• minnieo
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    1 year ago

    this is gonna go nowhere per usual, but still, the very idea of working in your dreams is fucking horrifying. black mirror type shit.

    • @pdxfed@lemmy.world
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      21 year ago

      Followed quickly by the quote “control is what we want”…sure, they mean for you over your dreams, right?

      Imagine having the ability to lucid dream and your first thought is, great, more time with Excel!

      • Introversion
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        1 year ago

        “Why not abolish days, and just work an endless stream of hours?” —Elon Musk, probably

    • Eager Eagle
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      11 year ago

      just a clickbaity headline. Obviously any time spent doing work will count as work hours, and employers don’t need futuristic tech to push for more of those. So nothing is changing in that regard.

        • Eager Eagle
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          1 year ago

          there’s no trust in my statement. The incentives to increase work hours already exist, and even if it’s not snake oil, this tech won’t change that. A work hour is a work hour regardless if the worker is sitting down or in a lucid dream.

          • @isles@lemmy.world
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            101 year ago

            In the US not long ago, families were thriving on a single income. And then some families sent two parents to work and saw large relative benefits. As more families did this, the relative benefit lowered. Employers found they could pay people less and the family would make up the gap with two incomes. Today, many families struggle with two incomes.

            This is a technology that is again, a potential way to double your income if you can work while you sleep and awake. The people who use it will see a relative benefit. Until it becomes necessary for everyone to work while sleeping.

            So if it holds true that they just count as work hours, most people will eventually be required to double their workload to afford their necessities.

  • TimeSquirrel
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    591 year ago

    You ever have a crazy intense epic dream and come up with this awesome new idea that you think will change the world, and after a minute or two of being awake and coming to your senses, you realize how utterly idiotic you sound? There’s going to be a lot of that.

    • digdug
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      221 year ago

      When I was twelve, I woke up convinced that the color yellow was called yellow, because humans had figured out that word was intrinsically linked to that color.

      I was devastated my “epiphany” stopped making sense after I fully woke up.

      • Lupec
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        51 year ago

        To be fair, that’s a bloody rad dream! Love the concept lol

    • @NoRodent@lemmy.world
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      121 year ago

      Have you ever had a dream that you, you had, your, you could, you’ll do, you wants, you could do so, you’ll do, you could, you want, you want him to do you so much you could do anything?

    • livus
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      1 year ago

      Probably. I have been able to lucid dream since I was a kid, if we’re talking about knowing you are dreaming and controlling aspects of the dream.

      It’s still just your own brain, and if you’re controlling it you’re actually being less outside-the-box creative than in the dreams where you’re not.

      If you’re so in control you’re able to force it to do work tasks then what’s going to be generated will probably be lower quality than waking tasks, not higher.

    • Boozilla
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      41 year ago

      What do you mean using pizzas for steering wheels is a bad idea!? I’m gonna make billions!

    • Senex
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      31 year ago

      I wrote a hit song with the Rolling Stones and was able to sing the whole thing when I woke up. It was gone by lunch time.

      • @Jaded@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        31 year ago

        This would actually be insane for music creation. The few times I had dreams where I was playing an instrument, it was pure fire

    • @homoludens@feddit.de
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      11 year ago

      And no tooling will certainly improve the coding abilities. Especially since I remember all the code, including the changes others made in the time since I last looked at it.

  • rynzcycle
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    431 year ago

    I sometimes lucid dream, something tips me off that it’s not real, and then I can take some control. Mostly I like flying, but sometimes I go full crimefighting superhero.

    Realizing you are in a dream world and deciding to work, is like winning a billion dollars and deciding to spend it all on a nice car somehow. What a boring waste.

    • @kent_eh@lemmy.ca
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      161 year ago

      Yeah, seriously.

      This just sounds like a way to squeeze more work out of a person.

       

      Work/life balance? What’s that…

      • @Ithi@lemmy.ca
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        71 year ago

        Well if i could work well sleeping and then live my life while awake that’d be pretty sweet.

        Doubt that’s what a lot of company owners would want but that is maybe the only plus side of this.

        • @JGrffn@lemmy.world
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          11 year ago

          Third comment in this post about this from me, but I’ve done university work while lucid dreaming, solved bugs we didn’t even know existed, stuff like that. I don’t think you rest as much while lucid dreaming, I’m pretty sure I built up fatigue at many points in my life just due to how much lucid dreaming I was doing. I now avoid lucid dreaming, and have started losing the ability to do it frequently (which frankly is a blessing). I feel more well rested now than I did when I lucid dreamt a lot. No way this idea doesn’t just leave you completely tired after a while.

  • Digital Mark
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    321 year ago

    I have a lot of lucid dreams, and they’re often in a specific city, and sometimes I even go to work in these dreams. I haven’t lived in a city and worked in an office in over 10 years, so it’s some kind of reverse escapism. I can always leave, and weird stuff happens anyway. I wouldn’t trust any of my work output there.

    But to let a company try to take over your dreams and never let you escape, you need to stand up and fight that shit. Put them in a never-ending nightmare where nobody gives them money.

  • @retrieval4558@mander.xyz
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    261 year ago

    This is stupid for a wide variety of reasons, but one of the more interesting ones is that text is notoriously inconsistent in dreams.

    A very common “reality check” to see if you’re dreaming is to look at a clock or text, look away, and look back. The time/text will nearly always change.

    So explain to me how they expect COMPUTER CODE to work?

    • @banneryear1868@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I became obsessed with lucid dreaming after seeing the Waking Life movie, around when I started high school, and yeah that’s one of the things I used to induce them. Kept a dream journal and had a digital watch that I would always look at, light switches etc. I did have lucid dreams but never got really good at it and eventually just neglected the practice… about when I started having real life sex LOL

      • @retrieval4558@mander.xyz
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        31 year ago

        Ha funny how that works.

        I never got into dream journaling but frequent reality checks and practicing meditation was pretty effective for me. 100% of the time when I wake up from a lucid dream I get bad sleep paralysis where I feel like I’m suffocating, so I kinda fell out of the habit.

        • @kusivittula@sopuli.xyz
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          21 year ago

          i regularly have lucid dreams but i’m only able to turn it into a nightmare by spawning a demon or falling from a roof. and i get a sleep paralysis every single time. this happens about three times almost every night. it’s getting pretty lame by now.

        • @banneryear1868@lemmy.world
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          21 year ago

          Well I never had that… that’s disturbing. I’d probably have about a lucid dream per week and it’s weird how it lost it’s novelty. Same thing happened with DMT for me where I more or less have the same trip every time.

  • @BluesF@feddit.uk
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    221 year ago

    If this is the same startup I read about a while ago… Well the technology doesn’t actually exist. There’s a vague suggestion that maybe lucid dreams could be induced through techniques that are not properly understood yet, and that’s about it.

    • @JGrffn@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Well FWIW there are somewhat reproducible techniques, I’ve used them, but I couldn’t tell you how I’ve used them if my life depended on it (honestly, brain chemical imbalances or fatigue might be a prerequisite). I actually got tired of lucid dreaming and started avoiding certain positions in bed, and started shifting around if I felt myself getting close to jumping into a lucid dream during hypnagogia.

      I also worked on university assignments during lucid dreams, solved countless bugs in my code while asleep, a friend can even attest to it since one time I instantly woke up to solve a specific bug and then went back to sleep, with him right next to me (all nighters woo hoo).

      It can be done. It really shouldn’t be done. The reason why I grew tired of lucid dreaming is because I didn’t feel like I was actually resting at all. That disconnect and peace that falling asleep gives you, it’s not there for me while lucid dreaming (at least not if I jumped in through hypnagogia).

      • AlexisFR
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        11 year ago

        Yeah, unfortunately my weak brain instantly wakes up as soon as I realize I’m in a dream, the rare times it happens

        • @threeduck@aussie.zone
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          11 year ago

          Focus on something up close in your dream, like the texture of a wall or table, it’ll pull you back into the dream. Works for me!

          The other suggestion is to spin around, but I did that to stay in a dream once and noclipped through the floor. Which woke me up.

          • @JGrffn@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            I was often sent flying with no way to come back down. Went up fast. Not great for anxiety. The “focusing on stuff” trick does work, though if I overdid it I also woke up because I tried engaging my senses too much.

    • @mannycalavera@feddit.uk
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      51 year ago

      There’s a vague suggestion that maybe lucid dreams could be induced through techniques that are not properly understood yet, and that’s about it.

      Where can I invest?

    • Chaotic Entropy
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      11 year ago

      With enough venture capital, anything is possible! Cheques in my name, please.

  • @Meltrax@lemmy.world
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    171 year ago

    Lucid dreaming is such a cool concept. The ability to mentally experience things in a truly boundless environment, untethered by laws of physics or standards of reality.

    Why the fuck would you want to waste that experience on work?

    • @akrot@lemmy.world
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      31 year ago

      I feel also the concept of “work” is viewed from employer/employee perspective, but I’d argue it should be viewed more from "useful” development one. Like reading a fiction book vs a non-fiction.

  • CarlsIII
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    171 year ago

    I already work in my dreams. I’m always having dreams about going back to jobs from my past. God owes me money or something.

      • @kent_eh@lemmy.ca
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        21 year ago

        So are a lot of worker antagonistic business trends.

        Doesn’t stop some CEO from trying to implement it.

        • @Zeth0s@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          This is really a scam. A sleeping engineer cannot code in his dreams. This is not how the human body works. This guy is trying to scam ignorant venture capitals.

          Similar to theranos. They exploit deep ignorance on biology of people who spent their life doing money

          • @Jaded@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            11 year ago

            Hypothetical situation, if there was a way to induce lucid dreaming and record the dreams as well? Coding doesn’t really lend itself to this but advertising, filmography or architecture would benefit at least at the early concept stage.

            I agree It’s all very sci-fi but if they can make a product that works like they say (sending ultrasounds to target specific parts of the brain to induce lucid dreaming), it has amazing entertainment value right out of the box regardless of its work use.

            • @NBJack@reddthat.com
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              21 year ago

              Ever tried to read something in your dreams? Coding is basically 90% reading and 10% writing. Then you have to insure that shit compiles and runs.

              I can’t speak for you, but I don’t think my brain has a valid edition of the Java Development Kit.

            • @Zeth0s@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              It’s like asking a computer in sleep mode to run a screen saver and pretending close-to-random loosely-guided images are result of a rational creative process. Sleeping brain work differently, for a reason. At that point they should put money on AI to improve awake productivity. Programming during lucid dreams is a scam

              Regarding entertainment, there is a reason the humans needs to sleep. Disrupting natural patterns creates only issues

    • @NBJack@reddthat.com
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      1 year ago

      Just think: People having to get help because the job they quit three years ago keeps showing up in their dreams. What’s worse is that they keep doing it, in control but unaware of the fact that they aren’t getting paid, threatened by their in-dream former boss with being fired if the quota wasn’t met.

      Staying awake yet unemployed becomes one of their only escapes. They turn to stimulants to stay away from ‘work’ just a bit longer, just a little more peace.

      But they then ‘crash’, falling asleep for almost a day, and starting a shift that feels like an eternity, Inception style.

    • @dogslayeggs@lemmy.world
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      31 year ago

      I don’t know the answer to this, but I thought lucid dreaming still counted as getting rest as far as your brain was concerned. I lucid dream about once a month, and I never felt tired after it or like I was missing sleep.

      • livus
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        51 year ago

        @dogslayeggs no, the brain needs to cycle through four phases. REM only takes up a portion of your sleep. Even if it felt like you were dreaming all night, you likely weren’t.