It would be much appreciated.
@theorogalski3799
6 ай бұрын
Read books about it
@dieuveillemabounda3991
5 ай бұрын
@@theorogalski3799 What kind of books ? Looks like there is a plethora of information out there
@9trx
5 ай бұрын
@@dieuveillemabounda3991 every single one of them
@jazzgirl2358
27 күн бұрын
You can start with "Crafting interpreters" if you want to get into writing compilers
This guy is too smart...he's murdering lots of my brain cells just listening to him.
@samyak4250
Жыл бұрын
Same happened with me when lex had Lee Cronin on his show
@blo0m1985
Жыл бұрын
Bill Gates did the same. Just took impossibly complex issues.
@blo0m1985
Жыл бұрын
but you really feel inferior if compare yourself to him, not like you can't get it all. But just ability and possibility to process so much things in a such a short time.
@simongido565
11 ай бұрын
With every weak brain cell that dies a new one, stronger one, shall be born! ( Not really just kidding )
have shawn fanning on
Weaponising curiosity
Just remember how you learn it
2:03
interesting
I embraced the grind already ;) I grind my teeth
@IgneousGorilla
Жыл бұрын
💀
I think you shouldnt learn things deeply if you are on college as that can take you more time and burn you out quicklier when all you need is the grade.
so everything is Diet Coke then
❤
The voice caught me off guard
"just learn more bro"
@jamesevans2507
Жыл бұрын
just be confident worked for me
If you care about something, books makes the difference.
@TheKickboxingCommunity
Жыл бұрын
They do. But good conversations with the right people can be life altering too in a very positive way
@TheKickboxingCommunity
Жыл бұрын
And also the right youtube videos, this youtube channel alphamalestratagies basically convinced me to stop clubbing and getting on my purpose. Thanks to that random dude I did not drink for three full years lol
@electric_sand
Жыл бұрын
@@TheKickboxingCommunity Proud of you mate
wtf..this is epic.
Now try to do the other Carmack...would be quiet, fascinating & funny.
Elonk musk is an example of not learning so much in deep, but learn different things in different areas and make connections.
@EckhelDreiundZweizig
Жыл бұрын
Wrong
@TheKickboxingCommunity
Жыл бұрын
Just do whatever works I guess. Some people want to master one thing, others want to be the jack of all trades. Do whatever works for you to improve your own situation
@psibarpsi
Жыл бұрын
Can't be too sure of that. He was admitted to Stanford for a PhD. He quit, yeah, but it takes a lot of depth and breadth just to get there, you know?
The one is wealthiest whose pleasures are cheapest.
Don't be stupid and lazy basically.
@justins5756
Жыл бұрын
Two hard things not to do
Here's one for the American kids, prepare to answer to one of 2 things in the near future: your Chinese boss or your Chinese Overlord. I'm betting on the latter for this brilliant American generation.
@jackjack4412
Жыл бұрын
F YOU. We'll fight to the death to prevent that outcome.
If we get rewarded fairly for learning deeply, we all would
@kingsurya3215
2 жыл бұрын
Stop learning then
@jonhylow1239
2 жыл бұрын
We are.
@trystdodge6177
2 жыл бұрын
Stop thinking strictly materially and you will always be rewarded. You're welcome
@ketmunojenfrin583
2 жыл бұрын
a lot of people want to party and not read... "reading is nerdy"
@jukvalim
Жыл бұрын
Well, we do get rewarded... it's just that those rewards don't come that fast. Investing in your mind is kind of like investing in your body via exercise, or investing your money instead of spending it - it takes effort and is not always the most rewarding thing short term, very rewarding over longer time periods.
Weaponized Au-, I mean Curiosity
get an actual marxist scholar on like Zizek then lmao
Sum it up. Carmack, from everything I've heard about him, started poor.
@MadLadsAnonymous
4 ай бұрын
Romero said Carmack grew up in a middle or upper-middle class household.
John Carmack, advice for young people: just be born with 140+ IQ!!!! So easy! Even you can move from Bratislava to Canada at 15, learn to speak english faaar faster than most native speakers! You can solve a Rubick's cube while riding a bike - under a minute!!!! Even you can become a top researcher by age 30! While in reality, only about 1 ín 5 people worldwide are able to use basic trigonometry - even if educated properly!!!!
@TheBruceKeller
2 жыл бұрын
It's like you're high but also still angry.
@autoteleology
Жыл бұрын
@Flaneur underrated comment
@golangismyjam
Жыл бұрын
You completely missed the point. If you are able minded and have time, the internet (he calls this books but i'll translate) and a hunger to learn about a subject, you can learn anything that has already been discovered and written down. Your problem is that you aren't interested enough or don't have enough time to learn it but thats not to say the information is not there and available to all.
@burrybondz225
Жыл бұрын
@Flaneur he probably would but there are so many prerequisites and it would take him far longer than the average person. If he likes it tho it shouldn' t matter how long it takes. People with average intelligence can learn almost anything.
@abdullahnadeem1823
Жыл бұрын
I hate this sort of mentality. I used to have a similar mindset. Sure, some people are born smarter than others, but why should that put you down? Just because it takes you longer to learn that very thing? Why be ashamed? I spent 3 years programming wondering if I could ever just make anything, constantly comparing myself to others, wondering if I could ever get better. Only this year I actually feel like I'm getting better. Take note that my problem solving skills and abstract thinking are pretty bad. It just takes serious time, dedication and not to give up.
The dweebs that’s messing up the world
Great engineer, but due to a lack of creativity, this guy will never create anything amazing in the AI or algorithmic space.
@bhavyakukkar
7 ай бұрын
creativity and AI in the same sentence? no way!!!!
2:00 typology
@cplusplussizeddick1430
Жыл бұрын
6:30