Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Taking Sides -- Principles and Power


I recently read two articles in the same issue of the New Yorker (May 24, 2010) that seemed to uncannily reverberate with one another.

"Activism v. Restraint"

... Today, liberals applaud when the Supreme Court strikes down federal legislation restricting the rights of detainees at Guantánamo, or a state’s limitations on gay rights, and if the day comes when the Court jettisons Citizens United liberals will be too busy celebrating to remember the primacy of stare decisis. As is so often the case, in courtrooms and elsewhere, the battle between Obama and the Roberts Court is as much about power as it is about principle; neither side is as concerned with abstract concepts like activism and restraint as it is with winning. ...

"What Did Jesus Do?"
... The passion with which people argued over apparently trivial word choices was, Jenkins explains, not a sign that they were specially sensitive to theology. People argued that way because they were part of social institutions—cities, schools, clans, networks—in which words are banners and pennants: who pledged to whom was inseparable from who said what in what words. It wasn’t that they really cared about the conceptual difference between the claim that Jesus and the Father were homoousian (same in essence) and the claim that the two were homoiousian (same in substance); they cared about whether the Homoousians or the Homoiousians were going to run the Church. ...


After reading these and making the mental link between them, I also thought about YourMorals.org, where across cultures researchers found two clusters of peoples' answers to moral questions: those who emphasize loyalty and the group, and those who emphasize liberty and autonomy.

As I ponder all of these things, I alternately feel fascinated, dispirited, resigned, and curious about what to do given the apparent stability of these tensions among people.

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Surviving The “Project Plateau.”

It was nice for me to read someone else's take on this phenomenon that I've experienced before (and recently) but didn't really have words for.

Scott Belsky wrote:

"Most ideas are abandoned at what I’ve come to call the “project plateau”: the point when creative excitement wanes and the pain of deadlines and project management becomes burdensome. To escape this pain, we generate a new idea (and abandon the one we were working on). This process can easily repeat itself ad infinitum, without us ever finishing anything meaningful.
Show your ideas some respect, and spend some energy improving how you execute. If not for you, do it for everyone else who will benefit from your ideas once they actually see the light."

Monday, April 26, 2010

Spring, travels, etc.

The leaves are largely back on trees now -- the world looks green again here around Boston. Just before all the green was all the pollen and the almost two boxes of tissues used up and my body felt like it was hijacked to produce goo out of my nose. That plus a bit of a cold has mercifully subsided and I'm able to enjoy the longer and warming days.

Work's been moving slowly toward getting something evaluated for patentability, and I've been talking with a few potential collaborators and networking in the mean time. I've also started mentoring two people in the design field. That's been fun and interesting.


I've been doing a chunk of traveling.


Most recently I was in Atlanta for the big Computer Human Interface conference. It was interesting in unexpected ways, but I'm not sure it'll be worth going next year. It was nice to see some people from Raleigh at the conference and a few people I know from other places. The conference organized a trip to the CDC, which was kind of interesting.


While in Atlanta I got to walk around a bit and visit the High Museum, the main art museum. I was impressed with the John Portman architecture exhibit. His Marriott Marquis hotel in downtown Atlanta has been a favorite of mine since I first saw it in high school. As I was walking around downtown Atlanta I also noticed some resemblances between buildings and finishes and the Embarcadero Center in San Francisco, and found out at the exhibit that he was the architect of that complex, too. It all fell into place. I also was impressed with the Renzo Piano museum building and am looking forward to the local Gardner Museum building under way by him. And the High has a nice collection of american marble figure sculptures -- really quite lovely.


A couple weeks before I drove north of Toronto for a short (three-day) meditation course (that I wanted to get in before summer rowing season). That went well, but felt very short -- I felt like I was finally really arriving and settling in when it was time to pack up and go. I got to visit a few college and work friends along the way, and see a community ice show rehearsal. 


Before that was a trip to Scottsdale, Arizona for a pretty mellow bachelor party. We went to a spring training baseball game, which fulfills my baseball quota for at least a year. We also went to the Frank Lloyd Wright Taliesin West compound for a tour and visited a friend who lives there for a barbecue and tape ball. Fun weekend.


I took a short trip to New York, largely for work market research (to see what products are sold at electronics retailers there like J&R and B&H and find out what people say about them). While there I saw the new Addams Family musical, visited the MoMA and Cooper Hewitt museums, and spent some time at a friend's 40th birthday party. The week before I made a quick trip to Providence for another friend's 40th birthday party, too.

Around here I saw this year's Hasty Pudding Theatricals production of Commie Dearest!, and the Gold Dust Orphans' Phantom of the Oprah with Varla Jean Merman. Fun! Also went to a couple of orchestra concerts, with highlights being Stravinsky's Rite of Spring by the Boston Philharmonic and the Beethoven Septet Op 20 by the BSO Chamber Players.


With the warmer weather, it's time to get back on the water to row. Before my regular Community Rowing season began, there was an event called the Snow Row, an open water race that some people from the club went to. It was a beautiful, warm, calm early march day -- no jacket required, and a fun event. Rowing at Community Rowing is going strong again, though I've missed a chunk of time on the water with travel and the bad luck of the draw being assigned to row on machines. But this morning we had some fun races, so it feels like we're back on.


Chorus rehearsals have started again for the June Pride concert, titled DIVAS. Yes, it'll be as gay as the name makes it sound. (I was disappointed I missed performing in the winter concert because of rehearsal conflicts and travel. I'm glad to be back.)


So those are the highlights for the last almost two months. Next up a wedding around this weekend with some visiting and two-stepping while out there.

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Savannah and Startup?

Highlights in February:

Interaction Design Association conference in Savannah, Georgia. Nice conference, particularly a talk by Nathan Shedroff on, among other things, designing for meaning (PDF here). Savannah itself is really lovely. I'd seen lots of pictures of oak trees with hanging Spanish moss, and they were there in spades. The thing that really struck me, though, is how lovely it is to have a park every few blocks, and how nice it is that the parks are the same size and similar, but enough different to be able to tell them apart -- lovely variations on a lovely theme. I don't recall ever being in a city with so many parks so close together, but the parks themselves reminded me of my favorite in St. Petersburg, Russia, the Summer Garden.

I also started work on job hunting and thanks to the Boston Globe found the company I'd been hoping to find for years (Global Relief Technologies in Portsmouth, N.H.). As I read about what they were doing and thought about the problems they were trying to solve, I realized that there's another set of approaches to solving the problems of understanding the situation in an emergency, so I've started to work seriously on a start-up myself. I've been reading tons of FEMA documents (fortunately, a little less dry than I feared, but more filled with TLAs than I'd prepared for), and tracking down interesting research projects (like Photosynth) and patents. It's exciting!

Along with the startup work I've been going to a bunch of professional meetings and talks for interaction designers, entrepreneurs, etc. Good stuff -- and there's lots of it around Boston. I could probably go to events five nights a week if I could stomach it. One to three a week has been more like it, though.

With all this activity in the evenings, I'm disappointed I won't actually be able to sing with the chorus this concert series. It'll be good, though, even if I won't be on stage with them.

Also in February I got to achieve something I like to practice: having fewer keys. I returned the keys from my old place and picked up the last of my stuff, and now I just have three keys (house, car, bike) and a few loyalty cards (cut down to be smaller). I like having a lighter key ring.

I've also been enjoying the BBC's A History of the World in 100 Objects. Art and history and economics and anthropology and lots of other stuff talked about in the context of objects in the British Museum's collection. I recommend it! (I don't recommend, and am exasperated by their 3D object explorer, though. Arg.)

Made it to a few shows and concerts (Mark Morris was the highlight), a friend's Non-Valentine Party (on the 13th, geared toward single folks to just hang out together), reading and the usual stuff.

This month I'm looking forward to making progress on (or, if I find a good reason, stopping work on) the startup, a bachelor party around Phoenix, a silent meditation retreat, Varla Jean Merman and the Phantom of the Oprah, and getting back to rowing on the water. Yay!

Be well.

Saturday, January 30, 2010

First year in Boston in short

Well, it's been about a year since I updated this -- much longer than I intended.

The biggest thing is that I've been in Boston (well, the Boston metropolitan area) for a year now. I was a little worried when I decided to leave BlueStripe and move to Boston that I'd feel unsettled and that I'd want to move again soon. Fortunately, nothing of the sort has happened. I really like it here and feel at home. Speaking of home, I've changed mine. I was living in a shared apartment in Brighton most of the year, then I moved to a shared house in Watertown across the river in December. I like it here, though I miss being within a few minutes' walk of the rowing boathouse.

Weather's been a bit off average, but nothing for me to complain about. It snowed substantially (more than six inches) the first three weekends I was living here, which is a bit more often than usual, I guess. The April showers of spring lasted through July, or at least it felt that way. The summer was lush and green and I happened to be out of town for the one particularly hot week. The fall was quite mild through mid December, when we got our first big snow. It's snowed a few times since, with an interval of heavy rain followed by the current bitter cold.

As for rowing, it was a big priority for me in 2009, being one of the big draws to Boston. I was at practice early in the morning (5:00 a.m. generally) three or four times a week from April through November. And I really liked it. I like the guys I'm rowing with (the CRI competitive men), I like the coaches, and I like rowing generally, and on the Charles River in particular. It ranges from quiet and beautiful to crowded and stressful, as one would expect for a great urban recreational space. With the competitive team, I raced in regattas in Boston, Connecticut, Philadelphia, Camden, N.J., Lowell, Mass., and Manchester, N.H. The highlight was rowing in the Head of the Charles Regatta at the end of October. Fortunately, the weather for our race was blustery and chilly, and without the wind-driven wet snow that showed up on Sunday afternoon. Our crew even was in a pretty big photo in the Sunday Boston Globe. After rowing on the water was done at the end of November, I felt a bit of a let-down -- rowing for the season and in the Head of the Charles was something I'd looked forward to for years, and it was over. Indoor training on weights and rowing machines pales in comparison. I'm eager for the river to thaw and for us to be back on the water in a couple of months!

Near the end of the rowing season, though, I started something else I'd wanted to for a while: I joined the Boston Gay Men's Chorus. My first concerts were the holiday concerts in December at beautiful Jordan Hall, featuring fairly traditional Christmas music, plus a big dollop of music highlighting the difficulties faces by Elves at the North Pole with Mrs. Clause, accompanied by over-the-top dancing Elves. (I, regretfully, didn't audition to be one of the dancing elves.) We were invited to sing at Boston Mayor Menino's inauguration party, which was an honor, even if the performance was challenged by technical difficulties. I'm looking forward to our next concert "We the People" featuring a big recent piece about marriage equality, which is engaging, interesting, and dramatic, and accompanied by video and audio recordings of people involved. Then in the spring will be the Pride "Divas" concert. Whee!

On the equality front, I went to Washington D.C. for the March for Equality. It was delightful and moving to be there.

On the professional front, I did a consulting engagement for New Relic in Portland, Ore. and San Francisco. That was interesting and rewarding. And I learned that I'm not as interested in consulting work as I thought I would be. I took much of the year as a sabbatical and kind of independent study in preparation for going back to interaction design work here in Boston. I'll be starting that work shortly. I've written up that "independent study" separately for those who are curious.

I got a nice amount of visiting in this year. I visited Dad and Grace and family on Saipan in January with stops out and back in Portland and San Diego. I visited friends in San Fancisco, Raleigh, Washington D.C., New York, Cape Cod and Minneapolis (for the state fair and yummy corn dogs!). It was also nice for friends to come and visit from Washington, D.C., New York, Minneapolis and even Australia. I got to see family in Philadelphia around July 4th while I was there for a regatta. And now that I live within a half-day's drive of my mother, I've gotten to see her more often, and she and Cindy even came to Boston for a chorus concert and a couple days of being a tourist.

I went to Easton Mountain retreat center north of Albany, N.Y. a few times to participate in workshops and to volunteer. It's a lovely place and I've met many of my close friends there. In a similar vein, a friend of a friend put together a "happy group" in the fall where people got together every other week to share dinner and talk about positive psychology (the study of how to help regular people be happier). It was quite nice to learn and talk about it with such nice company. Toward the end of the year I started with the happy group organizer to have a daily call to help us get important things done. It's been an interesting and useful practice for me.

Speaking of friends and happiness, it felt really nice to realize toward the end of the summer that I felt I'd established a group of supportive friends here around Boston. It really helped me feel more settled here.

For other recreation, I spent a lot of time with visual art and at performing arts events.

On the visual art front, I've spent good chunks of time at museums. The Boston MFA, Gardner Museum, Boston ICA, Mass MoCA, the Met and Frick in New York, the Museum of the City of New York, the Getty Villa, and the Minneapolis Institute of Arts all had exhibits that really appealed to me. I also took a drawing class for the first time, and a museum class which involved sketching and writing at some length about various works at the MFA. And I've been paying a lot of attention to and reading about typography. And an insightful (pun acknowledged) friend of mine sent me a nice little book called How to Use Your Eyes. I've been using my eyes a lot more thoughtfully this year.

For performing arts, I've mostly been to orchestra concerts (lots of BSO, and I got turned on to the Boston Philharmonic), musicals (Jerry Springer the Opera was my favorite this year), and plays (Fences at the Huntington was riveting). I made the pilgrimage to see Pilobolus again. I also had a fun and surprising stretch of drag performances (Varla Jean Merman, Gold Dust Orphans, Hasty Pudding Theatricals, Strange Fruit). I have a new favorite performing artist: the puppeteer Basel Twist, whose Petrushka and Johnny Boy I saw this year. It's been a while since I've been interested in TV programs, but Modern Family, Glee, Better Off Ted and Arrested Development all grabbed me. (Thanks, Hulu!) Thanks and farewell, King of the Hill.

I keep a list of stuff I want to do and short notes about my experiences at http://carlsstufftodo.blogspot.com/ if you're interested in joining me for something coming up or are curious about what I've been seeing and doing.

Another draw to Boston was to be closer to mountain hiking. I made it up to Mts. Moosilauke and Monadnock, but want to go more often this coming season. And I'm hoping to get on a bike this year, too. Mine stayed in storage.

So those are the highlights for me this past year. I'm looking forward to a lot of the same, plus getting back to work this year. And I'm hoping to spend even more time with family and friends old and new. Happy 2010!

My "independent study"/sabbatical

I've spent a lot of this sabbatical year paying attention to and learning things I've been interested in, and it's felt a bit like an independent study period. With a year having passed, I wanted to write down the things that made a good impression on me (not everything did), and I recommend everything on here. I've put in bold those few books that made the biggest impression on me. If you're curious about something, I'm happy to tell you more, too.

I put most energy into learning about interaction design. I have a long reading list, including:
  • Designing for the Digital Age by Kim Goodwin
  • Contextual Design by Beyer and Holtzblatt
  • Visual Thinking for Design by Colin Ware
  • Information Dashboard Design by Stephen Few
  • Experience Design 1 by Nathan Shedroff
  • Glut: Mastering Information through the Ages by Alex Wright
  • The Reflective Practitioner by Donald Schon
  • Designing for People by Henry Drefuss
  • Designing for Interaction (2nd ed) by Dan Saffer
  • Designing Gestural Interfaces by Dan Saffer
  • Don't Make Me Think (2nd ed) by Steve Krug
  • Web App Design Handbook by Fowler and Stanwick
  • Universal Principles of Design by Lidwell, Holden and Butler
  • Do You Matter by Brunner, Emery and Hall
I also went to two interaction design-related conferences:
  • Interactions '09, the Interaction Design Association (IxDA) conference in Vancouver, B.C.
  • CHI2009, the ACM's Computer Human Interface conference in Boston.

I attended a number of design-related events and groups around Boston.
  • BostonCHI, particularly Ben Schneiderman's talk on social media involvement
  • Pecha Kucha Boston
  • UX Book Group Boston
  • UPA Boston
  • IxDA Boston
  • Refresh Boston

While I was thinking more seriously about consulting and entrepreneurship, these books were particularly illuminating:
  • Art of the Start by Guy Kawasaki
  • Getting Started in Consulting by Alan Weiss
  • Inventor's Bible by Ronald Louis Docie Sr.
I also put some effort into understanding storytelling:
  • Made to Stick: Why Some Ideas Survive and Others Die by Heath and Heath
  • Presentation Zen by Garr Reynolds 
  • The Elements of Persuasion by Maxwell and Dickman
  • The Story Factor by Annette Simmons
Along with the "happy reading/discussion group" that I was with, I read a few other things in a similar vein:
  • The Happiness Hypothesis by Jonathan Haidt
  • Everyday Tao: Living with Balance and Harmony by Deng Ming-dao
  • Flow: the Psychology of Optimal Experience by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi
  • Ten Poems to Change Your Life by Roger Housden

I paid attention to visual communication and understanding.
  • The Back of the Napkin: Solving Problems and Selling Ideas with Pictures by Dan Roam
  • How to Use Your Eyes by James Elkins
  • How to Read a Painting: Lessons from the Old Masters by Patrick de Rynck
  • The Art Instinct: Beauty, Pleasure and Human Evolution by Denis Dutton
  • Why Architecture Matters by Paul Goldberger
  • Prints and Visual Communication by William Ivins
  • The Digital Photography Book Volume 1 by Scott Kelby
  • Illustrator CS4 Visual QuickStart Guide by Weinmann and Lourekas
Along with the time spent reading, I spent a lot of time looking. These are some of the most rewarding places and exhibits for me this year:
  • Boston MFA, particularly the Venetian masters exhibit, the ways of seeing class, and the Greek and Roman carved miniatures and seals.
  • Isabella Stuart Gardner Museum
  • Boston ICA, particularly the Shepard Fairey exhibit
  • Mass MoCA, particularly the Sol Lewitt installation
  • The Metropolitan Museum, particularly Roxy Paine on the roof, middle age pen and parchment exhibit, and the sculpture courtyards.
  • Museum of the City of New York's Saarinen exhibit
  • Getty Villa
  • Minneapolis Institute of Arts, particularly the large and appealing Asian collection
  • The Frick Collection

And there were a few books that didn't quite fit into any of these groups, but were still quite appealing -- my electives or recreational nonfiction reading.
  • Guns, Germs and Steel by Jared Diamond
  • Difficult Conversations: How to Discuss What Matters Most by Douglas Stone and others.
  • Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion by Robert Cialdini
  • The Works: Anatomy of a City by Kate Ascher
I also read a bit of fiction:
  • Alexander McCall Smith's No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency books, as well as his Isabel Dalhousie Mysteries
  • Calvin and Hobbes by Bill Watterson