
This building is being copied and built in another city at the same time, by a separate developer. At an even faster rate than the original. Without permission.
(via Photo Gallery: Copying the Masters in China – SPIEGEL ONLINE – International)

This building is being copied and built in another city at the same time, by a separate developer. At an even faster rate than the original. Without permission.
(via Photo Gallery: Copying the Masters in China – SPIEGEL ONLINE – International)
For the third year running, I’ve listed some memorable events for me during 2012. It has become a way to remember and manifest everything that has been going on. Even though many events are more documented than ever, they still seem to disappear in my memory for some reason. This is an attempt to counter-act that. For those of you that are curious, you can read about 2011 and 2010 too.
January

Swedish winter, on a good day.
February

The F-Train in San Francisco.
March

A shot from the outskirts of Stockholm in March.
April

Spring light with some snow left, near my parents in Resteröd, Sweden.
May

Toca Boca x Tattly.
June

Near Big Sur.
July

Sea Ranch, California.
August

West Village, New York.
September

Golden Gate Bridge, San Francisco.
October

Air show during Fleet Week.
November

Shibuya crossing, seen from my hotel.
December

– –
Another eventful year. A big thank you to all of you that were a part of it.
Seinfeld’s work habits were stringent from the start. Studying communications and theater at Queens College, he arranged an independent study in stand-up, trying club sets, analyzing others’ sets and writing a 40-page paper. When he scored his first appearance on Johnny Carson’s “Tonight Show,” in 1981, he practiced his five-minute set “200 times” beforehand, jogging around Manhattan and listening to the “Superman” theme on a Walkman to amp up.
Great story on Jerry Seinfeld in the NYTimes. I love how these success stories can come about in so many different ways. Some fall into it and are happy with that. Some, like Seinfeld, have made it a lifelong pursuit to perfect and improve. Even long after they have to.
The variation in the molecular weight of the raw plastic material alone results in variation that makes those sorts of tolerances pure hype or fantasy. If you look at the Lego design you see it is very forgiving, allowing for variation while still maintaining function. Also the acrylanitrile butadiene styrene material has a rubbery component that gives the blocks additional resilience and maintains a good feel while accommodating variation.
Think if all comment threads were like this?
Why Legos Are So Expensive — And So Popular : Planet Money : NPR
This so incredibly interesting and thoughtful that I want to empty my RSS-reader and start over with blogs like this. I’ll be coming back to his post several times for sure.
Instead of asking, “How much do I value this item?” we should ask “If I did not own this item, how much would I pay to obtain it?” And the same goes for career opportunities. We shouldn’t ask, “How much do I value this opportunity?” but “If I did not have this opportunity, how much would I be willing to sacrifice in order to obtain it?”
A method to not get stuck in your ways, or your career.
The Disciplined Pursuit of Less – Greg McKeown – Harvard Business Review
The other day, I tweeted that all emails should have an unsubscribe-button. It was a frustrated reaction to an overflowing inbox filled with persistent sales people and CC-conversations with limited relevance to me.
After giving this some more thought, it’s actually not a bad idea. Email is a moderately good communication tool, given that you use it the right way. Its downfall is that its efficiency relies on a third party to use it correctly. You can keep archiving, tagging, filtering and searching – but if someone else decides to start emailing you with things that you don’t want, it’s still a losing battle.
Since we seem to be stuck with email as a standard, what could be done to improve it? Perhaps the introduction of a mute button. Gmail seems to have had(?) an option earlier, although it used a work-around where it just filtered out the emails and skipped the inbox. That is not fully addressing the problem since it gives the impression to the sender that you’re still on – and should be reading – the thread. This could lead to even more emails with “didn’t you see this?”-messages.
Instead, a nice way would be to simply mute on two levels – a conversation level and a person level. On the former, it would remove you from To/CC entirely and send a message to the thread saying;
“Thanks for including me in this thread so far, but I believe the discussion has reached the stage where my participation is no longer needed.”
Or something like that. Something nice, anyway. It is important with the feedback to the sender to manage expectations.
Muting on a person level is of course a little more complicated. Muting someone’s email address entirely can of course by gamed by creating aliases and so forth, but it would nevertheless be a better solution than we have today.
Sales people often email without having a prior confirmation of interest from the recipient. I think once is fair game – sometimes they are offering something interesting – but on the third or forth time, it gets tiring. It simply isn’t reasonable that anyone should have the right to email me several times if I do not wish to receive his/her emails. So you would mute them, if this continued.
Again, it would notify the sender that this has happened, and then the channel would be blocked for further interaction. This should, if nothing else, make the sales people more careful about what they send since they don’t want to be muted straight away. That would be a good thing since it puts the power back where it belongs – the receiver of the emails. The person who is spending their own time managing the flow of information coming in.
Gmail seems to be the most suitable industry player to try to change this – as a labs extension if nothing else. Or perhaps there is already something like this out there? If so, please let me know in the comments.
Reporter: Did you ever think that the lessons you first learned on the stage of an improv comedy theater in Chicago would pay off later in life?
Bill Murray: It pays off in you life when you´re in an elevator and people are uncomfortable. You can just say, “That’s a beautiful scarf.” It’s just thinking about making someone else feel comfortable. You don’t worry about yourself, because we’re vibrating together. If I can make yours just a little bit groovier, it’ll affect me. It comes back, somehow.
You must be logged in to post a comment.