Showing posts with label social networking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label social networking. Show all posts

Monday, October 29, 2012

Book - Imagine: How Creativity Works


I have loved reading Jonah Lehrer's book Imagine: How Creativity Works.

Not too concerned
I'm not too concerned about recent controversy concerning a Bob Dylan quote. When I read, I don't take everything on face value. I look for the bits of truth that ring true.

I agree with Roy Peter Clark that it's worth reading despite the problems.
Rather than abandon it in its disgrace, you find yourself engaged and turning the pages, and suddenly your hand grabs for the highlighter to mark up this excellent paragraph about the origins of creativity, and then that one.
Okay, so Lehrer made up a quote and then lied about it. Not good, but doesn't taint the whole.

So he reworked some earlier work—big deal. If it's good, give it to me.

He simplifies neuroscience. Thank goodness, because I can understand it enough to urge me to further reading and study. (I searched out Geoffrey West and listened to his hour discussion about the dimensionality of cities.)

Application
I've been able to apply what Lehrer writes about to my life.

Here are a few examples, that I found interesting and true, in my experience:

On relaxing and indulging in distractions:
"Occasionally, focus can backfire and make us fixated on the wrong answers. It's not until you let yourself relax and indulge in distractions that you discover the answer; the insight arrives only after you stop looking for it." (p. 36)
This happens to me so often, it is ingrained in my work process. I stop, take a break, put it aside to work on something else, or just turn away from the computer for a few minutes. When I return, the answer (or the problem with the design) is obvious. Walks work, weekends work, vacations work even better. I always come back with a new perspective and a fresh look at the work.

On horizontal sharing and conceptual blending:
"The benefit of horizontal interactions—people sharing knowledge across fields—is that it encourages conceptual blending, which is extremely important part of the insight process...our breakthroughs often arrive when we apply old solutions to new situations." (p. 37-38)
This is why the best designers have a wide range of varied interests and a lot of different life experiences. They are better able to draw from ideas from these areas and recombine them in interesting and creative ways. The talented designers I know have full interesting lives with unexpected backgrounds and un-design-related talents.

On cities and creativity:

"It is the sheer density of the city—the proximity of all those overlapping minds—that makes it such an inexhaustible source of creativity." (p. 183)

I love going into Philadelphia because I always think new thoughts, talk to new people and find unexpected art. It's a scavenger hunt for new food, boutique shop finds, and interesting interactions...gluten-free peanut butter and chocolate "cake", brightly-colored rustic figurines from Peru, and a discussion with a parking attendant about the mural in his lot.

Other interesting truths
The stumped phase of creativity, the struggle, forces us to try something new. Because we feel frustrated, we start to look at problems from a new perspective. It's a normal part of the creative process. (p. 16, 17)

Imagination is unleashed by constraints. You break out of the box by stepping into shackles. (p. 23)

A relaxed state of mind allows us to look inward toward the stream of remote associations in our right brain...insights come in the shower, when we are in a positive mood, when we are not looking for an insight.  (p. 31-33)

Taking an idea, really seeing it, drawing it, making it real requires attention, focus and hard work. (p. 68-72)

Milton Glaser: Design is the conscious imposition of meaningful order. (p. 71)

Let go of the part of the mind that judges, the worry about doing it "wrong", so we don't constrain our own creativity. (p. 104)

Sleeping is the height of genius. [Love this one! It's the ultimate letting go, associations are free wheeling and the mind is relaxed.] (p. 107)

Travel: when you escape from the place you spend all your time, the mind is suddenly made aware of all those errant ideas previously suppressed. You start thinking about obscure possibilities. (p. 126)

Office conversations are so powerful that simply increasing their quantity can dramatically increase creative production; people have more new ideas when they talk with more people. (p. 153)

The most creative ideas, it turns out, don't occur when we're alone. Rather they emerge from our social circles, from collections of acquaintances who inspire novel thoughts. Sometimes the most important people in life are the people we barely know. (p. 204)

Worth the read
The publishers have pulled the book from the shelves, but if you get your hands on one, it's worth the read. Only if to wonder what all the fuss is about.

And, I agree with Roy...I'm busy learning. Tell me where the mistakes are in the book, and let me get on with it.

Other learnings
Critical insights into creativity

More about the controversy:
Controversy about a Bob Dylan quote
JL resigns from the New Yorker
Another false quotation found
A cautionary tale for today's overachiever

Videos, interviews
Captivating, accessible, never dull
How Creativity Works
How Creativity Works, an interview
The best way to learn at college: Be an outsider
The science of insight creation

e

Sunday, November 6, 2011

Google does not own the web: Search vs. Discovery


What?! Google does not own the web? Oh, thank goodness. For a minute there I heard, "Gee, Google, what do you want to do tonight?... try to take over the web!" Look out Brain, search on the web is changing.

I personally find Google search results are a thick muddy bog to be slogged through before I reach something useful, with so many spam sites to be sifted through, having to carefully pick and choose by looking at the design and content, clipart, flashing banner ads and user comments. It's just too much.
There is too much information online, too many pages filled with stock images and no context. Search engines provide significant utility, but we still have to exert energy to find what we need after results are algorithmically surfaced. The new crop of social media companies help discovery come online and threaten traditional search. With these new tools, users are able to clip and collect the bits of the web that they are most interested in and, in the process, disregard the rest as noise. The Shift from Search to Discovery
Pinterest is one of those social media companies. It's been picking up steam in the mainstream lately. There are several reasons Pinterest is on a rise, including that it's a beautiful and brilliant way of cataloging your ideas and tastes, based on a "recommendation" of sorts.

What is Pinterest?
Pinterest provides a way to make your favorite things easy for friends and followers to navigate. And similarly it’s like walking into a virtual tapestry of people’s favorite things. It's a way to discover what you love. And, you can organize the "bookmarks" in the ways that make sense to you.

When you find something on the web while browsing, you "pin" it or save it to your profile. You look at the collection of images others have found and "repin" to one of your boards, or best yet, use one of your own original photos. You follow others after perusing their collection to see if it fits your tastes and interest, and they follow you based on your pins and activity.


Why
I like it because it's visually appealing. You are exposed to images and ideas you would never have found on your own. The discovery is so stimulating and rewarding. When I find an image (which is usually linked back to the original website) I can "repin" it to a "board" like a scrapbook or cork board of things I love or find interesting.

It's full of positive reinforcement and validation. Followers can "like" your pin, comment, or repin.

My daughter said it makes her feel smart and creative. "I think I like Pinterest because it makes me feel like I too could do awesome stuff, but then I don't actually have to do it." Or, " I should probably ease up on Pinterest...but it's so fun!"

There are fun crafts, great places to visit, fashion, amazing art and things that will make you smile. Oh, and great recipes and food..."I shouldn't browse Pinterest when I'm hungry," my daughter told her Facebook friends.

It's something you talk your friends and family into joining so you can share cool new things with them. My daughter's friend posted "Your pinboard on things that make you smile totally made my evening :)

It's helped get me out of a rut with my cooking with this pin (and others).


I made this quinoa dish...yum!

A rocket ride
But it's a love/hate relationship, right now, with Pinterest. It's "beta-ish" (my daughter quips) and requires an invitation to join. The iPhone app is buggy, crashing often; the app icon disappears and reappears on my phone; it freezes or comes up with gray squares or blank pages. Not sure this company is technically ready for activity and growth. But I'm willing to be patient.

While I'm enjoying my feast for the eyes on Pinterest you can slog through the Google results of what everyone else is saying about Pinterest. Poit!

e

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Sometimes You Have to Retreat, A Little

In a previous posts I went off on how Twitter was a total waste of time.

I still feel that way, personally.

But for the last couple of weeks I've been giving it a try as a way to be "in the know" about social networking and the latest buzz.

I started out much the same way GetItDoneGuy did and followed the same pattern: rekindling old friendships, following those who post good content, then following a few celebrities.

It didn't take long to unfollow celebrities (or celebrities' PR people really), except those that appear more authentic (love Ann Curry...breaking news, a few personal tweets).

I definitely don't follow all who are following me. Who are you anway?

I also happen to agree with copyblogger about the challenge to my writing and editing skills, composing and recomposing a 140 character tweet to convey as much meaning in as few words as possible.

As haiku is to poetry.

I've learned a bit from Jakob Nielsen about adding more punch, though I don't do formal iterations. Just informal ones in my head. See his tips on what's good, what's bad and when to Tweet.

I definitely recommend front-loading, which is a technique I learned from Mark Hurst in his book Bit Literacy, regarding e-mail subject lines and the first paragraph in the e-mail. State your purpose and call to action immediately.

Still, plenty of evidence that Twitter will fade as a fad, though:
Why Teens Don't Tweet
Facebook Exodus (can Twitter be far behind?)

But not just yet...Why Adults Have Fed Twitter's Growth

Until then, follow me: ellenking (at least for a little while longer)

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Twitter is the junk mail of the digital world

Twitter is to the digital world as junk mail to the paper world, the static of the radio world, the snow of the early TV world, the Solitaire of computer games, the annoying dinner-time telemarketer, the mass of billboards once cluttering our highways and obstructing America's vistas.

It is the just latest fad that has somehow turned noise and distraction, and lately marketing, into an art form consisting only of half conversations and a series of quips and glib one-liners, masquerading as human interaction and conversation.

Rather than strengthening relationships it is soaking up valuable time and attention better spent with living breathing humans in real meaningful dialog, or giving an honest day's worth of work to your employer, or even just keeping your eyes on the road.

Despite the current wave of publicity it will fade as other internet fads have. In the meantime, if I want to know what you're doing, I'll invite you to lunch and you can tell me in more than 140 characters. We'll enjoy a real conversation.

Tom Chi and Kevin Chang's Twatter Comic
Trouble with Twitter
Let Them Eat Tweets

Quotable


There is no greater harm than that of time wasted.
~Michelangelo