Difference between revisions of "Popularity symbiosis"

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Related idea: building off what a more famous person has produced, in the hopes of getting feedback from them/getting them to boost your work [https://www.swyx.io/writing/learn-in-public-hack/].
 
Related idea: building off what a more famous person has produced, in the hopes of getting feedback from them/getting them to boost your work [https://www.swyx.io/writing/learn-in-public-hack/].
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entire ''genres'' of output can be based on this idea, e.g. video game walkthroughs (parasitizing on the popularity of the game), solutions manuals, critical analysis.
  
 
here is a good example of this: i saw that someone had [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Explorable_explanation&diff=prev&oldid=879464851 inserted] a timestamped link to one of [[Jonathan Blow]]'s talks as a citation, and reasoned that whoever did this must be plausibly interesting. It turns out that this person indeed does have some interesting things on their website: http://hamishtodd1.github.io/
 
here is a good example of this: i saw that someone had [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Explorable_explanation&diff=prev&oldid=879464851 inserted] a timestamped link to one of [[Jonathan Blow]]'s talks as a citation, and reasoned that whoever did this must be plausibly interesting. It turns out that this person indeed does have some interesting things on their website: http://hamishtodd1.github.io/

Revision as of 00:35, 8 May 2020

one of the things i've noticed is that i find people by looking for discussions of more famous people. e.g. i might find some random person's blog by searching for keith frankish, or i might find someone's solutions to exercises in sutton and barto. i also remember one time searching for japanese book reviews of daniel dennett books. and sometimes, if that discussion is good, i will get curious about what else this person has done. In other words, these random people can parasitize on these famous people's popularity. i think this is a good thing, in a way. basically, if your discussion is good, you are adding value, and you're adding value by working on something that other people are already curious about.

there seem to be less-virtuous nearby actions, like just spamming a popular person's blog comments.

Related idea: building off what a more famous person has produced, in the hopes of getting feedback from them/getting them to boost your work [1].

entire genres of output can be based on this idea, e.g. video game walkthroughs (parasitizing on the popularity of the game), solutions manuals, critical analysis.

here is a good example of this: i saw that someone had inserted a timestamped link to one of Jonathan Blow's talks as a citation, and reasoned that whoever did this must be plausibly interesting. It turns out that this person indeed does have some interesting things on their website: http://hamishtodd1.github.io/