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by dalke 3620 days ago
Quoting from that Derek Lowe link to http://blogs.sciencemag.org/pipeline/archives/2015/04/02/sil... since it seems to describe your situation almost perfectly:

> There’s another problem that’s not unique to [Silicon] Valley, although it does tend to give people a bad case of it. That’s the “Clearly I’m smart and successful, so clearly I have something to offer in this other field over here” one. We all succumb to that one now and then; it’s human nature. ... If you’re used to being able to sit down and bang out code, any time, anywhere, with all kinds of tools (libraries, compilers, virtual machines, what have you) at your fingertips, then yeah, working up a new assay protocol in a cell line is going to seem agonizingly slow. Multibillion dollar ideas can be cranked out in the coding world very quickly, if you hit the right place at the right time, but just you try that in the lab. ... The real bottlenecks are figuring out what assay to run, and what to do with the data once you have it. ...

> As much as I might like to see something like that happening in biopharma, though, I can’t quite make myself believe it. Technology, Silicon Valley style technology, is human-designed and human-optimized for other humans. As human beings, we’re playing on our home turf there. But the biology of disease is an away game if there ever was one. The inner workings of cells and the ways that they work together are flat-out alien compared to anything we’ve ever built ourselves. People who are used to coding up apps have never experienced anything like it, and many of them don’t seem to realize that they haven’t. Expecting the sorts of behavior that you get from human-built technologies, and expecting the same effects from the techniques that work to optimize them, is an expensive accident waiting to happen.

As a related example, in the early 1990s AutoCAD thought they could enter molecular modelling, since they figured they could leverage what they knew from designing structures to design molecules. https://www.fourmilab.ch/autofile/www/chapter2_82.html . You'll notice the lack of success, and HyperChem is a dead product.

1 comments

I can't really see how the quote from Lowe's article is a reply to what I've written. I've done my best to be as humble as I can while still trying to offer something from my experience. You seem to be fixed on an image. You may call it silicon valley way of thinking or Andy Grove fallacy. It is unfortunate that it prevented you from replying to what I've written and instead caused you to paste in what is probably your auto response for any kind of an outside look on your field.

I sure hope you know what you're doing.

The uniformly negative comments by others here suggests that it is not uniquely I who misunderstand you.
The uniformity of comments here worries me, as does Lowe's article.

I think you are building a very tall wall.

The gist of my article is: From my experience in my area, developing in a complex environment requires the most investment not in the speed of processing, not in the algorithms used, not in the amount of memory - but mainly in ensuring constant progress. I was deeply curious to learn what is the equivalent in the drug development field.

Yes the theory existed long before Computer Science and Engineering ever did - but the experience did not.

> “Clearly I’m smart and successful, so clearly I have something to offer in this other field over here”

Interestingly enough, I did not speak of my successes, or my reputation, or other people who could say how great I am or even my current role. No, you did that.

> You'll notice the lack of success, and HyperChem is a dead product.

How ironic that you've stated one fallacy (success in one field -> success in another) and then immediately used a similar one.

> letting the submitter (that is, you), know that it is a poor fit for HN. > Why is this linked-to from HN?

I don't need to post anywhere to know that this is destructive criticism.

Perhaps the ideas in my article are completely wrong - I can live with that. What worries me more is the culture which exists in your field, the notion that you can dismiss so easily an outsider's look into your field instead of trying to see exactly how it relates to it, why you think that the idea is already implemented or should not be implemented and instead - spend so much energy on trying to convince me that I should never even think about proposing anything to any other field except my own.

Us and them - I think this saddens me most - I'm them, you're us (and vice versa from my POV).

Again, you malign the entire field with such unsubstantiated claims that "the experience did not". You do not know the field. You do not know what people do in the field. You simply don't have the knowledge to make that assertion.

This is identical to the casual arrogance of the smart but uninformed, which is why I keep reading that interpretation into your comments. You have said nothing which convinces me that you are informed, even to a undergraduate level, of the field.

Drug discovery is a highly multidisciplinary field with "outsiders" constantly entering the field. There is no wall. There are large pits. Some look enticing. It's taken a lot of time, toil, tears, and cash to map out the pits. Many of them are well-known, via papers and books, or word-of-mouth. New ones keep appearing as we map thing out.

This is like a newcomer from out of state who arrives, and before even looking at a map exclaims "you yokels should go that way, because this looks like region X back home, and we've figured out how to get through X in the 1970s." Only, the locals respond "yes, new people often think that, but we figured out back in the 1920s how to get through the area, have since built a four-lane highway through it, and if you go that way you're going to fall into quicksand."

The idea that an outsider with different experience can provide fresh insight is enticing. But software developers with agile experience who work in drug discovery is not an outsider view.

My reaction isn't "us vs. them", it's annoyance over people who don't do their homework.

From what you say there is no real outsider's view. To do the homework I would have to be on the inside. Fair enough, if that is the entry level, I guess I really can't offer any new ideas.