
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
In today’s episode of Welcome to Cloundlandia, we discuss the intersection points of Da Vinci's genius and the current digital age as we explore the origins of technology and its impact on society.
SHOW HIGHLIGHTS
Links:
WelcomeToCloudlandia.com
StrategicCoach.com
DeanJackson.com
ListingAgentLifestyle.com
Dan Sullivan
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
And then we went to Richard Rossi's Da Vinci 50. Which was terrific. I mean, it was really, really terrific. Dave Asprey was there And had a good catch up with Dave, Yeah, and then came back here and you know, and I had a busy week. We had a holiday Monday because it was Victoria. Day here and here in the colonial realm of Canada. The Canadian colony.
And anyway, and so then back to work and it felt good. It felt good I had two free zones, connectors and I had a 10 times connector and we started book 35. The next book just coming back from the printer this week is I think I've talked to you about the geometry for staying calm and cool, geometry and quotation marks, because this isn't about spatial geometry, this is about psychological psychological geometry Right Yeah, psychological geometry.
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
So there's nobody's permission to ask whether you can make up new things, and anything you make up is going to be advantageous to somebody and unfair to someone else. So just forget about that and just make up new things that other people find useful, and you're clear and free.
Dean Jackson
Dean Jackson
And I had a guy I did a breakthrough blueprint this week in Orlando And I had a gentleman who he he was very popular in a niche of electronic controls for, like, semen and honey well, and these things that control all these air qualities and systems for enterprise level things, big office buildings and hotels and all that stuff. So it's kind of a small audience but he's kind of like the most known guy in the field. He's the only one that's kind of organizing the community. And I said you know this will go all the way and just like, appoint yourself to be the mayor of control town and start acting like it.
There's nobody appointing anybody to the position of doing anything good, especially when you're like connecting people. You're connecting people in a good way. Everybody's very myopic, everybody's very only focused on what's in it for me, on their own sort of thing, and as soon as you start thinking about what can you do to help them or achieve what they're looking for, the whole world changes. Nobody, that's one of those. Life's not fair. It's not fair that well, wait a minute, you're not, you're just helping them get there.
That's not fair, you can't do that for free.
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
and so I came up in the only talk I ever gave Peter Diamonis's story about AI in 1960, was he. I mentioned that we already knew how to deal with technology a long time ago, because docs were actually our first technology. Way, way, way back. People mastered fire and then they figured out you should be near a river and they took. But the docs and this is before agriculture Dogs were domesticated before agriculture and dogs is actually a creation. There were no dogs, There were smart wolves and there were smart humans and they did a free zone collaboration and we came up with this thing.
We came up with, this thing called dog, and that's anywhere between 30,000 to 40,000, they're not, because it seems to have happened independently. One of them happened in Europe and they know, another one happened in Southeast Asia And they're genetically different. so they know that the it was a different source, the wolf, different wolf genes in the two dogs, but anyway. so anyway, i just titled the book Training Technology Like a Good Dog.
Dean Jackson
Training well, no, you have to be the alpha and you have to be the alpha.
Dan Sullivan
yeah and and technology. You have to establish that you're the alpha here and technology has to prove it's Worth. It has to prove its usefulness and and You know, and so. But, for example, you know just one. I know we're going to get into the AI Conversation here, but we just hired Evan Ryan to train our whole team. He's got a succession zoom Program that's called AI as your teammate. Okay, so Mm-hmm, which I thought was terrific.
Yeah.
Dan Sullivan
That's exactly right, yeah, yeah.
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Oh, okay.
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Hey, I mastermind group Yeah. Yeah.
Dan Sullivan
Uh-huh.
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Just wow your wi I'm discernment, discernment any mention, or my top two, and double you as a third. Yeah. So that's funny, but that's it's like it makes sense that that's the, you know and it fits, before it really does fit, because when you take it I think you'll find it very interesting.
Dan Sullivan
And who not? how That's?
Dean Jackson
It's weird.
Dan Sullivan
I'm with it, but somebody's got to get it. Oh, that's funny.
Dan Sullivan
Okay, perfect. I'm flying to London tonight.
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
that's all done on Zoom which is just such a great thing, And and so I, thursday in London we have the we're at the Berkeley Berkeley hotel which is out there, and you know, in May, pier Kensington, that area yeah, in that in that area.
So, I have all the non 10 times in free zone in the morning and the 10 times in free zone people can be there, But in the afternoon I just have. UK, not UK clients, but people who would go to London for their, you know, for workshops, workshops right, yeah. And they're either on the virtual 10 times or they're going to London or and a lot of them come to the United.
They come to Canada and the United States and the free zone, of course they come to, that's Gary and, and Guy and Gary are the first to the and Peter Buckle. Peter Buckle is a free zone. And then we had Helen, who is from Newcastle, but her both her parents died and she's at all landed on her.
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Mm, hmm.
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
These are supplements and she's got a thing called the Kaufman protocol. That's the name of the book. I think that's the name of her book, but I think she was a pediatrician. She just got fascinated in this age reversal thing and she's a terrific presenter. And what the neat thing about Richard is that she was there on the Wednesday afternoon, she spoke again on the Thursday and she spoke again on Friday.
So he can take a present.
Dan Sullivan
You know, friend of the front of the room I mean he's and he's got that, you know, devilish sense of humor, and I mean he's got very, you know, he's sort of pick, he's self self humorous, he tells jokes about himself And and so. And then we had an amazing person and this one wasn't recorded because there was a lot of inside organizational knowledge on it, and but it's a guy named Ed Shulack and he's a marvelous person And he was an architect and then he got an idea and this is just kind of shows you where his mind was. He was an architect and, you know, successful, but then he I think Trump was the big thing, but Trump started, and I think it started before Trump, but Trump really went gun hoe with it. No, no, it was way before Trump, because he started this in the 80s, you know 70s and 80s And what it was is the United States established a thing called tax free trade zones.
Okay, and there's I think there's about 20, 25 of them in the US now, here in 2023. And what it is? they're a tax free trade zone, so it's places where companies from outside of the United States could come and present their you know their goods here And they have factories there, so they can.
You know, business can. Things can actually be created in business. But what Ed got the notion of? in the last 70s is that virtually all the airports, the major take. Orlando, for example, take. Miami for example, that almost all the big airlines airports in the US airfields were had a lot of farmland around them still. And so he went up, bought up, he bought up all the farmland, Okay around any broad.
Okay, oh yeah, and so he, and so he essentially owned the land that the trade zones were on, and, and essentially, and then when he was 55, he sold out for a humongous amount. And then he, he lives in Detroit and terrific, just, and very, very quiet, very, very quiet, very like isn't it wonderful that I get to do this, but what?
he did is that he was starting to get into the Regenerative Medicine. You know that was starting to develop and he met Peter Diamandis and he said you know, i'm just going to see who the dozens and top people are in this field. I'm going to have an invitation. I'm really good at organization or anything. So I'll give you three, three months of my time if you'll just inform me of everything that you're doing. Okay. And and he did. You know with what's his name? the guy who did the first gene map, craig.
Venture.
Dan Sullivan
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
And we met him two years ago, we were on Peter Diamandis's longevity trip in Boston, and then he got up but he only got, like, you know, a lot, a lot. You know, you only got about 40, 40 minutes or so, but here he had like two and a half hours and then he stayed and you know, and by asking him a question right at the end, which fascinated him, i said Ed, we know what you've done since 55, but what were the five capabilities, the stack of capabilities that you put together before 55 that make you probably the only person in the world who can do what you're doing.
And he found that fast. He found that and he named three of them. You know, like when he was a teenager, when he was in his twenties, when he was in his thirties, but there wasn't time to get the other two out. So at dinner that night he said I like to explore with you You're thinking on this because I hadn't thought about the connections between these things as it relates to me now.
And he says my mind is kind of going a little bit crazy with this, so can you give me a call and we'll finish the other five and then tell me what I should do with that? So he gave me his card, so I'm going to give him a call.
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Speaker 1
Dean Jackson
Speaker 1
Dean Jackson
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
I'm creating new tools too for the 10 times program. It's all good. It's so funny because my team was saying, well, there isn't time in your schedule. We've looked at the schedule for the rest of the year and I said, well, you know those dates aren't in cement.
I said these are suggestions of how I could spend my time. I said, but this is all in the I'm a 10 quick start. I said this is the most negotiable human being on the planet. Is a 10 quick start. Yeah, because something new is always more interesting than something that's already scheduled.
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
And you know, or a 10 time connector call Yeah, Or where I'm attending to something and I, you know, I've given my commitment I'm going to do it. But if it's just internal, you know it's internal things, like you know, I said, that's come and talk to me about this. Yeah, i have a Lillian. Come and talk to the decider.
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Speaker 1
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
I can't go to black, i can go to navy blue, and then I've got socks, and then I have workout clothes and you know my toilet kit and you know my meds. Yeah, I don't know what else I have. You know how long does that take to go, you know and. I now take everything that I could get by with for a whole week just in my carry on.
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
They're constantly going up, but the most recent stats that I had heard was, you know, four and a half million hours a day of video uploaded to YouTube into a system that is consuming five and a half million hours a day of video across the whole platform. So the daily needs are basically going they're being met every every two days. It's double the amount of the ability we have to consume it. You know, and I really think that there's, along with chat, what I'm finding chat GPP is going to do now is that, as long as all this content is being created, it's chat GPP.
If you think about it as your team member, like you mentioned earlier, you don't need to be able to consume everything to know it, because you've got a super smart team member who has access to all of it and can summarize it or use whatever you need to know. It's a hunting dog.
Dan Sullivan
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
that's where I think we are right now, Like I think we got to where we got to, where you had radio, you had television, you had books, magazines, all of that stuff, automobiles, electricity, everything was that sort of like full maturity, air travel, right, all of it was 1950. We kind of got to that point where all those things were now fully natural and integrated into our society And it feels like we had a, you know, this amazing period of thriving from 1950 to 1985 on the back of that platform. We kind of got used to it and all of the good stuff that came out of people adopting those things. And it feels like in 2000, you know, 2022, here or 2023, where we've gotten to with digitization, everything ever, you know, if you just even take content stuff, um, you know we got from where somebody could create and broadcast television, you know, to people and somebody could make movies and put it, but it was a very few people who were you?
know there were only opening television networks, three television networks and you know half a dozen or a dozen movie studios and music companies. All the content was being metered out by a few people in charge right, very capital intensive to set together. But now we're at a point where everybody has access to everything ever written and created or recorded up to now and the ability to create and broadcast to everybody. And I think that we're going to be in a period now of I don't know how long, but I think we're going to see now the emergence of a period of settling down into that right That we're going to.
Dan Sullivan
You know it was Xerox that created it, never used it. Steve Jobs stole it and then Bill Gates stole it from Steve Jobs. You know creative borrowing And you know, and that's all of a sudden the world could have computers. And then out of that, you know, the military had created the internet. It was the, it was the intelligence communities in the military created the internet and they said, hey, you know, we can, you know we can make this commercial. And then they did, and then you had, you know, then you had, and you know the internet was another big, big new capability. And then you had, you could have your phone could become a computer.
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
You know, and it's the English speaking. You know it's the main English speaking countries and you know people in India who speak English and other people who speak English, but it's all kind of an English speaking tyranny. I mean, the Chinese, of course, are trying to do their own thing, but who cares what the Chinese do? And you know and the and so it's I think I was speaking and 90% of the 100, you know the 100% are doing it is in the United States, because Americans are that type of people And and I would say the productive people who are already productive without AI are going to become 10 times more productive.
The people who are already creative without AI, are going to become 10 times more creative, and I said this is not lessening the equality in the world. This is going to, you know it's going to be, you know, solar system wide that the inequality in the world, and, and but life's not fair.
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
Wow Four million, four million, but at the same time the community colleges, which are teaching you know the trades and everything, are going through the roof. They've never gone through an expansion like this because there isn't going to be any AI plumbers, there isn't going to be any AI, you know, carpenters.
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
We have a whole new studio, same space. But you know, we've asked the city to repair its water main, please, and put some barriers between the water main when it breaks outside. And I mean, it was 19,. It was put in in the 1920s, so you know, things can fall apart in 100 years and anyway. But yeah, much more great. We have exactly the same space but it's incredibly more productive. We got five studios, we got zoom studios you know right along the lines of the studio that you go to.
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
They have sort of a paranoia, and generally, is that things are falling apart. This is the end of the United States. That's one of the paranoia. And the other way is they're going to, the government is going to take away all our guns And they're going to start going through the Bill of Rights, the first 10 amendments, and they're going to, they're going to take away all the freedoms that you get from the first 10 amendments to the Constitution. I said yeah. I said I'm a big history buff. I'm running out in the United States. I think this is the 25th time that we're. It's like. You know, this is the technology that changes everything. Well, this is the you know and.
I said, yeah, this is about the 25th time that the United States has fallen apart and this is the end. You know, you got to get. You know you got to. You got to do some deep breathing exercise. You know you got to relax. You have to learn how to relax and everything like that. But but one of the things is that I was going back to the AI thing that have you ever seen a site you've given me a great reference today with working genius, but there's a great site called visual capitalist.
Have you ever seen that?
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
You know they're you know I mean, some of them are like programmers and coders and everything else, but they're already, they're already getting slaughtered. But but it's going to be basically all those who do a four year or seven year college education so that they can be information transfers, and you know they. But it's basically jobs that have no value creation compared with them. They're going to get. They're going to get slaughtered.
Yeah, this is great They have a section you can just go they. They have a, you know an accumulating site for AI. I love it, yeah, yeah, but it'd be interesting. I mean it'd be interesting, it would add to your, you know, because diagrams I mean good diagrams are really useful.
Dean Jackson
Speaker 1
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Speaker 1
Dean Jackson
4.3
99 ratings
In today’s episode of Welcome to Cloundlandia, we discuss the intersection points of Da Vinci's genius and the current digital age as we explore the origins of technology and its impact on society.
SHOW HIGHLIGHTS
Links:
WelcomeToCloudlandia.com
StrategicCoach.com
DeanJackson.com
ListingAgentLifestyle.com
Dan Sullivan
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
And then we went to Richard Rossi's Da Vinci 50. Which was terrific. I mean, it was really, really terrific. Dave Asprey was there And had a good catch up with Dave, Yeah, and then came back here and you know, and I had a busy week. We had a holiday Monday because it was Victoria. Day here and here in the colonial realm of Canada. The Canadian colony.
And anyway, and so then back to work and it felt good. It felt good I had two free zones, connectors and I had a 10 times connector and we started book 35. The next book just coming back from the printer this week is I think I've talked to you about the geometry for staying calm and cool, geometry and quotation marks, because this isn't about spatial geometry, this is about psychological psychological geometry Right Yeah, psychological geometry.
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
So there's nobody's permission to ask whether you can make up new things, and anything you make up is going to be advantageous to somebody and unfair to someone else. So just forget about that and just make up new things that other people find useful, and you're clear and free.
Dean Jackson
Dean Jackson
And I had a guy I did a breakthrough blueprint this week in Orlando And I had a gentleman who he he was very popular in a niche of electronic controls for, like, semen and honey well, and these things that control all these air qualities and systems for enterprise level things, big office buildings and hotels and all that stuff. So it's kind of a small audience but he's kind of like the most known guy in the field. He's the only one that's kind of organizing the community. And I said you know this will go all the way and just like, appoint yourself to be the mayor of control town and start acting like it.
There's nobody appointing anybody to the position of doing anything good, especially when you're like connecting people. You're connecting people in a good way. Everybody's very myopic, everybody's very only focused on what's in it for me, on their own sort of thing, and as soon as you start thinking about what can you do to help them or achieve what they're looking for, the whole world changes. Nobody, that's one of those. Life's not fair. It's not fair that well, wait a minute, you're not, you're just helping them get there.
That's not fair, you can't do that for free.
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
and so I came up in the only talk I ever gave Peter Diamonis's story about AI in 1960, was he. I mentioned that we already knew how to deal with technology a long time ago, because docs were actually our first technology. Way, way, way back. People mastered fire and then they figured out you should be near a river and they took. But the docs and this is before agriculture Dogs were domesticated before agriculture and dogs is actually a creation. There were no dogs, There were smart wolves and there were smart humans and they did a free zone collaboration and we came up with this thing.
We came up with, this thing called dog, and that's anywhere between 30,000 to 40,000, they're not, because it seems to have happened independently. One of them happened in Europe and they know, another one happened in Southeast Asia And they're genetically different. so they know that the it was a different source, the wolf, different wolf genes in the two dogs, but anyway. so anyway, i just titled the book Training Technology Like a Good Dog.
Dean Jackson
Training well, no, you have to be the alpha and you have to be the alpha.
Dan Sullivan
yeah and and technology. You have to establish that you're the alpha here and technology has to prove it's Worth. It has to prove its usefulness and and You know, and so. But, for example, you know just one. I know we're going to get into the AI Conversation here, but we just hired Evan Ryan to train our whole team. He's got a succession zoom Program that's called AI as your teammate. Okay, so Mm-hmm, which I thought was terrific.
Yeah.
Dan Sullivan
That's exactly right, yeah, yeah.
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Oh, okay.
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Hey, I mastermind group Yeah. Yeah.
Dan Sullivan
Uh-huh.
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Just wow your wi I'm discernment, discernment any mention, or my top two, and double you as a third. Yeah. So that's funny, but that's it's like it makes sense that that's the, you know and it fits, before it really does fit, because when you take it I think you'll find it very interesting.
Dan Sullivan
And who not? how That's?
Dean Jackson
It's weird.
Dan Sullivan
I'm with it, but somebody's got to get it. Oh, that's funny.
Dan Sullivan
Okay, perfect. I'm flying to London tonight.
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
that's all done on Zoom which is just such a great thing, And and so I, thursday in London we have the we're at the Berkeley Berkeley hotel which is out there, and you know, in May, pier Kensington, that area yeah, in that in that area.
So, I have all the non 10 times in free zone in the morning and the 10 times in free zone people can be there, But in the afternoon I just have. UK, not UK clients, but people who would go to London for their, you know, for workshops, workshops right, yeah. And they're either on the virtual 10 times or they're going to London or and a lot of them come to the United.
They come to Canada and the United States and the free zone, of course they come to, that's Gary and, and Guy and Gary are the first to the and Peter Buckle. Peter Buckle is a free zone. And then we had Helen, who is from Newcastle, but her both her parents died and she's at all landed on her.
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Mm, hmm.
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
These are supplements and she's got a thing called the Kaufman protocol. That's the name of the book. I think that's the name of her book, but I think she was a pediatrician. She just got fascinated in this age reversal thing and she's a terrific presenter. And what the neat thing about Richard is that she was there on the Wednesday afternoon, she spoke again on the Thursday and she spoke again on Friday.
So he can take a present.
Dan Sullivan
You know, friend of the front of the room I mean he's and he's got that, you know, devilish sense of humor, and I mean he's got very, you know, he's sort of pick, he's self self humorous, he tells jokes about himself And and so. And then we had an amazing person and this one wasn't recorded because there was a lot of inside organizational knowledge on it, and but it's a guy named Ed Shulack and he's a marvelous person And he was an architect and then he got an idea and this is just kind of shows you where his mind was. He was an architect and, you know, successful, but then he I think Trump was the big thing, but Trump started, and I think it started before Trump, but Trump really went gun hoe with it. No, no, it was way before Trump, because he started this in the 80s, you know 70s and 80s And what it was is the United States established a thing called tax free trade zones.
Okay, and there's I think there's about 20, 25 of them in the US now, here in 2023. And what it is? they're a tax free trade zone, so it's places where companies from outside of the United States could come and present their you know their goods here And they have factories there, so they can.
You know, business can. Things can actually be created in business. But what Ed got the notion of? in the last 70s is that virtually all the airports, the major take. Orlando, for example, take. Miami for example, that almost all the big airlines airports in the US airfields were had a lot of farmland around them still. And so he went up, bought up, he bought up all the farmland, Okay around any broad.
Okay, oh yeah, and so he, and so he essentially owned the land that the trade zones were on, and, and essentially, and then when he was 55, he sold out for a humongous amount. And then he, he lives in Detroit and terrific, just, and very, very quiet, very, very quiet, very like isn't it wonderful that I get to do this, but what?
he did is that he was starting to get into the Regenerative Medicine. You know that was starting to develop and he met Peter Diamandis and he said you know, i'm just going to see who the dozens and top people are in this field. I'm going to have an invitation. I'm really good at organization or anything. So I'll give you three, three months of my time if you'll just inform me of everything that you're doing. Okay. And and he did. You know with what's his name? the guy who did the first gene map, craig.
Venture.
Dan Sullivan
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
And we met him two years ago, we were on Peter Diamandis's longevity trip in Boston, and then he got up but he only got, like, you know, a lot, a lot. You know, you only got about 40, 40 minutes or so, but here he had like two and a half hours and then he stayed and you know, and by asking him a question right at the end, which fascinated him, i said Ed, we know what you've done since 55, but what were the five capabilities, the stack of capabilities that you put together before 55 that make you probably the only person in the world who can do what you're doing.
And he found that fast. He found that and he named three of them. You know, like when he was a teenager, when he was in his twenties, when he was in his thirties, but there wasn't time to get the other two out. So at dinner that night he said I like to explore with you You're thinking on this because I hadn't thought about the connections between these things as it relates to me now.
And he says my mind is kind of going a little bit crazy with this, so can you give me a call and we'll finish the other five and then tell me what I should do with that? So he gave me his card, so I'm going to give him a call.
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Speaker 1
Dean Jackson
Speaker 1
Dean Jackson
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
I'm creating new tools too for the 10 times program. It's all good. It's so funny because my team was saying, well, there isn't time in your schedule. We've looked at the schedule for the rest of the year and I said, well, you know those dates aren't in cement.
I said these are suggestions of how I could spend my time. I said, but this is all in the I'm a 10 quick start. I said this is the most negotiable human being on the planet. Is a 10 quick start. Yeah, because something new is always more interesting than something that's already scheduled.
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
And you know, or a 10 time connector call Yeah, Or where I'm attending to something and I, you know, I've given my commitment I'm going to do it. But if it's just internal, you know it's internal things, like you know, I said, that's come and talk to me about this. Yeah, i have a Lillian. Come and talk to the decider.
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Speaker 1
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
I can't go to black, i can go to navy blue, and then I've got socks, and then I have workout clothes and you know my toilet kit and you know my meds. Yeah, I don't know what else I have. You know how long does that take to go, you know and. I now take everything that I could get by with for a whole week just in my carry on.
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
They're constantly going up, but the most recent stats that I had heard was, you know, four and a half million hours a day of video uploaded to YouTube into a system that is consuming five and a half million hours a day of video across the whole platform. So the daily needs are basically going they're being met every every two days. It's double the amount of the ability we have to consume it. You know, and I really think that there's, along with chat, what I'm finding chat GPP is going to do now is that, as long as all this content is being created, it's chat GPP.
If you think about it as your team member, like you mentioned earlier, you don't need to be able to consume everything to know it, because you've got a super smart team member who has access to all of it and can summarize it or use whatever you need to know. It's a hunting dog.
Dan Sullivan
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
that's where I think we are right now, Like I think we got to where we got to, where you had radio, you had television, you had books, magazines, all of that stuff, automobiles, electricity, everything was that sort of like full maturity, air travel, right, all of it was 1950. We kind of got to that point where all those things were now fully natural and integrated into our society And it feels like we had a, you know, this amazing period of thriving from 1950 to 1985 on the back of that platform. We kind of got used to it and all of the good stuff that came out of people adopting those things. And it feels like in 2000, you know, 2022, here or 2023, where we've gotten to with digitization, everything ever, you know, if you just even take content stuff, um, you know we got from where somebody could create and broadcast television, you know, to people and somebody could make movies and put it, but it was a very few people who were you?
know there were only opening television networks, three television networks and you know half a dozen or a dozen movie studios and music companies. All the content was being metered out by a few people in charge right, very capital intensive to set together. But now we're at a point where everybody has access to everything ever written and created or recorded up to now and the ability to create and broadcast to everybody. And I think that we're going to be in a period now of I don't know how long, but I think we're going to see now the emergence of a period of settling down into that right That we're going to.
Dan Sullivan
You know it was Xerox that created it, never used it. Steve Jobs stole it and then Bill Gates stole it from Steve Jobs. You know creative borrowing And you know, and that's all of a sudden the world could have computers. And then out of that, you know, the military had created the internet. It was the, it was the intelligence communities in the military created the internet and they said, hey, you know, we can, you know we can make this commercial. And then they did, and then you had, you know, then you had, and you know the internet was another big, big new capability. And then you had, you could have your phone could become a computer.
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
You know, and it's the English speaking. You know it's the main English speaking countries and you know people in India who speak English and other people who speak English, but it's all kind of an English speaking tyranny. I mean, the Chinese, of course, are trying to do their own thing, but who cares what the Chinese do? And you know and the and so it's I think I was speaking and 90% of the 100, you know the 100% are doing it is in the United States, because Americans are that type of people And and I would say the productive people who are already productive without AI are going to become 10 times more productive.
The people who are already creative without AI, are going to become 10 times more creative, and I said this is not lessening the equality in the world. This is going to, you know it's going to be, you know, solar system wide that the inequality in the world, and, and but life's not fair.
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
Wow Four million, four million, but at the same time the community colleges, which are teaching you know the trades and everything, are going through the roof. They've never gone through an expansion like this because there isn't going to be any AI plumbers, there isn't going to be any AI, you know, carpenters.
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
We have a whole new studio, same space. But you know, we've asked the city to repair its water main, please, and put some barriers between the water main when it breaks outside. And I mean, it was 19,. It was put in in the 1920s, so you know, things can fall apart in 100 years and anyway. But yeah, much more great. We have exactly the same space but it's incredibly more productive. We got five studios, we got zoom studios you know right along the lines of the studio that you go to.
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
They have sort of a paranoia, and generally, is that things are falling apart. This is the end of the United States. That's one of the paranoia. And the other way is they're going to, the government is going to take away all our guns And they're going to start going through the Bill of Rights, the first 10 amendments, and they're going to, they're going to take away all the freedoms that you get from the first 10 amendments to the Constitution. I said yeah. I said I'm a big history buff. I'm running out in the United States. I think this is the 25th time that we're. It's like. You know, this is the technology that changes everything. Well, this is the you know and.
I said, yeah, this is about the 25th time that the United States has fallen apart and this is the end. You know, you got to get. You know you got to. You got to do some deep breathing exercise. You know you got to relax. You have to learn how to relax and everything like that. But but one of the things is that I was going back to the AI thing that have you ever seen a site you've given me a great reference today with working genius, but there's a great site called visual capitalist.
Have you ever seen that?
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
Speaker 1
Dan Sullivan
You know they're you know I mean, some of them are like programmers and coders and everything else, but they're already, they're already getting slaughtered. But but it's going to be basically all those who do a four year or seven year college education so that they can be information transfers, and you know they. But it's basically jobs that have no value creation compared with them. They're going to get. They're going to get slaughtered.
Yeah, this is great They have a section you can just go they. They have a, you know an accumulating site for AI. I love it, yeah, yeah, but it'd be interesting. I mean it'd be interesting, it would add to your, you know, because diagrams I mean good diagrams are really useful.
Dean Jackson
Speaker 1
Dean Jackson
Dan Sullivan
Dean Jackson
Speaker 1
Dean Jackson
147 Listeners
46 Listeners
111 Listeners
218 Listeners
47 Listeners
1,940 Listeners
130 Listeners
33,957 Listeners
3,994 Listeners
15 Listeners
72 Listeners
2,137 Listeners
11 Listeners
514 Listeners
8,227 Listeners