Harnessing the Power of Mistakes
 
By Jason Ruck

 
"You must learn from the mistakes of others. You can't possibly
live long enough to make them all yourself."
-Sam Levenson
 

History books provide accounts of man's successes and failures so that we may learn from them to better our future. However, detailed accounts of geopolitical wars and ethnic disturbances are of little use when one is trying to renovate the kitchen or decipher the fine lines of an HMO application. The fact is that there is little literature written about the mistakes of everyday pursuits, and if there is, it is often segmented, outdated or incomprehensive. Inviting the internet community to detail their mistakes on an online open-source encyclopedia would provide an invaluable resource for users.

Equating this is monetary terms would be difficult but providing an example might help illustrate the point;
 
Let suppose you live in an apartment and the intercom system has mysteriously stopped working. You contact your body corporate and they get the company in to inspect. After a few  weeks you hear nothing and upon calling the company they tell you that your system is old and a new one would cost $200 per apartment. If you went onto WIKIhistory (the name I'm proposing) and typed in "apartments" and then clicked on intercom, you could read that one user found out that her next door neighbor was on holiday and "left the receiver off the hook". Such a simple solution would save your block thousands of dollars for a new system and a lot of inconvenience.
 
This is a specific example and I'm sure countless other examples involving encounters with tradesmen and choosing the right material for a job could be cited.
 
Supposing that on average each person makes 1 unique, notable mistake a week that's 52 mistakes a year, and within a few months 10,000 people have contributed to WIKIhistory. With each mistake saving an average of 5 dollars, this conservative estimate predicts that WIKIhistory's intangible worth at one year to be equal to $260,000. Suppose then that In the course of one year each bit of advice is headed in total 5 times by users of the site, the savings could then be posited at $1.3 million.
 
Putting aside monetary considerations, WIKIhistory's worth could be appraised another way. 10,000 years of experience in one year.
 
Such centralization of wisdom coupled with the navigational simplicity of Wikipedia would create an extremely useful system.
 
Wikihistory should not be a forum where people pour out detailed advice but rather each a succinct paragraph  backed up by real-world cases.


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