Jan
12
2009

Estimates

I remember in elementary school once we did a whole bunch of excercises in estimation. One that sticks out is beingaskes to open a closed dictionary to a particular letter section. I thought these were really stupid, but now realize that people are often horrible at common sense things that come down to reasonable (or totally unreasonable) estimation.

I doubt that more time flipping through dictionaries would have helped much, but I’ve never thought schools put enough emphasis on basic common sense. Maybe this would be a good happy median for the educators among us.

Written by evan on Monday, January 12th, 2009 at 8:42 pm |
Jan
11
2009

Consumers vs. producers

This is a really good post that is awfully autobiographical for something I didn’t write.

I’d read several books on self-publishing and writing non-fiction, and I could have a really good conversation about them, but I’d synthesized the information for knowledge-sake, rather than to act on it. That made a big difference.

That line alone was pretty interesting to read. I’ve felt that way at a lot of points in my life–knowing a lot about something but being virtually clueless when trying to actually do it.

I do question the inherentness of the “consumer” and “producer” characteristics, but the post is informative and interesting nonetheless.

Written by evan on Sunday, January 11th, 2009 at 8:24 pm |
Jan
07
2009

Organizational vs creative work

I realized yesterday that I’m almost incapacle of doing anything usfully creative before 4pm. Similarly I cannot do anything that requires real organization after 4.

This is either a relief or a real pain in the ass.

Written by evan on Wednesday, January 7th, 2009 at 9:25 am |
Jan
05
2009

Idea sparks and quick turnaround

The “authority-based Twitter search” meme from a couple weeks ago led to my first ever blog comment. That led to a back and forth on Twitter and some emails back and forth. A couple days ago Salim launched Twidentify.

It’s pretty cool to see something like that grow from the spark of an idea to a live product in just a week or two. I had nothing to do with the site except for exchanging some ideas with Salim (both pre and post launch) but it’s still fun to have been there to see it develop along the way.

Written by evan on Monday, January 5th, 2009 at 2:12 am |
Jan
02
2009

Marketing things that solve big problems

By the time someone has a really big problem, the offending product or service has probably built up a really big switching cost–otherwise they likely would have switched before the problem got really big. I wonder if there’s some kind of bell curve-esque relationship of problems to open-mindedness when presented solutions where the X axis would be the magnitude of a user problem and the Y axis would be their receptiveness to marketing of an alternative.

Written by evan on Friday, January 2nd, 2009 at 5:22 am |
Dec
31
2008

Outliers

I’ve been listening to Malcom Gladwell’s book, Outliers, on my iPhone for the last few days. It is, as the subtitle says, the story of success–specifically, how successful people become successful.

I’ve always tried to work smarter, rather than harder, whenever possible. If nothing else, it’s a creed that fits well with being somewhat apathetic about many things. That said, when it’s something I care about, virtually every time, there have been circumstances where I’ve run low on smarter and had to resort to simply throwing more time at a problem than others in order to “win.”

That’s always seemed a bit lame. But Gladwell’s examples point to that being closer to a rule than an exception, and he’s about as witty, and therefore authoritative, as anyone else. It’s comforting.

Written by evan on Wednesday, December 31st, 2008 at 5:26 pm |
Dec
30
2008

Multiplication

Most people don’t know how to do it, much less when to do it.

Written by evan on Tuesday, December 30th, 2008 at 9:15 pm |
Dec
29
2008

Fascinated by sleep

I used to barely sleep at all.  Staying up for 24 or 48 hours at a time was a weekly occurrence, and for the most part I could function decently up until I passed out.  And after a relatively short rest, I was right back at it.  I also found, while spending a summer without any real time commitments, that my natural sleep pattern was entirely capable of having me go to sleep at noon and wake up at 8pm.

Oh how that’s changed.  If I go two nights in a row with less than 8 hours of sleep I am in a world of hurt, three and I’m basically useless.

I’ve read the stories of Einstein needing 10 hours of sleep and DaVinci sleeping in 15 minute chunks, and I was always pretty comfortable with the idea that there is no “right” amount of sleep.  I’ve also heard that as people grow older than tend to need less sleep, which made sense for a lot of reasons.  So it’s a little puzzling that as I grow older I need more sleep.  Maybe I’m exerting myself more, although if I am it’s certainly not physically, despite my best efforts.

I’m so curious about what’s going on when I sleep that I actually bought an iPhone sleep analyzer application.  It was so useless that I won’t even waste time linking to it, but suffice to say that it didn’t lend any insight other than my room is relatively quiet at night except for my phone buzzing when I recieve emails.

Hopefully one day I’ll be on a sleep schedule that makes some sense to me.  Until then I’ll keep crashing at 9pm when I have to and desperately searching for health analysis from my mobile devices.

Written by evan on Monday, December 29th, 2008 at 9:56 pm |
Dec
29
2008

To do lists

For someone who is woefully unorganized in pretty much every part of my life, I’m really into to do lists. Currently Outlook tasks are my drink of choice because they easily integrate with email, but nearly every day I have post it notes, spiral notebook pages and .txt files with some flavor of to do’s.

The interesting thing about to do’s is that unlike a lot of organizational items, mobile access is often a net negative. Seeing that I need to write a document when the only device I have access to is a phone doesn’t do anything for me. I think a lot of the companies building stuff in this space (like Evernote, which I do not get the hype about at all) are going about it all wrong. Showing me stuff no matter where I am isn’t helpful. I want to be able to categorize stuff from anywhere so that it shows up in the places I want it–only in the places I want it.

Written by evan on Monday, December 29th, 2008 at 4:55 pm |

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