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Technology

Lucid Dream Startup Says Engineers Can Write Code In Their Sleep (fortune.com) 141

An anonymous reader writes: People spend one-third of their lives asleep. What if employees could work during that time ... in their dreams? Prophetic, a venture-backed startup founded earlier this year, wants to help workers do just that. Using a headpiece the company calls the "Halo," Prophetic says consumers can induce a lucid dream state, which occurs when the person having a dream is aware they are sleeping. The goal is to give people control over their dreams, so they can use that time productively. A CEO could practice for an upcoming board meeting, an athlete could run through plays, a web designer could create new templates -- "the limiting factor is your imagination," founder and CEO Eric Wollberg told Fortune.

Consumer devices claiming to induce lucid dream states aren't new. Headbands, eye masks, and boxes with electrodes that stick to the forehead all populate the market. Even some supplements claim to do the trick. But there's still an appetite for new technologies, since the potential for creativity and problem-solving is so great and since many on the market don't work to the extent they promise, a dreaming expert told Fortune. The potential of lucid dreaming is less about conquering specific problems and more about finding new, creative ways to approach topics that a sleeper couldn't previously fathom. For example, a mathematician might not reach a specific, numerical answer to a math problem while asleep, but the lucid dream allows them to explore new strategies to tackle the equation while awake.
Halos will cost around $1,500 to $2,000 each.
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Lucid Dream Startup Says Engineers Can Write Code In Their Sleep

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  • That's nice (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ufgrat ( 6245202 ) on Friday December 01, 2023 @10:05AM (#64046273)

    Can't even escape your job in your sleep.

    How dystopian of them.

    • by burtosis ( 1124179 ) on Friday December 01, 2023 @10:08AM (#64046281)

      Can't even escape your job in your sleep.

      How dystopian of them.

      That’s ok, it only compiles and runs in their dreams.

    • Where's your loyalty the company? You weren't using that part of your brain anyhow.

      But if they paid you for it. Well that would be like gig work . Rent a brain. A mesh network of elastic brain servers.

      Of course all the code they'd write would strangely resemble liesure suit Larry

      • Where's your loyalty the company? You weren't using that part of your brain anyhow.

        But if they paid you for it. Well that would be like gig work . Rent a brain. A mesh network of elastic brain servers.

        Maybe we could extend the sleep cycle to last all the time since it’s so productive, you could even be provided a nice pod to rest in. I even hear that arrangement could produce lots of power.. ..

        • by Kokuyo ( 549451 )

          Was thinking in a similar direction. Or rather the Matrix should have used our brains for computational power as a plot device rather than energy production.

          • That would have made so much more sense. I was hesitant to leave it out lest the reference be too arcane.
      • by Thud457 ( 234763 )
        "Work" while "sleeping"? [kym-cdn.com]
        Fuck that noise.

        also :

        Leela: Didn't you have ad's in the 20th century?

        Fry: Well sure, but not in our dreams. Only on TV and radio. And in magazines. And movies. And at ball games and on buses and milk cartons and t-shirts and written on the sky. But not in dreams. No siree!

    • Re:That's nice (Score:5, Insightful)

      by serafean ( 4896143 ) on Friday December 01, 2023 @10:18AM (#64046317)

      Futurama:
      Didn't you have ads in your century?
      Well sure, but not in our dreams! Only on TV & radio, and in magazines, in movies at ballgames on buses, milk cartons and t-shirts and bananas, and written on the sky. But never in our dreams!

    • isn't that the plot of the Matrix?

      Anderson was a gifted coder who had trouble sleeping. He knew a guy offered him meds to help with his insomnia but was pushing something stronger with some nasty side effects such as hallucinating that you were living in a video game with a fetish for black leather.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Friday December 01, 2023 @11:12AM (#64046479) Homepage Journal

      No this is great, I can sleep through work!

    • by skam240 ( 789197 )

      On the other hand I would love to get my 8 hour work day done while asleep.

    • Re:That's nice (Score:4, Insightful)

      by taustin ( 171655 ) on Friday December 01, 2023 @01:17PM (#64046743) Homepage Journal

      If I'm working in my sleep, then I'm getting paid for that time. 24 hours a day, seven days a week. (And make no mistake, California will interpret it that way, and enforce it. After the first week, it's automatically 100% double time roughly eight times the pay for a 40 hour week, until there's a proper break.)

      Most people will be able to retire by 30.

      • I doubt it. The most likely result in that scenario is that the supply of human-hours will jump overnight, and unless there is a similar increase in demand, the rate per hour will suffer dearly.
        • by taustin ( 171655 )

          The whole idea is bullshit to begin with, but if you accept that as plausible, the rest logically follows. California doesn't give any more of a damn about workers than any other state, but they love screwing over companies. Wages can't drop below minimum wage, and eight times that, in a few more years, will be is over a quarter million bucks a year.

  • Seriously? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by proctorg76 ( 657774 ) on Friday December 01, 2023 @10:09AM (#64046283) Journal
    Burn this dude at the fucking stake before it can spread.
  • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Friday December 01, 2023 @10:09AM (#64046289)

    Especially management of the "slaveholder" type will be thrilled by this. Obviously, no useful code will ever come out, but being able to control your slaves while they sleep? Priceless!

    • My manager has been doubling as a line worker for 20+ years now. The problem is the C-suite. We did away with Kings and just up and replaced them with CEOs. About 40% of the world, even in countries with democracy, can't imagine life without a ruling class. Hilariously it tends to be the folks who shout the loudest about freedom...
  • I once was on a tough programming problem that vexed me most of the day and at night I had a dream/nightmare where I was trying to solve it only to come up with the same lame solution over and over and over again. Have you ever dreamnt of some awesome song song never heard before and were able to remember the lyrics and realize once awake it was not really that good? (actually pretty bad)

    Dreaming is the generative AI of the brain.

    • I once was on a tough programming problem that vexed me most of the day and at night I had a dream/nightmare where I was trying to solve it only to come up with the same lame solution over and over and over again. Have you ever dreamnt of some awesome song song never heard before and were able to remember the lyrics and realize once awake it was not really that good? (actually pretty bad)

      Dreaming is the generative AI of the brain.

      I've written a ton of songs while dreaming. About 25% are worth keeping once I actually get them recorded. But I could totally see a management type thinking 25% return on on employees sleep time being worth it if it prevented them from having a moment's peace from the nightmare of creating profit for someone else. God damn, this is a truly frightening prospect.

  • by burtosis ( 1124179 ) on Friday December 01, 2023 @10:18AM (#64046313)
    All the fun of sleep paralysis but now with agile teams and shortened development times. The future is now thanks to science!
  • by Miles_O'Toole ( 5152533 ) on Friday December 01, 2023 @10:18AM (#64046315)

    Work when you're awake. Work when you're asleep. Work when you're having sex. Work instead of being a parent to your kids. The dystopian nightmare that is our future lurches closer and closer.

  • by nightflameauto ( 6607976 ) on Friday December 01, 2023 @10:19AM (#64046319)

    The fact that workers need to sleep drives the owner class absolutely insane. They've been fighting it since the concept of the 8 hour work day came along. If they can make it work, and work well enough to justify foisting it out into the world, I can see the corporate fat-cats lobbying to make it a legally viable option to force programmers to run this shit during every sleep cycle. And most likely, somewhere down the line, lobbying to make it legal to induce perma-sleep states for the best programmers in sleep-state so that they never have to lose critical momentum.

    If this actually flies, at all, it'll be a race to see if we can get AI up to speed enough we no longer need human programmers, and warehouses filled with sleeping bodies programming 24/7 in dream-state, never actually living. Jesus wept. We are truly headed towards a nightmarish dystopia of hell.

    • but look at the upside you can sleep and do drugs on the clock.

    • Not just greed (Score:2, Insightful)

      by rsilvergun ( 571051 )
      but the American puritanical obsession with work and with everything good in life being balanced by at least twice as much bad.

      Puritanicalism is the greatest blight on our species in history. Folks focus on the obsession with work but miss that second fundamental. That if you get something good you must be punished for it. Always. It's an entire philosophy that believes nothing can ever get better in the slightest because we're supposed to be in a constant state of misery where pleasure and happiness on
      • by Shaitan ( 22585 )

        "Folks focus on the obsession with work but miss that second fundamental. That if you get something good you must be punished for it."

        This isn't just some American obsession but rather human nature. Without being discontent and unhappy we'd all just lay in bed and starve to death. Want to not starve? Someone has to do the work of hunting/raising the food, preparing the food, cleaning up the meal prep, cleaning up the dishes, cleaning the bathrooms after the waste comes out, drilling and plumbing for the nat

        • America has spread this rather horrible nonsense just like we spread all our worst aspects (you will literally find people in Germany & South Africa and South American decrying "woke" culture).

          Productivity is bad when machines are doing all the work and 1% get all the profit. It starts to grind our entire civilization to a halt. Capitalism works when large swaths of labor are extremely valuable. Basically Post WWII after we killed off a huge %age of the population and blew everything up so it had to
    • but there are always individual who do not. The problem is there's all sorts of tricks those greedy people use to let normal, non-greedy people let them have all the money and power. Better education and more critical thinking will break down those tricks, but those greedy people know that and they fight against teaching people.
  • Non paywalled (Score:5, Informative)

    by Dan East ( 318230 ) on Friday December 01, 2023 @10:19AM (#64046321) Journal
  • by Junta ( 36770 ) on Friday December 01, 2023 @10:20AM (#64046325)

    Well, obviously, it's horse shit. Inducing Lucid dreaming is on shaky enough ground, getting structured productive data from an unconscious brain is just ridiculous (which is the only way the "web designer" example could make sense).

    But even imagining that they could work, even a lucid dreamer is like a really stoned person. They may *think* they are having amazing ideas at the time and are very smart, but upon sober review it's utterly garbage (with a slight chance that maybe a fictional story might have something in it, but even then it's usually crappy).

    • by HiThere ( 15173 )

      I don't know about "inducing lucid dreaming", but I do know that the code I've designed while I was asleep has had glaring places where I just dropped context for several crucial things. That's just the stuff I remember while awakening, of course. The rest I didn't even remember long enough to evaluate. (I don't think this qualifies as "lucid dreaming", as it was the stuff I was dreaming just as I awoke. But it's probably a fair guide to the quality.)

      • by Shaitan ( 22585 )

        If you are already dreaming about coding you desperately need to escape.

        • by HiThere ( 15173 )

          You might. I happen to enjoy it. But I still wonder what it means. Dreams usually aren't about what they appear to be about.

    • by Shaitan ( 22585 )

      "Inducing Lucid dreaming is on shaky enough ground"

      Do you mean a device which can do so or inducing lucid dreaming at all? I've never had a device induce lucid dreams. Those things are normally several hundred dollars or more which I'd happily pay for a surefire and working product but would never pay just to find out. Further they are usually composed of electronics that for any other purpose would be under $50 or in the case of the masks they sell less than $15.

      That said I know inducing lucid dreams is po

      • by Junta ( 36770 )

        I meant devices. Not sure there's data showing that any of them are any more successful than placebo.

        Yes, people can induce lucid dream (or did you have a lucid dream, or merely dreamt that you had a lucid dream?). However I'll say that even when you *think* it's perfectly stable and productive, it's almost certain that if you could view it more objectively, your lucid dream is not all *that* grounded in actual reality.

        I'll admit to not having a lot of scientific work to reference, but everyone I have eve

        • by Shaitan ( 22585 )

          "Yes, people can induce lucid dream (or did you have a lucid dream, or merely dreamt that you had a lucid dream?)."

          Way to inception it up. But no, if you are aware you are dreaming within a dream and don't immediately wake upon realizing it, then it is a lucid dream so if at the end of the chain of within's it's you, actually dreaming and being aware of it then it is a lucid dream.

          "However I'll say that even when you *think* it's perfectly stable and productive, it's almost certain that if you could view it

  • will they tell you how to beat the drug test?

    • will they tell you how to beat the drug test?

      Don't use drugs. I know what you're thinking, it's such a simple process it can't be done.
  • Only $2K to offer up the last 6 hours of my day to our corporate overlords?

    Where do I sign?

  • If the company gets me this I could sleep at work and justify it.

  • by JustAnotherOldGuy ( 4145623 ) on Friday December 01, 2023 @10:53AM (#64046423) Journal

    Oh I'm sure this will take off and in no time everyone will be "coding in their sleep". Sure it will.

    FFS, it's hard enough to code competently when you're awake, I don't think coding in a dream state will be any better.

    Please stop with these bullshit ad-hype stories.

  • I didn't bother reading the linked article as the summary was enough to depress me. Imagine harnessing the power of lucid dreaming and using it to design a better presentation. This is equally as appalling as business bastardising yoga and mindfulness into productivity tools. It's almost as bad as tech bros boring everyone silly with microdosing and weird diets to squeeze a few more drops of productivity out of their brains... how joylessly mundane!
  • by Chris Mattern ( 191822 ) on Friday December 01, 2023 @11:08AM (#64046467)

    And judging by some of the code I've seen, many of them *do*.

  • It might be part of the job at Tesla or X

  • by cwatts ( 622605 )

    yeah, right.

  • No, I'm not napping at my desk. I'm coding.

  • by Virtucon ( 127420 ) on Friday December 01, 2023 @11:18AM (#64046489)

    Of course, let me use that copious spare time between midnight and 6 am to do more work. Hell, you can even shove a broom up my ass and I'll sweep the floor at the same time.

  • I wrote this comment and some code while lucid dreaming. It's pretty effective and elephant giraffe monkey bongo mulchie declare petunia integer
  • ... what happens if the developer can dream up only nightmares?
  • As a person who has experienced several very fun lucid dreams, I can't imagine wasting them doing code.

  • act as if the developer wrote it in their sleep.

  • Perhaps people are different. Every time I tried to think about much of anything while I was aware of being inside a dream it was always an exercise in futility having tasks I knew were frustratingly simple escape me.

    I suspect if people could be "all there" while sleeping it probably would obviate much of the point of sleep in the first place.

    • One of the tests you do when you are dreaming, to determine that you are dreaming, is to try to read something twice. Supposedly you can't read in a dream or the text will change. That would make coding fun.

  • by RightwingNutjob ( 1302813 ) on Friday December 01, 2023 @12:11PM (#64046629)

    And his experiments with weed and sensory deprivation tanks in 1970s California.

    He wrote that at first he thought he really was reaching higher states of consciousness, really on the cusp of opening his mind to the universe and just just on the edge of transcending into greater understanding. Tantalizing stuff for a physicist of his caliber, or anyone who cogitates while sitting on their ass for a living.

    And then, when fully awake and not high he had an even more profound revelation: he was daydreaming and consulting his own imagination, and for no good reason was believing his own imagination about having achieved a higher understanding rather than consulting experimental data to verify that that understanding was accurate. Very much the opposite of what science is. And he stopped playing with this stuff and went back to doing science the old fashioned way: awake and lucid rather than blitzed out of his mind and delusional.

    I myself have had plenty of "lucid" dreams. About the only lucid thing about it was a vague sense that this isn't real. No deep insights into my personal life or my work or anything. Plenty of crazy shit that wouldn't really work IRL. Just immersive delusions.

    And quite honestly, any "code" written while dreaming would just as likely be predicated on 2 plus 2 equaling 42 to work as anything else. Not really a recipe for any kind of success.

    So where are we? Someone pitching pleasant-sounding snakeoil predicated on delusions being real.

  • I had dreamed of reading TFA, but it's paywalled.
  • I am ok with it, as long as managers conduct meetings and shareholders enjoy their profits the same way.

  • I can think of nothing more dystopian than forcing people to work in their sleep.
  • Or is it that employers want to go back to the "good old days", where people's *normal" working day was 16 hours, six days a week?

  • Have a completely lucid and aware dreamscape at your disposal that you can bend and manipulate to your whim! Just think of all the additional labor we could squeeze out of you!

    I've had lucid dreams and neither the lucidity nor the dreamscape was stable enough to do anything productive, perhaps the way the Halo induces this state would trigger the ideal parts of the brain and fix that but you can be damn sure if start working on anything in my dreams it will be work FOR ME not my employer.

  • A lot of code I reviewed lately sure looked like whoever wrote it was asleep at the keyboard.

  • Most people can't write code while awake. so how is an overly expensive headset going to help? Leave my prinate sleep time to myself. Is this too much to ask?
  • My greatest breakthroughs in the last 40 years came while:
    - Sleeping: once
    - Peeling carrots: once
    - On a smoke break: lots of times, but the cigarettes weren't really the necessary part
    - In the shower: lots of times

    And for the record, the cigarettes cost more than $2000 in total, but the carrots were cheap and the showers were necessary anyway.

     

  • You would sell this device for recreational use, not work. If it was reliable enough.

  • Will they get paid for that time when they would normally be off work? If people are working "in their sleep", then they should be paid for that time.
  • I lucid dream often and enjoy it immensely. In my dreams the #1 fastest way to punch out is to read something. Look around, find some text on anything, a page, a book binding an advertisement, and /read/ the text, focusing on the shapes of the letters as the assemble into words*. Whatever portion of my brain handles OCR is normally off during sleep and clicking it on wakes me up instantly.

    * The distinction I'm trying to make here is between reading and choosing to know what something says. It took me age

  • You only get sleepy code if you don't pour the coffee in.
  • I do not spend a third of my life asleep. It's more like two thirds. My whole life has been a preparation for the time when I can earn money while snoring and farting. I am the modern Stakhanov.

  • ... ... in their dreams?

    If I'm working, I'm getting paid by the hour. The problem is, we only dream about 15 minutes a night. The rest of the night, the brain is in cleaning or stand-by mode.

  • by mustafap ( 452510 ) on Friday December 01, 2023 @07:01PM (#64047641) Homepage

    While I would love to experience their augmented capability, I already do this.

    When I start work with a new org, the way I know I have settled in is when I wake up with a solution to a problem I went to sleep with the night before.

    I've been in tech since the 1980's, and it did take me a couple of decades to see this, but I now sleep with a notepad and pen next to me in bed.

  • ...but only about 20-25% of it is spent in REM sleep. So, right off the bat, there is a major misconception in the summary: something which is obvious to anyone with even a passing interest in sleep physiology, or anyone who is willing to spend 10 seconds googling.

    As far as I know, there is *no* device you can wear on your head which induces or prolongs a specific sleep stage. Yes, I'm aware that you can buy all sorts of devices which claim to do so. If you can point me to a peer-reviewed study that supports those claims, I'll be very interested in reading it. (There are a few medications which can influence sleep stages-- e.g., there are medications which *shorten* time spent in REM. I don't know if there are any which have been shown to prolong REM time).

  • Anyone who wants to live a healthy life, has to get *away* from work, get actual rest. This is not that.

  • Asperger's,
    it just comes naturally.
    That is the way of the future.

God help those who do not help themselves. -- Wilson Mizner

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