Manolis Kellis
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
So I will show up and they now have the baggage, but I don't.
So basically what makes interactions between humans unique
in this sharing and exchanging kind of way is the fact that we are both shaped by every one of our interactions.
I think the model of the digital twin works for dissemination of knowledge, of advice, et cetera, where I wanna have wise people give me advice across history.
I want to have chats with Gandhi, but Gandhi won't necessarily learn from me, but I will learn from him.
So in a way,
you know, the dissemination and the democratization rather than the building of relationships.
Yeah, yeah.
I take over.
And then whoever I was speaking with, it can have the AI, right?
Or like one of the AIs.
What if that one is actually way better than you?
So listen, I'm a professor.
The stuff that I give to the world is the stuff that I teach, but much more importantly, sorry, number one, the stuff that I teach, number two, the discoveries that we make in my research group, but much more importantly, the people that I train.
They are now out there in the world teaching others.
If you look at my own trainees, they are extraordinarily successful professors.
So Anshul Kundaji at Stanford, Alex Stark at IMP in Vienna, Jason Ernst at UCLA, Andreas Penning at CMU.
Each of them, I'm like, wow, they're better than I am.
And I love that.
So maybe your role will be to train better versions of yourself