About William Peng

Archive for May, 2009

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Eric Schmidt Commencement Speech

Sunday, May 24th, 2009

“You cannot plan innovation. You cannot plan invention. All you can do is try very hard to be at the right place and be ready.”

Eric Schmidt, Carnegie Mellon Commencement Speech

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In Praise of Dullness

Thursday, May 21st, 2009

David Brooks has an interesting Op-Ed in the NYTimes about the characteristics most highly correlated with successful CEOs. The results surprised me, since at first glance they are counterintuitive.

What mattered, it turned out, were execution and organizational skills. The traits that correlated most powerfully with success were attention to detail, persistence, efficiency, analytic thoroughness and the ability to work long hours.

In other words, warm, flexible, team-oriented and empathetic people are less likely to thrive as C.E.O.’s. Organized, dogged, anal-retentive and slightly boring people are more likely to thrive.

They, too, found that extroversion, agreeableness and openness to new experience did not correlate well with C.E.O. success. Instead, what mattered was emotional stability and, most of all, conscientiousness — which means being dependable, making plans and following through on them.

via Marquis.

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Dreaming in the Shower

Wednesday, May 20th, 2009

Cameron Moll has an interesting blog post up about the “creative pause” we experience in the shower. Creative pause is the “shift from being fully engaged in a creative activity to being passively engaged, or the shift to being disengaged altogether.” You move from a structured thinking to a stream of thinking.

Of course, when I want to complete a structured task, I don’t want to be in the shower. The desk is better environment for completing structured tasks. But the shower is great for brainstorming in an unstructured manner. Shifting your brain into a more relaxed state allows you to attack a problem from a different direction.

I find that a lot of my most creative thinking happens in the shower. The shower helps me develop my thoughts in new directions. It’s also a place for me to escape from stress or cluttered thoughts. These two ideas build on the fact that deliberate breaks can be helpful to problem solving.

There’s something about showering that tends to spawn new ideas which may not occur otherwise. And the frequency with which this occurs seems to suggest that perhaps the occurrence isn’t merely happenstance, but instead a decent model for what has been called “creative pause” — the shift from being fully engaged in a creative activity to being passively engaged, or the shift to being disengaged altogether.

Cameron continues to explain why the shower seems to be so effective at dislocating our minds from a hectic world:

  1. There’s little opportunity for distraction.
  2. Minimal mental engagement is required for the the task at hand.
  3. Showering creates a “white noise” effect.
  4. A change of scenery sets the stage for the unexpected.

I wonder how, or if, we can more efficiently harness the power of creative pause. Sometimes I think I should install a waterproof note-taking device inside the shower to record all my thoughts as they happen. But perhaps the conscious act of writing down what you are thinking destroys the creative pause? Because my thoughts in the shower flow quickly and randomly, jumping from topic to topic, the deliberate action of writing something down could disrupt the flow of thoughts. The action of writing is the distraction in point #1 above, and it involves the mental engagement in point #2.

In this way, creative pause is similar to dreaming. My high school chemistry teacher once told me that the best way to solve chemistry problems is in your sleep. He would give up on difficult problems and go to sleep. He would wake up in the middle of the night with a solution, and frantically scribble down the solution on a pad at the side of his bed, as his dreams slipped away.

This may also be evidence that, at some point in the night, you should go to sleep rather than go for an all-nighter. But that’s for a different blog post.

Of course, this is all pure speculation, so I may be completely wrong. I haven’t tried taking notes in the shower (yet). Perhaps the best and only way is to jump out of the shower, wake up from dreaming, and write as fast as you can. This means I need to learn how to write in shorthand.

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Dollar ReDe$ign

Tuesday, May 19th, 2009

Michael Tyznik redesigned the U.S. paper money to a much more modern and functional design. Looks a lot like European money, which has great design. Here’s his rationale in the redesign:

Here are the main ideas in this design: Money and the color green are inextricably intertwined in American culture. I think itd be a mistake to remove green as the primary color. Instead, each bill has a brightly-colored holographic strip embedded into it which contains the denomination. The width of this strip also changes with the denomination. This introduces an element which makes each bill extremely easy to identify. There is also braille denoting the bills denomination on the holographic strip.

The redesign is part of a project to “rebrand” the dollar bills. Also check out the redesigns by Richard Smith and Michelle Haft.

Update: Aegir Hallmundur at The Ministry of Type relates the potential new bill designs to European bill designs, in particular the varying bill sizes depending on the denomination of the bill.

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Posted in Design, Lifestream | Comments

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Amazing Aerial Virtual Tour of New York City

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009

Really high res and grandiose aerial virtual tour of New York City. Stepping away from the grunginess of the city makes you appreciate NYC that much more.

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Lincoln Center: Then and Now

Saturday, May 9th, 2009

Whatever one’s take on the Lincoln Center at its 50-year milestone, the institution is certainly doing its part to stimulate the sagging economy. At a time of severe recession, when arts organizations everywhere are cutting back and even going under, Lincoln Center remains committed to its nearly $1 billion renovation project. Arts lovers in New York should be gratified to see the scaffolding and walled-off excavation sites in the plaza. Having long ago chosen the all-together-now approach to creating an performing arts complex, Lincoln Center is determined to make the best of it.

(via NYTimes)

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Posted in Lifestream, Music | Comments

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A Portrait of the Designer as a Young Man

Saturday, May 9th, 2009

My friend Andy Chen, founder of the Student Design Agency at Princeton, brilliant graphic designer, winner of the Pyne Prize, and all-around good guy has started a blog, A Portrait of the Designer as a Young Man. I only wish I could write as well as Andy, so definitely check it out and subscribe to his feed.

Posted in Lifestream | Comments

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Confessions of an Entrepreneur’s Wife

Friday, May 8th, 2009

There is a very poignant story in Inc. of the effects of an entrepreneur’s drive and lifestyle on his family, from the perspective of his wife. It shows that there is a very human aspect to startup companies that simply cannot be ignored. There are the glamorous moments of success, where you feel like you’re on the top of the world, but there are also the opposite, and I think that it is how you act during the worst times that defines who you are as a person.

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Posted in Entrepreneurship, Lifestream | Comments

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NYC subway ridership trends mapped

Friday, May 8th, 2009

Mike Frumin graphed the NYC subway ridership data back to 1905 and mapped it for each subway station. There are some interesting trends in there, including the rise of Williamsburg, Brooklyn, but how the “growth decays at each successive stop away from Manhattan on the L train.” Also check out his full explanation of the project here.

(via Kottke)

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More Than Just Karma

Wednesday, May 6th, 2009

Whether you plan to cure cancer, lose weight or be the world’s best parent, results of a new study suggest you’d do well to keep your mouth shut about it. And not just to avoid annoying other people.

Researchers report that when dealing with identity goals — that is, the aspirations that define who we are — sharing our intentions doesn’t necessarily motivate achievement. On the contrary, a series of experiments shows that when others take notice of our plans, performance is compromised because we gain “a premature sense of completeness” about the goal.

(via the Montreal Gazette)

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