About William Peng

Archive for April, 2009

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Confidence Theory

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009

Confidence in any scenario isn’t about trying to convince yourself, “Hey! I’m awesome-squared!” It’s about feeling like you having options.

Chris Hardwick

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The Value of Income

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009

Income has no value without time. Income is just some wampum that you exchange for experience.

Tim Ferriss, from a talk given to ELE/ORF 491 High-Tech Entrepreneurship at Princeton University, 4/28/09

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12 Examples of Lazy Registration

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009

Web Jackalope has a good post about the importance of lazy registration. Lazy registration allows users to interact with the site and try out some of the features before signing up for the service. Putting all of the functionality behind a pay wall deters a good percentage of potential users, and you want to make the barrier of entry as low as possible. It’s kind of like the freemium model, but at an even earlier stage.

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My Dear Disco: Dancethink LP

Tuesday, April 28th, 2009

One of my favorite things to do is to share my favorite music artists with friends. It’s a surprisingly insightful way to learn about other people through their musical tastes. Services like Last.fm have transformed the way we share music, especially with their musical compatibility score, but you can’t replace the tangible feeling of experiencing music with friends.

My Dear Disco is a band with a unique, lasting effect. Although they fuse eclectic musical elements from electronica, pop, and techno, their music is neither overproduced nor trite. Hailing from Ann Arbor, Michigan, My Dear Disco is a seven-piece ensemble with members named Play, Stop, Eject, Rewind, Fast-Forward, Pause, and Record.

I’m a sucker for electronica fused with other random genres, so it isn’t a surprise that I love “dancethink,” My Dear Disco’s fusion of electro-pop, funk, rock, and techno. Their eclectic style is a reflection of their musical training at the University of Michigan, where they experimented with mixing instruments like bagpipes as the lead and an underlying bass techno beat. In the words of bagpipe player, songwriter and founding member Tyler Duncan,

Dancethink music to us would be, I guess in the shortest way, about having music that’s as good on the dance floor as it is in headphones, and striving to find that balance of music that’s going to make you want to get up and it’s also going to want to make you take that album home and enjoy it just as much when you’re sitting down and really just taking in all the various subtleties and nuances.

Their latest release Dancethink LP opens with “White Lies,” my favorite of the set. The beginning guitar riffs lead into Michelle Chamuel (a.k.a “Stop”)’s silky smooth yet powerful vocals and an underlying techno dance beat. The driving beat and melodic lines go straight to the hips, and pretty soon I find myself dancing, or at least bobbing my head. The song seamlessly transitions into “For Your Love,” which features some nostalgic 8-bit sound before transitioning into a Daft Punk-esque synth effect. The track also features talk boxes to mimic the Daft Punk style. But it is misleading to compare My Dear Disco to Daft Punk, because My Dear Disco brings so much more to the table in musical creativity.

Listening to their music on high quality headphones is a joy. They don’t skimp on production, and you can really hear the intricacies of their music. The tracks are also satisfyingly long, averaging 5-6 minutes. I often like to set a good song on repeat, but Dancethink LP spares me the effort. I’m looking forward to their next effort, a full album produced by Grammy-nominated, multi-platinum engineer and producer, Mark Saunders, with release date to be determined.

Top Tracks: White Lies, For Your Love, All I Do
Similar Artists: Daft Punk, Ratatat, The Postal Service, Cut Copy

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Posted in Music | Comments

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Recover Lost NetNewsWire Subscriptions

Tuesday, April 28th, 2009

So I like to live my life on the edge and have about 3 GB of free space on my hard drive. I was running Windows XP in Parallels virtualization and designing using Photoshop CS4, so it was using quite a bit of disk swap space. Eventually, my computer slowed to a standstill and OS X warned me I had 0 KB left on my startup disk.

One side-effect of this was that my .plist preferences file for NetNewsWire was corrupted. So when I launched up NetNewsWire after resuscitating my computer, and all 335 of my subscriptions were GONE.

Luckily, I found instructions on how to recover lost my subscription list. The developers of NetNewsWire are amazing and set up an automatic backup functionality that backs up your subscriptions each time you change the subscription list:

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Posted in Tech | Comments

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Self-Selectivity in App Store Reviews

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009

Garrett Murray, developer of iPhone app, Ego, says that people only review apps when they are unhappy. It doesn’t help that the app approval process blocks quick updates or bug fixes.

I’m far more likely to get 15 one-star reviews when something goes wrong than I am to get 15 five-star reviews when everything goes right. Perhaps it’s just frustration speaking here, but when Apple ties my hands behind my back and lets users punch me publicly in the face without allowing me to at least respond back, it’s hard to get excited about building an app.

Apple is creating an ecosystem of the kind of customers I don’t want.

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Posted in Lifestream, Tech | Comments

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A fundamental way newspaper sites need to change

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009

Insightful post by Adrian Holovaty about how the change in what is being delivered is more important than how it is delivered:

But the goal for me, a data person focused more on the long term, is to store information in the most valuable format possible. The problem is particularly frustrating to explain because it’s not necessarily obvious; if you store everything on your Web site as a news article, the Web site is not necessarily hard to use. Rather, it’s a problem of lost opportunity. If all of your information is stored in the same “news article” bucket, you can’t easily pull out just the crimes and plot them on a map of the city. You can’t easily grab the events to create an event calendar. You end up settling on the least common denominator: a Web site that knows how to display one type of content, a big blob of text. That Web site cannot do the cool things that readers are beginning to expect

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Posted in Code, Lifestream, Tech | Comments

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YouTube Symphony Orchestra

Thursday, April 16th, 2009

I’m disappointed I wasn’t able to go see this in person, but the YouTube video will have to suffice. The embedded video is Part 1 of the performance.

The YouTube Symphony Orchestra is an innovative collaboration of amateur and professional musicians, who auditioned to be in the orchestra, and renowned musicians such as Michael Tilson Thomas, Lang Lang, Gil Shaham, Yo-Yo Ma, Tan Dun, and Yuja Wang. The collaboration culminated in a concert at Carnegie Hall on April 15.

There is an early review by ConcertoNet here. Also, the NYTimes critic Anthony Tommasini didn’t like the performance because it was not substantive enough and too gimmicky, but he did credit the innovative idea.

“How Do I Get To Carnegie Hall?”
“Upload, Upload, Upload!”

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Posted in Lifestream, Music | Comments

Women Like to Share, Men Like to Hoard

Thursday, April 16th, 2009

I haven’t been able to devote as much time to this blog as I would have liked to, since the end of the school year looms and I have several final projects to finish.

However, my class on High-Tech Entrepreneurship has consistently been very good, and I want to post about the first of a series of four guest lectures over the next two weeks.

Today, Dany Levy from DailyCandy gave a guest lecture about her experiences at DailyCandy. A little background: DailyCandy is a free email newsletter that gives a personal, insider guide to the new and undiscovered. It has newsletters devoted to major cities including NYC, Chicago, LA, SF, Boston, and many more.

It was inspiring to hear Dany’s story, starting in print journalism at New York and Lucky, getting frustrated with the slow print publication process, and seizing the opportunity to use email to instantly send out information. This way, she was able to disrupt the way information was delivered. Oftentimes, Dany was able to beat the big name magazines to publishing scoops.

I took some notes, and this is a compilation of some of the more interesting take away messages that I got from the talk.

  • Know what you can and can’t do, and find the right people to complement you. Trust in your team. Don’t be pigheaded about your beliefs.
  • Don’t completely associate your company’s brand with one person. Spread the success among your team. A good example is Steve Jobs, who has long been associated with Apple’s success and innovation. When he left on medical leave at the beginning of this year, it was uncertain whether Apple would continue to be successful without him at the helm. However, we now know that the team at Apple is extremely competent and innovative, even without Steve at the head of day to day decisions.
  • Embrace change, but stay true to what you believe in. Figure out what you believe in if you haven’t already.
  • Dany didn’t like the idea of investing in a DailyCandy for men (Thrillist): It wouldn’t work because “Women like to share things. Men like to hoard.”
  • There are differing opinions on this, but Levy believes that the idea should come first, and the money will follow.

I’m looking forward to the next three lectures in the series:

  • Tuesday, April 21: Frank P. Slattery, Jr. ’59, President, Quintus Corp.
  • Tuesday, April 28: Tim Ferriss, Angel Investor; Founder, BrainQuicken; Author: The 4-Hour Work Week
  • Thursday, April 30: Professor Ed Zschau

I will try to post similar recaps of these talks as well. Until next time…

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NYU Student Conducts Most Adorable Robot Experiment Ever

Saturday, April 11th, 2009

I wondered: could a human-like object traverse sidewalks and streets along with us, and in so doing, create a narrative about our relationship to space and our willingness to interact with what we find in it? More importantly, how could our actions be seen within a larger context of human connection that emerges from the complexity of the city itself? To answer these questions, I built robots.

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Posted in Lifestream | Comments