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2020-07-21 However, I don't think that a person who does or cannot make things can invent. [長年日記]

(Continuation from yesterday)

I've been saying this for a long time now, but the other thing I could say about this,

"many people are hopelessly lacking in the sense of system configuration"

I know the reason pretty clearly.

'They don't make/can't make things' -- this is one choice.

If you have time reading "how to books" and attending lectures on "information engineering" and "how to build systems"

You can get 100 times more knowledge if you "create a poor app by yourself using a Raspberry Pi on the weekend."

"Writing 100 lines of code without sleeping" is 100 times faster than them.

In the first place, it's hard for me to think that a person who doesn't/can't make things can imagine the technical difficulty in their mind.

-----

Well, even a person who uses only PowerPoint and Word can make event plans and business models.

However, I don't think that a person who does or cannot make things can invent.

An invention is a "creation of a technical idea" (Patent Law Article 1).

A technical idea is devised from experience through a technical approach, that is, "the experience of making things."

Those involved in the work of patented inventions, self-proclaimed an engineer Just using PowerPoint and Word are

"it's worse than a cashless person".

I think.

I just don't speak that, because,

I'm an office worker.