In short: Smart people rediscovering things is normal and good. Turning that into a superiority crusade while ignoring context and history is what makes it insufferable. Humility scales better in the age of abundant knowledge. The Messiah act is a relic of information scarcity.
The “Rediscovery Messiah”, the smart, articulate person who finally connects two ideas that have been sitting in plain sight for years (or decades), then erupts into a multi-platform crusade. They don’t just share their insight modestly. They frame it as a profound revelation.
This archetype thrives among high-IQ generalists who are verbal and pattern-matching machines but haven’t yet internalized how much evolution happens in ideas. Smart enough to derive it independently, not yet humble enough to realize they’re late to the party
Another issue that the American industrial supply faces is bad forecasting. You need to get a good handle on how much time everything is to really get a good mark on efficiency. From logistics to labor to capX operations. Your forecasting needs to be nearly perfect.
If you go on any Chinese website and try to buy bar stock or even a finished assembly, it would be what it’s worth in weight. America will never let go from being rich. That is what drives us, that is our incentive. We’re asking the business owners and operators to collaborate.
@lukas_m_ziegler@Yaskawa_Motoman@AutomateShow I would love to see them starting at different RPMs and then synchronizing. Darling of the speed will be cool too. How far can you push it?