Right? Give me a Saturday that feels like a 15 year vacation. That might help with burnout.
Comment on [deleted]
Audrey0nne@leminal.space 7 months ago
Not saying this won’t be incredibly lucrative once the tax dollars start rolling in but punishment can only make so much money. Give someone a thousand years exciting experience in 8 hours and people will gladly sell their remaining 16 for it.
orangeNgreen@lemmy.world 7 months ago
ilinamorato@lemmy.world 7 months ago
“Huh…ok…let me think, I know I used to remember how to do this…”
“What? I taught you last week.”
“Yeah, but that was fifteen years ago. I’ve been traveling the world for the past decade.”
admiralteal@kbin.social 7 months ago
This technology existing would essentially be the end of all knowledge-sector jobs, instantly. It eliminates the value of your time, which means the labor market would almost definitely use it to pay wages VASTLY below minimum wage-per-perceived hour. People would take that bargain. You only have to work ONE day a week and we pay you a million dollars a year! ...that one day a week will be time chambered up to 15 years, though.
Why pay one ace coder a bigshot salary when you can pay a whole village in the developing world to spend as much time as the problem could possibly need the same price and they'll still finish by Thursday?
The economic ramifications are just beyond my fathoming, but I know it cannot possibly work in a society which has any kind of resource scarcity.
wahming@monyet.cc 7 months ago
I doubt you’d get anything useful out of it. The idea is that it messes with your time perception, making you feel as if you’ve spent a huge amount of time in whatever emotional state you’re in. It’s not going to actually overclock your brain to run at a thousand times its normal speed.
BubbleMonkey@slrpnk.net 7 months ago
if you haven’t seen it, I think you might like the animated series Pantheon.
Your comment made me think of it, very much.