Category: Culture

  • Train of Thought

    I’ve been interviewing people a fair amount lately. If the discussion gets to the area of workplace environment I often talk about the Netflix Freedom and Responsibility Culture. I’ve blogged about that before so just read it if you haven’t.

    Since I forwarded the link to someone I interviewed, I read it again. This time I was struck by this quote:

    If you want to build a ship, don’t drum up the men to gather wood, divide the work and give orders.

    Instead, teach them to yearn for the vast and endless sea.

    — Antione de Saint Exupery

    I didn’t recall that in The Little Prince, which is my sole exposure to the author, so I Googled it. Aside from discovering that it’s a bad translation from the original French I found a link to this very old post by Jeff Atwood. It talks about Stack Overflow and Jeff makes this point:

    I don’t care how much you pay me, you’ll never be able to recreate the incredibly satisfying feeling I get when demonstrating mastery within my community of peers.

    And he links to this video. Which you should watch.

    It’s amazing where your thoughts can take you…

  • State of the Economy

    (h/t to The Big Picture).

    This is a great live graphic showing key economic indicators within the spans of what is typical. For the debt fear mongers, note the Core Inflation number.

  • In 5 Years You Can Sell a Mickey Mouse T-Shirt

    Well, according to current law. 15 years ago, a copyright extension was passed. It seems like this extension was largely at the request of Disney and the Gershwin estate. It was a 20 year extension.

    So five years from now, if nothing changes, you will be legally able to print a T-Shirt with Mickey Mouse on it and sell it. Disney will not be able to send you nasty legal letters.

    Or perhaps the political establishment will balance organizations who can contribute huge sums of cash against regular people and extend the copyright.

    Normally I would assume Disney wins this. They will tell senators that not extending this will cause a proliferation of t-shirts of Mickey giving people the finger. Or whatever crazy thing people will come up with. And frankly, that’s true. But so what. Walt died over 45 years ago. Granting copyright for life plus 50 years is surely sufficient to promote innovation. I’m frankly not sure what the +50 is for. Not like the author can innovate once dead.

    The one hope I have for this to not be extended is Google. Google has their Google Books project. Copyright is a huge issue for this project. For books, in many cases the author is dead and there’s no one to ask, “hey, can we use this?”. So works that no one really cares about are still restricted.

    If I were betting, I’d say Disney gets the extension. But I’m rooting for Google.

  • Happy Birthday Sting

    Oh, to be that cool at 60 (or any age). Courtesy of The Big Picture:

     

  • Happy Birthday John Coltrane

    He would have been 87 today. If you don’t know who I’m talking about, you should. One of the greatest jazz saxophone players ever.

    If you would like to be introduced:

    Kind of Blue (1959 – Miles Davis): Considered by many (including me) to be the best jazz album ever (it’s literally in everyone’s top 5). Arguably the best jazz sextet ever (only Miles could keep a group this talented together.

    My Favorite Things (1961): Coltrane’s second solo album. The title track is from Sound of Music and is brilliant. This album has Coltrane playing a lot of soprano sax (including the title track). Tenor sax is how he started.

    Tenor Madness (1956 – Sonny Rollins): Sonny Rollins and John Coltrane are generally considered the best tenor saxophone players ever. This album is basically the rhythm section from Kind of Blue with Rollins and Coltrane (and the only time they recorded together).

    Giant Steps (1960): His first album with solely his own compositions. Historically this is more important than My Favorite Things, but if you are new to jazz, it’s harder to get into.

    Broaden your horizons and check these out…

  • The War for Talent

    Seth Godin has an interesting take on this today. He feels it should be more of a search for attitude:

    An organization filled with honest, motivated, connected, eager, learning, experimenting, ethical and driven people will always defeat the one that merely has talent. Every time.

  • Bike Lanes

    Funny and so true

  • Guinness

    Guinness is not my beer, but this is a great ad:

  • The Red Lantern

    Seth Godin raises an interesting question here. I don’t know the answer, but I suspect it’s important.