what are our expectations? which of the things we desire are within reach? if not now, when? and will there be some left for me? i took a walk through this beautiful world felt the cool rain on my shoulder found some something good in this beautiful world i felt the rain getting colder sha la la la la sha la la la la sha la la la la sha la la la la china s younger generation is driving a growth in consumption. this is where the real power is china. if you live in manhattan like i do and you think you live in the center of the world, this place, shanghai, will confront you with a very different reality. turn down a side street, it s an ancient culture. a centuries-old mix of culinary traditions, smells, flavors. a block away, this. an ultra modern, clanging cash register, levels of wealth, luxury, the sheer volume of things and services unimagined by the greediest, most bourgeois of capitalist imperialists. the city split by the
our communities. i was lucky. i got into a very big hacker community here in shanghai and met a lot of great mentors. you started in business at 21. in factory. quite an accomplishment. i didn t go to college. you didn t go to college? i didn t go to the college. why not? most of professors are way behind the development speed of the communities. why? your country is so advanced in so many other ways. why in this area? the network problem here in china, we have gfw, the great firewall, and it blocked a lot of important information websites. inside china. and a lot of people, they can t get the cutting-edge technology, which we don t teach in college at all. so the human resource problem and the manpower problem is more and more getting more and more serious here in china. because everyone s going to the silicon valley? they offer better. obviously. oh, here are the these are the famous ribs? yes.
damage. i m gonna go in, i m gonna look around, i m gonna see how things work. and i ll leave without disturbing anything. would most hackers say that that s okay? thomas: yes. yes. anthony: it s in the service of knowledge, that s thomas: that s okay for most the hackers in our communities. i was lucky, i got into a very big, big hacker community here in shanghai and met a lot of great mentors. anthony: started in business at 21? thomas: exactly. anthony: quite an accomplishment. thomas: i didn t go to the college. anthony: you didn t go to college? thomas: i didn t go to the college. anthony: why not? thomas: most professors are way behind the, uh, the the development speed of the communities. anthony: why? your thomas: because anthony: your country is so advanced in so many other ways, why in this area? thomas: it s a network problem here in china. uh, we have the gfw. it s a great firewall and it blocked a lot of, uh, important information webs
college? thomas: i didn t go to the college. anthony: why not? thomas: most professors are way behind the, uh, the the development speed of the communities. anthony: why? your thomas: because anthony: your country is so advanced in so many other ways, why in this area? thomas: it s a network problem here in china. uh, we have the gfw. it s a great firewall and it blocked a lot of, uh, important information websites inside china and a lot of people they cannot get the cutting-edge technologies. anthony: right. thomas: which we don t teach in college at all. anthony: mm-hmm. thomas: and, uh, so the human resource problem and the manpower problem is more and more serious, getting more and more serious here in china. anthony: because everyone is going to the silicon valley. thomas: uh, they offer better. anthony: right. thomas: obviously. oh, here they did anthony: oh, these are the famous ribs? thomas: yes. anthony: maybe the number one thing th
and i ll leave without disturbing anything. would most hackers say that that s okay? thomas: yes. yes. anthony: it s in the service of knowledge, that s thomas: that s okay for most the hackers in our communities. i was lucky, i got into a very big, big hacker community here in shanghai and met a lot of great mentors. anthony: started in business at 21? thomas: exactly. anthony: quite an accomplishment. thomas: i didn t go to the college. anthony: you didn t go to college? thomas: i didn t go to the college. anthony: why not? thomas: most professors are way behind the, uh, the the development speed of the communities. anthony: why? your thomas: because anthony: your country is so advanced in so many other ways, why in this area? thomas: it s a network problem here in china. uh, we have the gfw. it s a great firewall and it blocked a lot of, uh, important information websites inside china and a lot of people they cannot get the cutting-edge technolo