Saturday, July 29, 2006

Stumbling on Happiness

I recently picked up a copy of "Stumbling on Happiness" by Daniel Gilbert. Great book! Fantastic information presented in an accessible and humorous way. This one is a gem.

I wanted to write a couple of notes about this book. As I started into this exercise I realized that I was actually going to have to quote pretty big chunks of the text in order to capture the ideas I'm interested in. If you find any of this fascinating I would suggest taking the time to read the whole book as I'm just skimming the surface of a couple of ideas.

I've highlighted my comments in blue throughout the text below. The italics in the text are transcribed from the book. The bold is my editorial emphasis.


Page 125
“I’ve been waiting a long, long time to show someone this cartoon (figure 12), which I clipped from a newspaper in 1983 and have kept tacked to one bulletin board or another ever since. It never fails to delight me. The sponge is being asked to imagine without limits-to envision what it might like to be if the entire universe of possibilities were open to it-and the most exotic thing it can imagine becoming is an arthropod. The cartoonist isn’t making fun of sponges, of course; he’s making fun of us. Each of us is trapped in a place, a time, and a circumstance, and our attempts to use our minds to transcend those boundaries are, more often than not, ineffective. Like the sponge, we think we are thinking outside the box only because we can’t see how big the box really is. Imagination cannot easily transcend the boundaries of the present, and one reason for this is that it must borrow machinery that is owned by perception. The fact that these two processes must run on the same platform means that we are sometimes confused about which one is running. We assume that what we feel as we imagine the future is what we’ll feel when we get there, but in fact, what we feel as we imagine the future is often a response to what’s happening in the present. The time-share arrangement between perception and imagination is one of the causes of presentism, but it is not the only one.”

This idea is the reason that I decided that it was not only a good idea but also necessary for me to leave my last job prior to accepting my next position - or even really exploring the possibilities to any great depth. While working in my previous position I couldn't see "how big the box really is" and I knew that. I didn't always have the words available to me to explain this concept.

Page 109
“Presentism defined: The tendency for current experience to influence one’s views of the past and the future.”

I wanted to include this definition because I believe this is an incredibly useful word and I couldn't seem to remember what it meant. Wirting it down helps!

Page 161
“The research I’ve described so far seems to suggest that human beings are hopelessly Panglossian; there are more ways to think about experience than there are experiences to think about, and human beings are unusually inventive when it comes to finding the best of all possible ways. And yet, if this is true, then why aren’t we all walking around with wide eyes and loopy grins, thanking God for the wonder of hemorrhoids and the miracle of in-laws? Because the mind may be gullible, but it ain’t no patsy. The world is this way, we wish the world were that way, and our experience of the world-how we see it, remember it, and imagine it-is a mixture of stark reality and comforting illusion. We can’t spare either. If we were to experience the world exactly as it is, we’d be too depressed to get out of bed in the morning, but if we were to experience the world exactly as we want it to be, we’d be too deluded to find our slippers. We may see the world through rose-colored glasses, but roes-colored glasses are neither opaque nor clear. They can’t be opaque because we need to see the world clearly enough to participate in it-to pilot helicopters, harvest corn, diaper babies, and all the other stuff that smart mammals need to do in order to survive and thrive. But they can’t be clear because we need their rosy tint to motivate us to design the helicopters (“I’m sure this thing will fly”), plant the corn (“This year will be a banner crop”), and tolerate the babies (“What a bundle of joy!”). We cannot do without reality and we cannot do without illusion. Each serves a purpose, each imposes a limit on the influence of the other, and our experience of the world is the artful compromise that these tough competitors negotiate.”

I love this concept that we have to live in a mix of illusion and reality. We each find out own place within this balance and it helps me to see how different people can have such different impressions of the same thing.

Page 163
“Most of us pot a lot of stock in what scientists tell us because we know that scientists reach their conclusions by gather and analyzing facts…Scientists are credible because they draw conclusions from observations, and ever since the empiricists trumped the dogmatists and because the kings of ancient Greek medicine, westerners have had a special reverence for conclusions that are based on things they can see. It isn’t surprising, then, that we consider our own views credible when they are based on observable facts but not when they are based on wishes, wants and fancies. We might like to believe that everyone loves us, that we will live forever, and that high-tech stocks are preparing to make a major comeback, and it would be awfully convenient if we could just push a little button at the base of our skulls and instantly believe as we wanted. But that’s not how believing works. Over the course of human evolution, the brain and the eye have developed a contractual relationship in which the brain has agreed to believe what the eye sees and not to believe what the eye denies. So if we are to believe something, then it must be supported by-or at least not blatantly contradicted by-the facts.

“If views are acceptable only when they are credible, and if they are credible only when they are based on facts, then how do we achieve positive views of ourselves and our experience? How do we manage to think of ourselves as great drivers, talented lovers, and brilliant chefs when the facts of our lives include a pathetic parade of dented cars, disappointed partners, and deflated soufflés? The answer is simple: We cook the facts. There are many different techniques for collecting, interpreting and analyzing facts, and different techniques often lead to different conclusions, which is why scientists disagree about the dangers of global warming, the benefits of supply-side economics, and the wisdom of low carbohydrate diets. Good scientists deal with this complication by choosing the techniques they consider most appropriate and then accepting the conclusions that these techniques produce, regardless of what those conclusions might be. But bad scientists take advantage of this complication by choosing techniques that are especially likely to produce the conclusions they favor, thus allowing them to reach favored conclusions by way of supportive facts. Decades of research suggests that when it comes to collecting and analyzing facts about ourselves and our experiences, most of us have the equivalent of an advanced degree in Really Bad Science.”

We seem to be able to maintain beliefs even when the facts don't support our conclusion. They just don't blatantly disagree! Come to think of it I'm selecting the sections of this book that support my prefered conclusion and emphasizing them. It's a cruel joke and I admit that I have this universal degree in Really Bad Science.


Page 214-222
Super-replicators

“The philosopher Bertrand Russell once claimed that believing is “the most mental thing we do.” Perhaps, but it is also the most social thing we do. Just as we pass along our genes in an effort to create people whose faces look like ours, so too do we pass along our beliefs in an effort to create people whose minds think like our. Almost any time we tell anyone anything, we are attempting to change the way their brains operate-attempting to change the way they see the world so that their view of it more closely resembles our own. Just about every assertion-from the sublime (“God has a plan for you”) to the mundane (“Turn left a the light, go two miles, and you’ll see the Dunkin’ Donuts on your right”)-is meant to bring the listener’s beliefs about the world into harmony with the speaker’s. Sometimes these attempts succeed and sometimes they fail. So what determines whether a belief will be successfully transmitted from one mind to another?

“The principles that explain why some genes are transmitted more successfully than others also explain why some beliefs are transmitted more successfully than others. Evolutionary biology teaches us that any gene that promotes its own “means of transmission” will be represented in increasing proportions in the population over time…Genes tend to be transmitted when they make us do the things that transmit genes. What’s more, even bad genes-those that make us prone to cancer or heart disease-can become super-replicators if they compensate for these costs by promoting their own means of transmission…

“The same logic can explain the transmission of beliefs. If a particular belief has some property that facilitates its own transmission, then that belief tends to be held by an increasing number of minds. As it turns out, there are several such properties that increase a belief’s transmissional success, the most obvious of which is accuracy. When someone tells us where to find a parking space downtown or how to bake a cake at high altitude, we adopt that belief and pass it along because it helps us and our friends do the things we want to do, such as parking and baking. As one philosopher noted, “The faculty of communication would not gain ground in evolution unless it was by and large the faculty of transmitting true beliefs.” Accurate beliefs give us power, which makes it easy to understand why they are so readily transmitted from one mind to another.

“It is a bit more difficult to understand why inaccurate beliefs are so readily transmitted from one mind to another-but they are. False beliefs, like bad genes, can and do become super-replicators…

False beliefs that happen to promote stable societies tend to propagate because people who hold these beliefs tend to live in stable societies, which provide the means by which false beliefs propagate.

“Some of our cultural wisdom about happiness looks suspiciously like a super-replicating false belief. Consider money. If you’ve ever tried to sell anything, then you probably tried to sell it for as much as you possibly could, and other people probably tried to buy it for as little as they possibly could. All the parties involved in the transaction assumed that they would be better off if they ended up with more money rather than less, and this assumption is the bedrock of our economic behavior. Yet, it has far fewer scientific facts to substantiate it than you might expect. Economists and psychologists have spent decades studying the relation between wealth and happiness, and they have generally concluded that wealth increases human happiness when it lifts people out of abject poverty and into the middle class but that it does little to increase happiness thereafter…Economists explain that wealth has “declining marginal utility,” which is a fancy way of saying that it hurts to be hungry, cold, sick, tired, and scared, but once you’ve bought your way out of these burdens, the rest of your money is an increasingly useless pile of paper.

“So once we’ve earned as much money as we can actually enjoy, we quit working and enjoy in, right? Wrong. People in wealthy countries generally work long and hard to earn more money than they can ever derive pleasure from. This fact puzzles us less than it should…Once we’ve eaten our fill of pancakes, more pancakes are not rewarding, hence we stop trying to procure and consume them. But not so, it seems, with money. As Adam Smith, the father of modern economics, wrote in 1776: “The desire for food is limited in every man by the narrow capacity of the human stomach; but the desire of the conveniences and ornaments of building, dress, equipage, and household furniture, seems to have no limit or certain boundary.”

“If food and money both stop pleasing us once we’ve had enough of them, then why do we continue to stuff our pockets when we would not continue to stuff our faces? Adam Smith had an answer. He began by acknowledging what most of us suspect anyway, which is that the production of wealth is not necessarily a source of personal happiness.
  • “In what constitutes the real happiness of human life, [the poor] are in no respect inferior to those who would seem so much above them. In ease of body and peace of mind, all the different ranks of life are nearly upon a level, and the beggar, who suns himself by the side of the highway, possesses that security which kings are fighting for.”
That sounds lovely, but if it’s true, then we’re all in big trouble. If rich kings are no happier than poor beggars, then why should poor beggars stop sunning themselves by the roadside and work to become rich kings? If no one wants to be rich, then we have a significant economic problem, because flourishing economies require that people continually procure and consume one another’s good and services. Market economies require that we all have an insatiable hunger for stuff, and if everyone were content with the stuff they had, then the economy would grind to a halt. But if this is a significant economic problem, it is not a significant personal problem. The chair of the Federal Reserve may wake up every morning with a desire to do what the economy wants, but most of us get up with a desire to do what we want, which is to say that the fundamental needs of a vibrant economy and the fundamental needs of a happy individual are not necessarily the same. So what motivates people to work hard every day to do things that will satisfy the economy’s needs but not their own? Like so many thinkers, Smith believed that people want just one thing-happiness-hence economies can blossom and grow only if people are deluded into believing that the production of wealth will make them happy. If and only if people hold this false belief will they do enough producing, procuring, and consuming to sustain their economies…

In short, the production of wealth does not necessarily make individuals happy, but it does serve the needs of an economy, which serves the needs of a stable society, which serves as a network for the propagation of delusional beliefs about happiness and wealth. Economies thrive when individuals strive, but because individuals will only strive for their own happiness, it is essential that they mistakenly believe that producing and consuming are routes to personal well-being…This particular false belief is a super-replicator because holding it causes us to engage in the very activities that perpetuate it.

“The belief-transmission game explains why we believe some things about happiness that simply aren’t true. The joy of money is one example. The joy of children is another that for most of us hits a bit closer to home. Every human culture tells its members that having children will make them happy. When people think about their offspring-either imagining future offspring or thinking about their current ones-they tend to conjure up images of cooing babies smiling from their bassinets, adorable toddlers running higgledy-piggledy across the lawn, handsome boys and gorgeous girls playing trumpets and tubas in the school marching band, successful college students going on to have beautiful weddings, satisfying careers, and flawless grandchildren whose affections can be purchased with candy. Prospective parents know that diapers will need changing, that homework will need doing, and that orthodontists will go to Aruba on their life savings, but by and large, they think quite happily about parenthood, which is why most of them eventually leap into it. When parents look back on parenthood, they remember feeling what those who are looking forward to it expect to feel. Few of us are immune to these cheery contemplations. I have a twenty-nine year-old son, and I’m absolutely convinced that he is and always has been one of the greatest sources of joy in my life, having only recently been eclipsed by my two-year-ld granddaughter, who is equally adorable but who has not yet asked me to walk behind her and pretend we’re unrelated. When people are asked to identify their sources of joy, they do just what I do: They point to their kids.

“Yet if we measure the actual satisfaction of people who have children, a very different story emerges. As figure 23 shows, couples generally start out quite happy in their marriages and then become progressively less satisfied over the course of their lies together, getting close to their original levels of satisfaction only when their children leave home. Despite what we read in the popular press the only know symptom of “empty nest syndrome” is increased smiling. Interestingly, this pattern of satisfaction over the life cycle describes women (who are usually the primary caretakers of children) better than men. Careful studies of how women feel as they go about their daily activities show that they are less happy when taking care of their children than when eating, exercising, shopping, napping, or watching television. Indeed, looking after the kids appears to be only slightly more pleasant than doing housework.

“None of this should surprise us. Every parent knows that children are a lot of work-a lot of really hard work-and although parenting has many rewarding moments, the vast majority of its moments involve dull and selfless service to people who will take decades to become even begrudgingly grateful for what we are doing. If parenting is such difficult business, then why do we have such a rosy view of it? One reason is that we have been talking on the phone all day with society’s stockholders-our moms and uncles and personal trainers-who have been transmitting to us an idea that they believe to be true but whose accuracy is not the cause of its successful transmission. “Children bring happiness” is a super-replicator. The belief-transmission network of which we are a part cannot operate without a continuously replenished supply of people to do the transmitting, thus the belief that children are a source of happiness becomes a part of our cultural wisdom simply because the opposite belief unravels the fabric of any society that holds it. Indeed, people who believed that children bring misery and despair-and who thus stopped having them-would put the belief-transmission network out of business in around fifty years, hence terminating the belief that terminated them. The Shakers were a utopian farming community that arose in the 1800s and at one time number about six thousand. They approved of children, but the did not approve of the natural act that creates them. Over the years, their strict belief in the importance of celibacy caused the network to contract, and today they are just a few elderly Shakers left, transmitting their doomsday belief to no one but themselves.

“The belief-transmission game is rigged so that we must believe that children and money bring happiness, regardless of whether such beliefs are true. This doesn’t mean that we should all now quit our jobs and abandon our families. Rather, it means that while we believe we are raising children and earning paychecks to increase our share of happiness, we are actually doing these things for reasons beyond our ken. We are nodes in a social network that arises and falls by a logic of its own, which is why we continue to toil, continue to mate, and continue to be surprised when we do not experience all the joy we so gullibly anticipated.”

This helps me understand why I'm no longer driven by $. I got to the point in my last position where increases in pay didn't make much difference. Sure, the provided more disposable income which was fun, but it didn't generate more happiness. Now that I'm unemployed the balance has shifted again and I would expect that the first paycheck from my next job will produce a very different emotional response.

Regarding children and how they bring us happiness. I'm one of the few people that don't buy into the notion that children bring happiness. Sometimes I feel like a humbug for this feeling but reading this section of the book helps me to see how I came to this belief. I don't know what I'm going to do with this as I'm not sure I accept the idea of sharing the fate of the Shakers. But this helps me to see why I often feel at odds with the rest of society when it comes to my feelings about children.

Senator Stevens and Net Neutrality

Senator Stevens from Alaska has unleashed a flury of creativity on the internet - opps, I mean seires of tubes. Here are a few of my favorites:
Have fun!

Saturday, July 08, 2006

This Project is Spot On The Type of Thing I Want To Do

This article in MIT Technology Review describes just the type of project I want to get involved with. I'm specifically interested in how they hope "to use the data to build a computer program and database with, among other things, average flat-surface solar radiation readings for neighborhoods across the United States (as measured by the weather service at the nearest airport). Punch in the performance characteristics of the roofing product you want to use, plus your location, roof orientation and slope, and other data, and -- bingo -- you'll know what kind of wattage you can expect from your roof."

This is a great example of software applications and systems facilitating the development, competitiveness and adoption of clean and renewable energy sources and energy conservation opportunities. Which if you weren't already aware is my newly defined mission!

Saturday, June 24, 2006

Lake Harriet 1 Mile Swim

Now I'm 2 for 2 this year. I competed in my second race of the season this morning. This time it was a 1 mile open water swim at Lake Harriet in Minneapolis. This race is a bit different as it attracts some very good swimmers. I'm a pretty good swimmer when compared to other triathletes but when I go up against real swimmers I tend to fall into the middle of the pack. That happened again today (I think I got about 20 place out of about 35) but as luck would have it I ended up winning my age group! Here are a couple of photos of my trophy ;-

I'll have to put this up next to my crushed pingpong ball trophy from a few years ago.

Fear or Love

This post by Pam Slim about choosing fear or love is a great follow on to the presentation at PUSH about the philosophy slam. In the philosophy slam the question was "which is more powerful, hope or fear?"

Pam's reasoning is similar to most of the audience at PUSH in that they leaned toward hope. I'm still surprised that the kids seemed to be 50-50 split between hope and fear.

Wednesday, June 14, 2006

Domain Names

I'm trying to figure out what domain name to use for a web site/blog that will be dedicated to exploring the relationship between clean/renewable energy and software/IT. This is the niche I'm interested in and based on my research no one is already doing this.

So far I've come up with the following ideas. These listed below are ones that are available.

CLEANENERGYSOFTWARE.COM
CLEANENERGYIT.COM
RENEWABLEENERGYSOFTWARE.COM
SOFTWAREANDENERGY.COM
RENEWABLEENERGYIT.COM

You can see the trend in my thinking. I generally don't like the "IT" in the domain as it seems like the word 'it'. At this point the first one is my favorite as it's actually readable and I believe it's memorable. I'm looking for radical ideas. Anything way out there to get the brainstorming going. What domain would make you think of this? Please leave any ideas in a comment so that everyone can see.

Thanks!

Update - I really like Don's suggestion of renew-it.com. Problem is that this one is not available. renewable-it.com is available and I think is a pretty good alternative. cleanenergy-it.com is also available.

There is a theme building

"When you come to the edge of all the light you know, and are about to step off into the darkness of the unknown, faith is knowing one of two things will happen: There will be something solid to stand on ,or you will be taught how to fly. "
Barbara J. Winter--

So far I haven't found either the solid ground or the wings, but I still have faith that one or both will be there to support me.

Consider this...

My Mom sent this quote to me almost two years ago. I've been hanging onto the email since then trying to figure out how to apply this to my life. The decision to launch into a new phase of my career and my attendence at PUSH the last couple of days has reinforced this message as well as given me a chance to live it. I think you'll like this.

"Consider this,

"Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate, but rather that we are powerful beyond measure. It is the attention to our light, not our darkness, that most frightens us. We ask ourselves: "Who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous, talented, fabulous? Who am I to stand out? Is it safe to let my gifts show? Will others attack me out of jealousy?"

"Actually, who are you not to be? You are a creation of the divine force like all other creatures.

"Your playing small doesn't serve the world. There's nothing enlightened about shrinking to reassure other people with your lack of expression in order to make them feel secure around you. We are all meant to shine, as children do. We were born to make manifest the glory of the creation that is within us. It's not just in some of us; it's in everyone. And as we let our own light shine, we unconsciously give other people permission to do the same. As we're liberated from our own fear, our presence liberates others. Our positive energy releases manifestation in others.

"Therefore, seek not to conceal your own light, but let it shine affirmatively so that its beam may lead others to sharing their own brilliance and talents."

Nelson Mandela

Male Life Course

About two years ago I decided to do a self-guided version of a Men's Studies course. I did a fair amount of reading about men's lives with an emphasis on work, marriage and fatherhood. This wasn't an exhaustive review but included the things I could find (there's not a whole lot out there) and had time for. Here is a sampling of my reading list:
  1. Chicken Soup for the Father's Soul, 101 Stories to Open the Hearts and Rekindle the Spirits of Fathers by Jack Canfield, Mark Victor Hansen, Jeff Aubery, Mark Donnelly, Chrissy Donnelly
This might be controversial but one of the conclusions I came to is that the basic ordering of life events in the American culturally approved life course for a man is
  • to complete an education
  • to get a job
  • to move out of his parents' home and live independently
  • to date a number of women
  • to meet the woman he wants to marry
  • to spend time as a couple
  • to marry
  • to buy a house
  • to set up a home together
  • and to have children
This is the model that young men are taught by American culture but it seems less and less common that men actually follow this path. Or maybe we're just hearing more about men that don't follow this path. In fact, I would suggest that many men actively rebel against this model, myself included. Each has his own reasons.

This is a topic that still interests me. If it strikes a chord for you let me know and we can dig a little deeper.

Bono on Faith

"To have faith in a time of religious fervor is a worry. And, you know, I do have faith, and I'm worried about even the subject because of the sort of fanaticism that is the next-door neighbor of faith. The trick in the next few years will be not to decry the religious instinct, but to accept that this is a hugely important part of people's lives. And at the same time to be very wary of people who believe that theirs is the only way. Unilateralism before God is dangerous."
-Bono

This is a quote that I first saw over a year ago. Bono's words resonate for me the day after PUSH in two ways. First, as it relates to Lawrence M. Krauss' lecture that touched on Intelligent Design and religious faith. Second, I believe that it takes faith from everyone that attends an event like PUSH to let go of our internal critic and be open to new ideas and possibilities.


Tuesday, June 13, 2006

PUSH - David Allen Part 2

David Allen

David provided a few closing words for the conference. I have to admit that I was getting a bit tired by this point in the day but here is what I caught during his closing remarks.

After the conference (he called them the "Best Questions")
a. Clearing – put things in the “in box”.
b. Clarifying - what does this mean to you? If no, trash. If maybe, then when. File with items to check on that time line. What am I committed to? Look into? Do?
c. Organize. Crisis is usually the thing that gets us going. Find ways to take action without crisis. Personal sustainability.
d. Reflecting. Look at it from all the levels that you need to examine.
e. Engaging. You have to get personally and emotionally involved.

See my notes from his opening remarks in this post.

PUSH - Two Day Summary

"The best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago."
Chinese Proverb

The best way I know to summarize the two day is with this proverb. We have been both harvesting the fruit of ideas that were planted many years ago as well as planting new seeds that will only show their fruit many years from now.

PUSH - Walker Off Center

If you'd like to see more about the PUSH conference check out the Walker Off Center blog. Paul, thanks for the link. It's been a fantastic two days!

PUSH - Ze Frank

Ze Frank

Justifying his existence in 30 minutes. Impossible to describe but fantastic. Check out his web site for a sample.

Get other people to do all the work and take credit for it. Some people call this web 2.0.

You’ve got to see the “Doodle Analysis” tool.

Crapucopia - “There is so much more crap to consume” or is it that “there is so much more crap being made.”

The audience is learning your language, and they want to start a conversation. Choices.
• Ignore them. If you do this they will talk behind your back or go around you.
• Resist. Top down Control. Conversations resist this. Broadcast model worked for this but the participation model this breaks down.

Conversations are flexible. The context is malleable. You have to allow people to express themselves otherwise you’ll end up ignoring them or resisting them.

Friendster did it wrong. MySpace did it right.

People will show you what is interesting. YouTube.

Haikus for a newly neutered dog.

The Long Tail. Wired Magazine article by Chris Anderson. What about the production side of this equation? What is the value in the tail in the production side? We’re just starting to tap this resource. Businesses are just starting to figure out how to leverage this side of things. Create architectures that encourage participation and conversation.

Technology is moving faster than people’s emotional and intellectual capacity is able to keep up. Ze calls this web 0.2. Most people don’t even know why they’re there. But people are starting to feel a home online. This is starting to tap into deep emotions. This is shifting from a technology revolution to a social revolution.

The creative process is changing rapidly. People are putting more beta’s out and not trying to get it perfect. Tools for production are changing. Platforms for production are changing just as fast.

We laugh at the old people that got it wrong. We laugh because they should have known better. We aren’t in any better position to understand how our technology is really going to be used and what it’s going to lead to. We’ll be laughing at ourselves.

New designers are explorers.
How do you learn courage and resourcefulness?
Don’t respect the tools,
Don’t break old rules, find new one s to follow.
Don’t read the manual. It takes too long. By the time you read it the manual might be gone. Just dive in and use it like it’s throwaway garbage.
Become a perpetual hobbyist. Understand many different frames of reference.
You are the value proposition. A social revolution, not a technological one.

You can actually make money doing this.

Rules of punctuation
is a great follow up from my recent post about emoticons.

PUSH - Todd Reynolds

Todd Reynolds

Todd and Luke Dubois started off his presentation with an interpretation of GreenSleves called Sleves of Green, or something like that. It was Fantastic! Check out Todd’s web site for a sample of his music and to see his calendar.

Play. Loosing yourself in what you’re doing.

Free Play by Stephen Nachmanovitch

Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience -- by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi

Todd didn’t have a lot of “success” playing as a kid until he got the right toys. This included his violin and a computer. Then things took off.

People go to live performances to experience things they can’t get at home via CD, DVD etc. Todd’s conjecture is that people attend live performance to experience passion and watching someone do something they can’t do.

Luke showed us some of his consolidated works, movies in 1 minute, songs in 30 seconds, images overlaid and blended. Very cool! The sound on the covies was fantastic.

PUSH - Lawrence M. Krauss

Lawrence M. Krauss gave us a lecture about cosmology, string theory, evolution and ID. This quote stuck out to me as something that is applicable across many other contexts.

"Uniform expansion means that every place is the center or no place is the center. It depends on how you like to look at things."

Two related posts from a while ago are Physicists Getting Excited and Evolution Takes a Back Seat in U.S. Classes.

I have to also add that this whole ID "debate" really pisses me off. As Krauss pointed out ID isn't a theory. It's not testable. There isn't a basis for a debate. I'm fine discussing ID but it should be in a religious context as opposed to a scientific context.

Energy Cost of Everything

Several days ago while preparing dinner I spilled a couple of cooked and ready to eat grains of rice on the kitchen counter. About 20 minutes later I went downstairs to the basement to take a few items out of the dryer that usually dry much faster than the rest of the load.

My usual response to the spilled rice is that "it's no big deal" and I just wipe them into the sink. When I go to pull the specific items out of the dryer I just cherry pick the specific items out and then restart the dryer until the cycle is complete.

These are actions I've done countless times and I've never given much thought to the energy "cost" of these actions. However, this time something was different. Looking at the riceI saw the energy cost of everything that went into getting those rice grains to the point of being ready to eat, sitting there on the counter, spilled and about to be wiped into the sink. When I pulled the items out of the dryer I noticed that the other items in the dryer were pretty much dry as well. I saw the energy that was required to continue drying the rest of the already dry clothes.

This moment of clarity allowed me the opportunity to make a different choice. I didn't put the rice back in my bowl (the counter was a bit too dirty for this) but I did make a commitment to be more mindful of all that goes into my food. Regarding the dryer, I decided to pull all of the items out and next time I'll watch for that opportunity again.

None of this might seem all that revolutionary but it was a change for me. What this leads me to is the possibility of adding "energy cost" of products on labeling. We do this with nutrition info on food packaging. The co-op where I do all of my grocery shopping labels all of the produce with the country or state of origin. This is a start toward providing the energy cost. But why not add this info to all items. Clothing could have this info provided on the hang tags. This info could easily be added to the nutrition labels on packaged food. this would give us all the choice to buy items that required less energy to produce and provide a new way for producers to create a compeditive advantage. Today all of this cost is hidden behind the final price and there is no easy way for the consumer to find out which brand of cereal is the most energy effecient.

Let's see where this goes.

Monday, June 12, 2006

PUSH - Kids Philosophy Slam

Ten Children from the Minneapolis area came to share with the PUSH conference a flavor of what the Kids Philosophy Slam is all about. The question they were working with is “Which is more powerful, hope or fear?”

The answers were more diverse than I was expecting but the arguments were both impressive and moving.


My answer is that hope is more powerful. I think that fear is more common but hope can be initiated by an individual and catch on in a way that can change the world. What do you think?

PUSH - K. Anthony Appiah

K. Anthony Appiah
Everything is more complicated than you think.
Ghanaian Proverb: “If you throw something in the trash and go back to get it that’s just fine.” Retrieve what you need from the past.

Cosmopolitanism. Useful concept in addressing many of the major issues we are facing in the world. This isn’t the only thing that is necessary and even by itself its very complicated.

Cosmopolitanism is a metaphor, as it doesn’t make sense in a world that has many different states.
  1. We don’t need to argue for world government.
  2. We can think of ourselves as citizens of the world without being or wanting to be citizens of a world government. But we do have to care about all of the world’s citizens rather than just those in our community or family.
  3. We will all do better if we care about the fate of everyone.
Ironically Cosmopolitanism and Nationalism grew together. It was good for people to live in communities but to care about other communities. Therefore it is congruent to support other people in the development of their communities. However, nationalism in isolation gets out of control.

This involves tolerance for choice about how other people choose to live and humility. If you accept that you live in a world with lots of other kinds of people then you need to understand them even if you don’t agree.

Globalization has made this metaphor of Cosmopolitanism applicable to our current world. Through our technology capabilities we can know about each other and we have the power to impact each other. This makes cosmopolitanism attitudes mandatory for successfully living in our modern world.

Retrieving what we need from the past to make sense of the present and future.

PUSH - Howard Rheingold

2:00 - 3:30pm Social Dances: Networks, Power, and Meaning
Howard Rheingold

Many thousands of years ago humans created a new form of wealth – more protein than a family could eat before it rotted. Best place to store my catch is in my neighbors belly. This was make possible by cooperation. That cooperation was coerced by leaders to build cities.
Literacy was another new form of wealth. Initially this form of wealth was controlled by the elite. With the invention of printing press this form of wealth was able to be shared with a larger crowd. This led to literate societies that through cooperation created democracy, religious reformation, and science.

Social Dilemmas - 3 mythic narratives
1. The prisoner’s Dilemma. Do you rat your co-conspirators out or stay quiet.
2. The tragedy of the commons. In aggregate people tend to destroy common assets.
3. Public Good

A social contract is an agreement to deal with a social dilemma. A social contract is also a form of cooperation that represents a solution to greater dilemma.

Examples of online communities that are working on defining new social contracts.

http://thinkcycle.org/
http://folding.stanford.edu/
http://cooperationcommons.org/

PUSH - Julien Dibbell

11 - 12:30am - Blurred Realities: Virtual Verite – Julien Dibbell
Play Money. Virtual worlds. Have been turned into real economies.
World of Warcraft
How can you add real work into “games”? Topcoder.com
Item to ponder: Play will be to the 21st Century what Steam was to the 19th century.

PUSH - David Allen

June 12, 20069-9:30 AM
Link
David Allen - 9 AM
How do you silence the noise? Why does it work to make lists?
Most people wait until crisis before moving into high performance behavior.
He will present a system for this. Tools so that you never keep anything in your mind anymore. It’s all about productivity. The opposite is worry and not making any progress.

Only two problems in life.
1. You know what you want but don’t know how to get it.
2. You don’t know what you want.
Two solutions.
1. Make it up.
2. Make it happen

Mind Mapping is the technique for this.

Committees in our head. This is what makes us stressed. CEOs on the committee come up with ideas. Don’t worry about implementation. He has one folder for these ideas. The COO is the one that has to figure out how to make this happen. Don’t force the CEO part of you to be operational and don’t expect the COO to be visionary. Be the CEO at this conference!

Need to create clear space! The only way to move forward is from clear space. What is in the way of clear space? What is not supplies, reference material, decoration, or equipment? These things represent incomplete ideas or actions. These things take psychological attention and disrupt clear space.

If you don’t give appropriate attention to what has your attention it will take more of your attention than it deserves!

Getting things done – GTD.

Lists - Review each list each week and move items back and forth.
1. Projects.
2. Some day - Maybe.

Look into the free Mind Manager software that I got with the PUSH registration.

Different things show up with you do mind mapping with other people.

What do we have our attention on?

Don’t have any thoughts twice!
When you get clear space you then have room for new ideas.

Responsible- ability to respond.

PUSH Kickoff

Last night was the opening presentation and reception for the PUSH conference in Minneapolis. The theme for this year's conference is "A New Life". The opening presentation included performances by Crash and d3horse. Crash is a percussion group that combines visual presentation with rhythm and percussion. They did some very interesting things to produce sound that included using parts of their bodies and zippers on their clothing. They combined the ever changing rhythm patterns with visual presentation that was magical at times. I'm always fascinated by movement that is combined with the production of sound. Somewhere in my mind I have a hard time following both simultaneously and I get either absorbed in the sound or the movement and the other seems to spring from the primary focus of my attention.

Cecily Sommers then provided an introduction to the conference. A couple of things she mentioned that struck a chord for me are:
  • Wall of Email - this refers to the daily tasks that we all have to do just to stay afloat. Often these tasks take so much out of us that there isn't much left to start to work toward a different future.
  • Leadership from a vision - this refers to the power and quality of leadership that comes from a clear vision for the future. Her example in this space was Dr. Martin Luther King Jr and his "I have a dream" vision.
Following Cecily was a performance by d3horse titled "A New Life" to build on the theme of the conference. This was a fantastic performance! I'm not very practiced at describing stage performance that combines dialogue with dance and music but a couple of the themes that they developed included not needing to know exaclty where you're going to be able to start, patterns that we repeat over an over like we have no control over our actions and that there is no perfect time to start.

Overall this kickoff set a great tone for the next two days.

Monday, June 05, 2006

Emoticons

I have to admit that I really like these little add-ins when used correctly. The problem is that I don't know what they all actually mean and my own vocabulary of them consists of about 3.

:) Happy
:( Sad
;) Wink - but I don't really know what this means in an email or IM.

Does anyone really know what these mean? Is there really a standard out there that we follow or do we all interpret them our own way? I find this all to be pretty confusing.

I decided to do a little Googling on this to see what I can find. Here's what I found here on computeruser.com. (This is way too much for me remember!!!)
==============
Emoticons are facial expressions made by a certain series of keystrokes. Most often producing an image of a face sideways.

!-(Black eye
!-)Proud of black eye
#-)Wiped out, partied all night
#:-oShocked
$-)Won the lottery, or money on the brain
%(|:-) Â Propeller-head
%*}Inebriated
%+{Got beat up
%-(Confused
%-)Dazed or silly
%-6Brain-dead
%-\Hung over
%-{Ironic
%-|Worked all night
%-}Humorous or ironic
%\Hangover
>>:-<<Furious
>-Female
>->Winking devil
>-<Furious
>-)Devilish wink
>:)Little devil
>:->Very mischievous devil
>:-<Angry
>:-<Mad
>:-(Annoyed
>:-)Mischievous devil
>=^ PYuck
<:>Devilish expression
<:->Devilish expression
<:-(Dunce
<:-)Innocently asking dumb question
<:-|Dunce
<:|Dunce
( 8(|)Homer
( <> .. <> )alienated
(( )):**Hugs and kisses
((()))Lots of hugging (initials or a name can be put in the middle of the one being hugged)
()Hugging
(-:Left-handed smile, or smiley from the southern hemisphere
(:&Angry
(:-Unsmiley
(:-&Angry
(:-(Unsmiley
(:-)Smiley variation
(:-*Kiss
(:-\Very sad
(::()::)Bandaid, meaning comfort
(:|Egghead
*Kiss
*<:-)Santa Claus
*<|:-)Santa Claus, or a clown
*-)Shot to death
+<:-)Religious leader
+<:-|Monk or nun
+<||-)Knight
+:-)Priest
+O:-)The Pope
-)Tongue in cheek
-=Snuffed candle to end a flame message
-=#:-)Wizard
/\/\/\Laughter
0:-)Angel
12x@>--->---A dozen roses
2B|^2BTo be or not to be
5:-)Elvis
7:)Ronald Reagan
7:^)Ronald Reagan
8Infinity
8 :-)Wizard
8)Wide-eyed, or wearing glasses
8-#Death
8-)Wide-eyed, or wearing glasses
8-oShocked
8-OAstonished
8-PYuck!
8-[Frayed nerves; overwrought
8-]Wow!
8-|Wide-eyed surprise
: (Sad
: )Smile
: [Bored, sad
: |Bored, sad
:( )Loudmouth, talks all the time; or shouting
:*Kiss
:*)Clowning
:**:Returning kiss
:+(Got punched in the nose
:,(Crying
:-Male
:-#My lips are sealed; or someone wearing braces
:-&Tongue-tied
:->Smile of happiness or sarcasm
:-><Puckered up to kiss
:-<Very sad
:-(Frown
:-)Classic smiley
:-*Kiss
:-,Smirk
:-/Wry face
:-6Exhausted
:-9Licking lips
:-?Licking lips, or tongue in cheek
:-@Screaming
:-CAstonished
:-cVery unhappy
:-DLaughing
:-d~Heavy smoker
:-eDisappointed
:-fSticking out tongue
:-IPondering, or impartial
:-iWry smile or half-smile
:-JTongue in cheek
:-jOne-sided smile
:-kPuzzlement
:-lOne-sided smile
:-MSpeak no evil
:-OOpen-mouthed, surprised
:-oSurprised look, or yawn
:-PSticking out tongue
:-pSticking tongue out
:-p~Heavy smoker
:-QTongue hanging out in disgust, or a smoker
:-Q~Smoking
:-rSticking tongue out
:-sWhat?!
:-tUnsmiley
:-VShouting
:-XMy lips are sealed; or a kiss
:-xKiss, or My lips are sealed
:-YAside comment
:-[Unsmiling blockhead; also criticism
:-\'|Sniffles
:-]Smiling blockhead; also sarcasm
:-{)Smile with moustache
:-{)}Smile with moustache and beard
:-{}Blowing a kiss
:-|Indifferent, bored or disgusted
:-| :-|Deja vu
:-||Very angry
:-}Mischievous smile
:-~)A cold
:-~|A cold
:.(Crying
:/)Not funny
:/iNo smoking
:>What?
:@What?
:CAstonished
:eDisappointed
:PSticking out tongue
:XHear no evil
:xKiss
:\'Crying
:\'(Crying
:\'-(Crying
:\'-)Tears of happiness
:^DHappy, approving
:`-(Shedding a tear
:{Having a hard time
:~)A cold
:~-(Crying
:~/Confused
; )Wink
; PWink with a raspberry
;(Crying
;-(Angry, or got a black eye
;-)Winkey
;-DWinking and laughing
= OSurprised
= XMy lips are sealed
=):-)=Abraham Lincoln
=:-)Punk, or hosehead
=====:}Snake
=^*Kisses
=^DBig grin
?(Black eye
?-(Black eye
@>--->---A long-stemmed rose
@==Atomic bomb
@}->--Rose
B:-)Sunglasses on head
d :-oHats off to you!
IOHOIn Our Humble Opinion
M-)See no evil
M-), :X, :-MSee no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil
M:-)A salute
O 8-)Starry-eyed angel
O :-)Angel
O+Female
O->Male
O8-)Starry-eyed angel
O:-)Angel
P*French kiss
Q:-)College graduate
X-(Just died
[:-)Wearing a Walkman
[:-]Square head
[:-|Frankenstein
[:]Robot
[:|Frankenstein
[:|]Robot
[[ ]]Hug Insert a name in the brackets of the one who is being hugged, as: [[Marcia]]
[]Hug
\')Winky
\'-)Winky
\_/Empty glass
\~/Full glass
]:->Devil
]:-)Happy devil
][Back to back
^ ^ ^Giggles
^5High five
`:-)Raised eyebrow
{{ }}Hug; the one whose name is in the brackets is being hugged Example: {{MJ}}
{}No comment
|(Sleepy (on late night email message)
|-<>Puckered up for a kiss
|-(Sleepy, struggling to stay awake, or sleeping badly
|-DBig laugh
|-OYawn
|-{Good grief!
|-|Asleep
|IAsleep
|^oSnoring
}-)Wry smile
}: [Angry, frustrated
}{Face to face
~ :-(Steaming mad
~:-(Flame message
~:-\Elvis
~:oBaby
~:\Elvis
~=Lit candle, indicating a flame (inflammatory message)
~==Begins a flame (inflammatory message)
~~:-(Especially hot flame message
~~:[Net flame
~~~~8}Snake
~~~~~8}Snake

Pressure and Performance

It's amazing what can happen when the pressure is off. I went into the Buffalo triathlon on June 4 not sure how my injured (left shoulder rotator cuff and left knee patella femoral tendonitis) joints would feel. I just focused on having fun and letting it roll. The swim went very well and all of the rehab exercises I've been doing really paid off. My swimming was not very smooth but it was a very short swim and all worked out just fine. On the bike I could feel my lack of fitness but my position on the new bike is very effecient (good power output as well as very aero) so I was able to fly along. Every two minutes on the run I checked in with my knee to see how it felt and if at any point it wasn't happy I was just going to stop and walk back. It held up throughout and I ran a pretty good time. OK, it was an amazing time considering that my running workouts the last two months have consisted of nothing more than 15 minutes alternating between 45 seconds running and 45 seconds walking.

As several friends at the race said I can no longer play the "I'm injured" card in lowering pre-race predictions. The trick is to just take the pressure off.

Race results can be found here.

And for the effort I came away with a pretty cool prize.



Saturday, June 03, 2006

Infants and Toddlers

One of the things that I want to do while I have a bit more time this summer is volunteer in an organization where I have a chance to work closely with infants and toddlers. I've had many opportunities to interact with kids that are older (8 and up) mostly through coaching soccer but I've never had any opportunity to be around infants and toddlers. I'm the youngest in my family and I haven't been around extended family much.

I have a glimmer of possibility that there is something special that happens to an adult when they hold an infant. I want to find out what that is all about, at least a little. If anyone knows of any great organization that need volunteers in this capacity please let me know. I've been thinking about the Crisis Nursery in Minneapolis and Children's hospital in St Paul. Any other ideas?

One Red Paperclip

I was hooked the first time I saw the concept behind One Red Paperclip. I'm fascinated by this guys ability to take a children's game and turn it into a global phenomenon. Now in this post he takes a bunch of his readers to task for thinking that a KISS snowglobe was a major step down the value chain. I believe that this points to the notion of progress that we all seem to have. "Why would he trade for something that clearly has LESS value?" we all ask! Well, turns out he has a very good reason.

RenewUS: A Climate Movie with a Happy Ending (Really)

This is a good one! I would recommend taking a few minutes to read this post by Joel Makower and watch the 4 minute movie. This type of possibility is what really gets me excited. The possiblitiy that 2006 could be the year that we look back on as the turning point is a big motivator.

Tuesday, May 30, 2006

This blog has gotten a bit of rust on it from lack of attention. This isn’t representative of lack of things that I wanted to note; rather it’s a sign of how busy I’ve been the last 12 months.

I recently decided to leave my place of employment and turn my career attention down a different path. I’ve been with my last company for a bit less than 6 years and during that time I’ve had the fortune to work on many different projects and be exposed to a ton of great people and ideas. My job title, Technical Architect, suggested that I was primarily focused on technology and the tech aspects of solutions. Although this was true from an implementation perspective the part of my job that was most interesting to me and that I enjoyed the most brought me into the point of overlap between technology, design and business. It this capacity I was working to bring the three together to create complete solutions to business problems or opportunities. I’ve created this little diagram to articulate the relationship between these three elements.

The sweet spot for solutions is in the middle and that’s where my time and energy was most focused. I’ll write another post expanding on this concept in the future.

My plans for the future are to get involved in the development of renewable energy (wind, solar, etc). The energy challenges that our country and world face have been on my radar for a while and over the last few months my interest in working on those challenges has grown rapidly. My specific interest is in utilizing information technology to facilitate the development, competitiveness and adoption of renewable energy sources and energy conservation opportunities. I'm also expecting to do a deep dive into some specific area such as solar or wind.

I don’t know what the future will bring but I’ve starting down a path that genuinely engages my energy, enthusiasm and imagination.

Saturday, May 28, 2005

Quote - Normal is...

Ellen DeGeneres "Normal is getting dressed in clothes that you buy for work and driving through traffic in a car that you are still paying for - in order to get to the job you need to pay for the clothes and the car, and the house you leave vacant all day so you can afford to live in it."

Sometimes when framed just the right way our live seem pretty silly.

Monday, April 04, 2005

My Kind of Conservative

I've posted other links to this same blog. I'm always interested in reading well thought out arguments by people I disagree with. It forces me to really test my beliefs and this blog is one of the best I've found for this purpose. This post is worth a look. The quote "there are periods in which being a Conservative does not necessarily mean you are a Republican" really jumps out at me and is the reason for the title ot this post.

Friday, April 01, 2005

Quote: Galileo Galilei

Galileo Galilei

"I have never met a man so ignorant that I couldn't learn something from him."

It's valuable for me to be reminded of this. It's quite easy to get absorbed in my own self-importance and I like being reminded that everyone has something to contribute.