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Elon Musk's tiny submarine is a lesson in how not to solve problems in tech

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  • 6 min read
  • 11 Jul 2018

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Over the last couple of weeks the world has been watching on as rescuers attempted to find, and then save, a young football team from Tham Luang caves in Thailand. Owing to a remarkable coordinated effort, and a lot of bravery from the team (including one diver who died), all 12 boys were brought back to safety.

Tech played a big part in the rescue mission too - from drones to subterranean radios. But it wanted to play a bigger role - or at least Elon Musk wanted it to. Musk and his submarine has been a somewhat bizarre subplot to this story, and while you can't fault someone for offering to help out in a crisis, you might even say it was unnecessary.

Put simply, Elon Musk's involvement in this story is a fable about the worst aspects of tech-solutionism. It offers an important lesson for anyone working in tech how not to solve problems.

Bringing a tiny submarine to a complex rescue mission that requires coordination between a number of different agencies, often operating from different countries is a bit like telling someone to use Angular to build their first eCommerce store. It's like building an operating system from scratch because your computer has crashed. Basically, you just don't need it. There are better and more appropriate solutions - like Shopify or WooCommerce, or maybe just rebooting your system.

Lesson 1: Don't insert yourself in problems if you're not needed


Elon Musk first offered his support to the rescue mission in Thailand on July 4. It was a response to one of his followers.

https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1014509856777293825

Musk's first instincts were measures, saying that he suspects 'the Thai government has got this under control' but it didn't take long for his mind to change. Without any specific invitation or coordination with the parties leading the rescue mission, Musk's instincts to innovate and create kicked in.

This sort of situation is probably familiar to anyone who works in tech - or, for that matter, anyone who has ever had a job. Perhaps you're the sort of person who hears about a problem and your immediate instinct is to fix it. Or perhaps you've been working on a project, someone hears about it, and immediately they're trying to solve all the problems you've been working on for weeks or months. Yes, sometimes it's appealing, but on the other side it can be incredibly annoying and disruptive.

This is particularly true in software engineering where you're trying to solve problems at every level - from strategy to code. There's rarely a single solution. There's always going to be a difference of opinion. At some point we need to respect boundaries and allow the right people to get on with the job.

Lesson 2: Listen to the people involved and think carefully about the problem you're trying to solve


One of the biggest challenges in problem solving is properly understanding the problem. It's easy to think you've got a solution after a short conversation about a problem but there may be nuances you've missed or complexities that aren't immediately clear.

Humility can be a very valuable quality when problem solving. It allows everyone involved to think clearly about the task at hand; it opens up space for better solutions.

As the old adage goes, when every problem looks like a nail, every solution looks like a hammer. For Musk, when a problem looks like kids stuck in an underwater cave, the solution looks like a kid-sized submarine.

Never mind that experts in Thailand explained that the submarine would not be 'practical.' For Musk, a solution is a solution. "Although his technology is good and sophisticated it’s not practical for this mission" said Narongsak Osatanakorn, one of the leaders of the rescue mission, speaking to the BBC and The Guardian.

https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1016110809662066688

Okay, so perhaps that's a bit of a facetious example - but it is a problem we can run into, especially if we work in software. Sometimes you don't need to build a shiny new SPA - your multi-page site might be just fine for its purpose. And maybe you don't need to deploy on containers - good old virtual machines might do the job for you.

In these sort of instances it's critical to think about the problem at hand. To do that well you also need to think about the wider context around it - what infrastructure is already there? If we change something, is that going to have a big impact on how it's maintained in the future?

In many ways, the lesson here recalls the argument put forward by the Boring Software Manifesto in June. In it, the writer argued in favor of things that are 'simple and proven' over software that is 'hyped and volatile'.

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Lesson 3: Don't take it personally if people decline your solutions


Problem solving is a collaborative effort, as we've seen. Offering up solutions is great - but it's not so great when you react badly to rejection.

https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1016731812159254529

Hopefully, this doesn't happen too much in the workplace - but when your job is to provide solutions, it doesn't help anyone to bring your ego into it. In fact, it indicates selfish motives behind your creative thinking.

This link between talent, status and ego has been developing for some time now in the tech world. Arguably Elon Musk is part of a trend of engineers - ninjas, gurus, wizards, whatever label you want to place on yourself - for whom problem-solving is as much an exercise in personal branding as it is actually about solving problems.

This trend is damaging for everyone - it not only undermines people's ability to be creative, it transforms everyone's lives into a rat race for status and authority. That's not only sad, but also going to make it hard to solve real problems.

Lesson 4: Sometimes collaboration can be more inspiring than Elon Musk


Finally, let's think about the key takeaway here: everyone in that cave was saved. And this wasn't down to some miraculous invention. It was down to a combination of tools - some of them even pretty old. It wasn't down to one genius piece of engineering, but instead a combination of creative thinking and coordinated problem solving that used the resources available to bring a shocking story to a positive conclusion.

Working in tech isn't always going to be a matter of life and death - but it's the collaborative and open world we want to work in, right?