Archive for the ‘Online’ Category

Gladwell on Enron, intelligence and information

Saturday, January 13th, 2007

OPEN SECRETS, a New Yorker piece by Malcolm Gladwell, a thinker and writer whose work I really enjoy and who Time magazine named as one of the 100 Most Influential People a few years back. If you enjoy this piece, I recommend his books as essential reading for those interested in how we react and function in society, consciously and unconsciously.

The Tipping Point is a great way to grasp social epidemiology – the why and how of things changing.

In Gladwell’s own words: “It’s a book about change. In particular, it’s a book that presents a new way of understanding why change so often happens as quickly and as unexpectedly as it does. For example, why did crime drop so dramatically in New York City in the mid-1990’s? How does a novel written by an unknown author end up as national bestseller? Why do teens smoke in greater and greater numbers, when every single person in the country knows that cigarettes kill? Why is word-of-mouth so powerful? What makes TV shows like Sesame Street so good at teaching kids how to read? I think the answer to all those questions is the same. It’s that ideas and behavior and messages and products sometimes behave just like outbreaks of infectious disease. They are social epidemics. The Tipping Point is an examination of the social epidemics that surround us.”

Blink will make you think about how you think (particularly rapid cognition) differently from now on.

In Gladwell’s own words: “It’s a book about rapid cognition, about the kind of thinking that happens in a blink of an eye. When you meet someone for the first time, or walk into a house you are thinking of buying, or read the first few sentences of a book, your mind takes about two seconds to jump to a series of conclusions. Well, “Blink” is a book about those two seconds, because I think those instant conclusions that we reach are really powerful and really important and, occasionally, really good. You could also say that it’s a book about intuition, except that I don’t like that word. In fact it never appears in “Blink.” Intuition strikes me as a concept we use to describe emotional reactions, gut feelings–thoughts and impressions that don’t seem entirely rational. But I think that what goes on in that first two seconds is perfectly rational. It’s thinking–its just thinking that moves a little faster and operates a little more mysteriously than the kind of deliberate, conscious decision-making that we usually associate with “thinking.” In “Blink” I’m trying to understand those two seconds. What is going on inside our heads when we engage in rapid cognition? When are snap judgments good and when are they not? What kinds of things can we do to make our powers of rapid cognition better?”

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What’s in my bag these days

Sunday, January 7th, 2007

abagfullofstuff

Although the ‘What’s in my bag?’ meme is well past it’s first flush of youth, I do find it mildly diverting to look at what folks carry around. The photos that people add to the ‘What’s in my bag?‘ and ‘Every Day Carry‘ Flickr groups give a small window on the global community’s changing habits; the common themes, the emerging and receding social trends and the plain strange. For what it is worth, the changes in my workaday needs, modes of transport and personal productivity habits can be traced from November 2004, through my off-duty bag in March 2005 and in August 2005 during my last work weeks in the UK before emigrating.

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Inkless pen

Friday, January 5th, 2007

Jason has blogged an awesome find – a pen made entirely of metal that marks paper permanently without any ink whatsoever. Christmas is a long way off but this is going on the list.

Performancing and ScribeFire: a new twist

Friday, January 5th, 2007

As I mentioned a few days back, PFF, the free blog editor for Firefox is moving to its own domain and has been rebranded as ScribeFire. However, today it was announced that the Metrics part of the Performancing package is to go Open Source after the deal proposed by PayPerPost went south. Metrics, the free blog statistics part of the package will be given back to open source in the hope that the developer community will pick up the code and work with it. Here endeth the twist.

Slimming down

Thursday, January 4th, 2007
Not another New Year’s diet but a rationalisation of my daily work tools. I normally review my work habits and productivity tools as the year turns and this year is no different. The turmoil in my home and work life over the last eighteen months – emigration, job hunting, residency process, promotions and company-wide reorganisation – has left me with an appetite for the simpler things.

My desk around November time

Although I still miss not being able to use a Palm PDA in my work, I’m not sure I’d be still as digitally committed as I once was. Outlook is a necessary evil that I have learned to accommodate into my working life and, for calendar and email at least, it does most of what I need it to do. The company issue Windows Mobile wifi cellphone (with keyboard and 3G/GPRS connectivity to the company’s exchange server) is great for calls, email, text and the odd rare internet excursion but no good for taking notes of any length or project planning/management.

I have a great laptop but it stay in the docking station mostly when I’m in the office but I still have a need to capture meeting notes, ideas and be able to mind map thoughts and concepts. My solution to date was a Filofax A4 conference folder/ring binder (open in the middle of the shot above), with a notepad, pens and pencil on one side and key documents, metrics reports and the like (my mobile filing system) on the rings. Good but cumbersome to walk around with and hard to force into my laptop case along with all the other junk.

Img 2054 250X188.Shkl

Today I changed all that for a new lightweight version that I have wanted to try out for a while. Quite simply and for a cost of less than NZ$25, I bought an A5 ring binder, some dividers and plastic sleeves and three fine point pens and then printed, guillotined and punched selected A5 inserts that I downloaded from the superb D*I*Y Planner resource, created and led by Douglas Johnston, whose blog I’ve read since way back.

DIYPlanner.com is a community site whose focus is on paper-based productivity, planning, journalling and creative techniques. Here you will find the official D*I*Y Planner kits, as well as daily articles, scores of useful templates, handbooks and how-to’s, forums for discussing productivity in its many forms, images to clad your planners or inspire you, and so much more.

If you have ever used a DayTimer, Franklin Cover Planner, Filofax or similar planner, liked it but often thought “I wish I could get my own meeting planner/to do list/Cornell Notes/GTD page inserts instead of the standard ones”, this is the resource for you. I won’t go into detail here because if you’re intrigued, you’ll click through and look and if you’re not, you probably won’t. If this all works and I can settle to a core set of pages I use, then I’ll start looking around for a slightly more ritzy binder, though I quite like the low-rent look this one has – I caught my CEO looking at it curiously earlier today – so I might not.

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LifeHack offers 2006’s best 50 hacks for your Life

Wednesday, January 3rd, 2007

In their 2006 review, LifeHack.org have gathered up the best 50 hacks for your life. A quick sample include seven tips on handling emails without feeling overwhelmed, five ways to improve your productivity in the office, Time Management: Handling Disruptions in Daily Schedules, The Most Underutilized Tool for Effective Communication and 6 Sleep Tips for those who are productive but tired!

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Performancing becomes ScribeFire

Monday, January 1st, 2007

Ian of the Messy Desk snuck in a last minute 2006 post referencing the blog editor with both currently use, Performancing for Firefox. Following the sale of parts of Performancing, PFF has now morphed into ScribeFire. The ScribeFire link skips to the Mozilla.org download page at present but a separate website is sure to follow.

Having downloaded the leading OS X blog editors over the holidays for another look-see, I have to say that ScribeFire (which is a FireFox extension and free) still holds up well against the hard app clients out there. MarsEdit (Mac), the stablemate of the excellent NetNewsWire, is fine but offers no WYSIWYG option. I have previously had issues with uploading iPhoto images in ecto (Mac, Win), the de facto editor for many a Mac user, but a recent attempt with version 2.4.1 went without a hitch. Furthermore, ecto is probably the most fully featured editor out there for those who are looking for plug-n-play posting, offering iTunes, iPhoto, Amazon insert buttons and the now-essential social tagging straight from the toolbar. The latest release of Qumana (Mac, Win) is pretty well featured too but, as a Java app, seemingly takes an age to load initially.

Ironically, I wrote all but this paragraph of this post in ScribeFire but had to do a quick cut and paste of the raw HTML into ecto when ScribeFire simply refused to take any keyboard input. Closing and restarting Firefox resolved the issue which was the first I have had with Performancing/ScribeFire I have had I (that wasn’t my own fault, that is!).

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Apple Lisa: rare fruit in Kiwi land

Sunday, December 31st, 2006

After the umpteenth complaint from the spouse and sprogs about their XP machine not acquiring the wireless network or dropping the broadband connection, I thought I’d have a look around Trade Me (NZ’s eBay) for a Mac to replace the PC.  Among the G4s and iMacs, I came across an Apple Lisa One for sale.  I don’t imagine that there are too many Lisas anywhere these days, let alone sitting in rural Whakatane.

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Acorn founder gets a gong

Saturday, December 30th, 2006

As usual, the pop singers and sporting folks headed those getting New Year’s Honours today – not to mention a royal family member (there’s something not right about the Queen handing out an MBE to her granddaughter).  Tucked away down the list, you’ll find the influential Professor Andrew Hopper.  For those saying ‘Who?’ and ‘What do I care?’, here’s three reasons:

  1. Hopper founded Acorn Computers, makers of the BBC Micro computer that many of the current leading UK geeks cut their teeth on. 
  2. He went on to create Advanced RISC Machines, whose chip designs went into cutting edge PDAs like Apple Newtons.
  3. Not content with those contributions, he later pioneered a good number of the wireless technologies we now rely on in our daily ‘connected’ lives.

Professor Andy Hopper’s web site at Cambridge University includes a great cockpit video of landing his Cessna at the Courchevel snowfield airstrip in France.

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Ten of a hundred things

Friday, December 29th, 2006

Fathers tend to determine the height of their child, mothers their weight.

Coco Chanel started the trend for sun tans in 1923 when she got accidentally burnt on a cruise.

More than 90% of plane crashes have survivors.

Barbie’s full name is Barbie Millicent Roberts.

The medical name for the part of the brain associated with teenage sulking is "superior temporal sulcus".

The word "time" is the most common noun in the English language, according to the latest Oxford dictionary.

The egg came first.

In Bhutan government policy is based on Gross National Happiness; thus most street advertising is banned, as are tobacco and plastic bags.

Iceland has the highest concentration of broadband users in the world.

In the 1960s, the CIA used to watch Mission Impossible to get ideas about spying.

Just ten of the 100 things we didn’t know last year.

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