Category Archives: Uncategorized

Life Through the Eyes of Google

Google Images has hit a home run! They have brought online the entire database of photographic images from Life Magazine. For those of you who are too young to remember Life Magazine, just take my word for the fact that other than National Geographic Magazine, you will not find finer photographic images. This database reaches back through history to the 1860's! Although the search page claims the images stop with the 1970's, the database is actually "Time Life" and reaches to current history. I still need to spend some more time testing, but here are some examples of covers from Time Magazine (run my query and just replace the year for your own desired results):

Here are two covers I found from Time (circa 1941), and a multiple frame photo of the Saturn V rocket. Click to expand any image to full size. Search for your own Time Life Magazine images.

Russia
France Saturn5

Innovation After Kindergarten

On the plane this afternoon I listened to a podcast from the Stanford's Entrepreneurial Thought Leaders Seminar. The guest presenter was Tom Kelley, general manager at the world-renowned design firm, IDEO. His talk focused not upon how to increase innovation in the organization, but why it is 100% necessary to innovate as an individual. In short, you must consider yourself a personal innovation project. Organizations don't come up with innovations, people do!

Tom Kelley reviewed the works of an artist named Gordon McKenzie. This artist visited a school and spent time with each class from grades K through six. When he asked the kindergartners how many of them were artists … almost every hand went up. By the time he got to the sixth grade and asked the same question, only two hands went up. Somewhere in the intervening six years the children had learned how not to be creative … but instead looked around the classroom and sought their peer's approval.

As a coach of Lego Robotics for the past six years, I learned the same lessons. While the designs from the Minnesota H.S. robotics teams are robust, when it comes to creativity every coach knows one must visit the elementary school competitions. The younger children have not yet been taught what does not yet work. They experiment.

Recently I had this lesson reinforced when I attended DeFrag 2008. If you will remember from my earlier post, I was astounded to learn that over 60% of the attendees who watched my Social Search in the Corporate Environment twittered about my content during my talk. Quite frankly I had personally dismissed Twitter as a waste of time … I was forced to reassess. I had stopped learning and innovating in this particular domain. Given my new personal data point, I then read an excellent research report on all the enterprise like Twitter applications (report is the work of Pistachio Consulting). I am now encouraging my company's active experimentation in this domain.

In summation, Tom Kelley while at Stanford advocated that all students think and act like a traveler. In other words, while overseas we tend to put ourselves into a "observer" status and look for new content and experiences. We seek to learn from these new data points. He warns us to to be wary of our own expertise. You can use your knowledge gained through the years to discount new ideas.

Osprey V-22 Over Ocracoke Island

Hello from vacation on Ocracoke Island (barrier island off North Carolina's coast). Today was stormy but when the weather abated we went beach combing and were treated to a neat sight via the US Marine Corp. An Osprey V-22 tilt-rotor aircraft did touch and gos only 100 yards away from us over the sand dunes and our rent-a-car! This is one cool bird! It shifts from helicopter mode to prop jet mode while flying. There is a rotor at the end of each wing. You can watch a video I took via YouTube:

My photos from this afternoon (click to expand)

Osprey
Molly
Waves

DeFragged … now rebooting

Just got back from DeFrag 2008 earlier this week … now rebooting. In the past four months:

  • My Mom died
  • My Dad had serious surgery, almost died … in the hospital for three months.
  • My daughter got married
  • Survived a big ReOrg with lots of layoffs at work

Rebooting … Vacation starts! Off to the Outer Banks of North Carolina at 6 am tomorrow morning. The first stop is the OBX Marathon on Sunday. Those 26.2 miles will be relaxation for me … just a physical challenge. Won't post for some time because of some serious B&B action on Oracoke Island.

Marathon

Science 2.0

If you are both interested in Web 2.0 and the new "science" of engineering found upon (or not found) upon the web, then you need to listen to this podcast from Tech Nation. Dr. Moira Gunn speaks with Nobel Laureate Robert Laughlin, about the value of the information we get for free from the internet, and that which for scientists is not out there for any price. Mr. Laughlin's new book is titled the Crime of Reason. The sub title is "and the closing of the scientific mind".

Crime