Wednesday, February 27, 2008

Creation of new is playing with a purpose

The creation of something new is not accomplished by the intellect but by the play instinct acting from inner necessity. The creative mind plays with the objects it loves.
- Carl Jung
I ran into this quote today and thought that it was simply excellent. When the "zone" hits and you are creating anything new, be it a program, a system, art, music or a new business model it feels like playing. When you watch someone who is really good at it, they almost seem to be having too much fun... it can't possibly be work that way right? I have always found so much enjoyment in these types of activities myself that to describe it as anything else is pretense. When your brain is in the right state, you are relaxed, the deep parts of your mind, where the real horsepower is, can bubble up thoughts and put things together that your conscious mind simply can't.

This phenomena was described to me recently as operating with the power in the frontal cortex (the default conscious section) is roughly equivalent to using the change in your pocket. When you are in "the zone" and your deeper mind is able to work it is more like the national product of the United States of America. That's one heck of a difference.

If you never play with your inner child they atrophy. Or potentially worse, get bored and go off in random directions. Kind of like any muscle in your body when you don't use it your mind gets tired too and you can't be as readily be creative... plus personally I think it just makes you prematurely old. If you ever want a dose of reality on your brain aging check out the Brain Age games on the Nintendo DS.

The moral of this post... play every day.

Friday, February 22, 2008

YAY Input Innovation

There few things in technology that really get me hopping excited any more but every now and then something pops into the tech stream that makes me happy. Today is a happy moment for me.

Input devices and Human Computer Interface design though not something that is part of my core job or direct areas of research has always been one of those items that I have had a lot of interest in. I blame a particularly engaging professor I had in college that did research in this area that helped open my eyes to how silly things are today.

For example, we still use the QWERTY keyboard layout, a model that was built to slow down typing... yes really. On typewriters it was built so that the hammers would hang up less often because commonly used letters were farther apart and people would be slower thus causing less hits. If you are old enough or lucky enough to have had the experience of a typewriter that hung you will understand why this was a good idea at the time. Now critical mass is there and the world is unlikely to change. Just try and tell a Gen-Xer that can type 100+ words per minute on a QWERTY that you are going to change the layout. Of course now Gen-Y is used to a phone and small device without the need for a keyboard at all.

Apple has filed for a patent on a new generation of input device that is focused on touch, write and multi-touch. For more info check out the Apple Insider post for great detail from the patents themselves. One of my favorite features/ideas from the iPhone has always been the multi-touch. In fact part of the reason I expect to be getting an Apple laptop now is that they are adding that ability to those as well.

While we still have not achieved a DNI (Direct Neural Interface) jack yet so all we have to do is think it's only a matter of time. By the way... that really is happening. Controlling your computer with the power of thought is currently focused on assistance for the physically disabled. You don't need to be a dreamer though to realize that the downstream implications are simply fascinating.

Monday, February 04, 2008

Microsoft bid to buy Yahoo

It has been in the rumor mill for a while now that Microsoft was seeking to buy Yahoo. When there is sufficient smoke there seems to be fire and now the deal is officially proceeding. There are reasons for it and reasons against it. Apparently Live has not pulled in the traction that Microsoft wants and the desire for ad revenue and internet traffic control as a business model is

Google brings up some interesting points on the combination having more webmail and portal traffic than anyone else and Microsofts track record of following the path of Embrace, Extend, Exterminate when it comes to competition. But that input from a competitor is unlikely to bring about any sort of block of the deal. In fact some reports are even suggesting that the deal could be good for competition.

I am not 100% decided on the deal and it's positive or negative effects. Microsoft has a long record of proven execution and when they really set their eyes on something they can make it happen. There is a wide range of incredibly bright people there that when unified to a cause can deliver. The big change that I see though is in release management. Microsoft has a history of classical software development with releases taking years and subsequent patches taking months. In the internet world, and Google is a great example of this, change is constant, the ability to roll out new versions and try new approaches every week is key to success. This will be a big change from the default Microsoft dev approach. Will this Agile development change cross over into Microsoft's standard products? Another one of those much discussed items, SAAS Software As A Service suddenly becomes a lot more of a potential reality. To me this is the real reason for the desired purchase. Ads and Eyeballs are great to monetize and transform what Microsoft has done for a long time.

No matter what finally happens, this aught to be fun to watch.

Saturday, February 02, 2008

You have to pay attention to the periphery

I have long been interested in how the brain works and why we do some of the bizarre things that we do. Add my interest in innovation and viola there is a fun intersection.

Individuals as well as companies have problems spotting, let alone executing innovations. In many cases the innovations seem obvious in retrospect causing people to think "well why didn't ABC co do that? They must be idiots." The truth is that spotting something outside of our current focus is not anything that we are wired to do. In fact we are wired to do the opposite.

For a few cool examples of this check out these YouTube videos. (Normally I would do an embed for your convenience but these are not available for some reason so go check them out.)
The defense our mind puts in place that keeps us focused and able to complete a task without all of the information available overwhelming our brain is the one that keeps us from noticing things on the periphery. But if the periphery is where the interesting things happen what do we do?

The first step is to be aware of what you are focusing on. The next is to allow yourself time to wander, or in many cases allot yourself time to wander. This doesn't mean daydreaming (remember, vision without execution is daydreaming) but it does mean looking at things outside of the immediate and allotting effort and brain cycles to it occasionally. Probably not at the same rate as your real focus but without carving out at least some you quickly find that your immediate focus is all you have time for.