I think this is a great image of how Twitter got going. Click here to see full size
From here
I’m just a little person,
One person in a sea
Of many little people
Who are not aware of me.I do my little job
And live my little life,
Eat my little meals,
Miss my little kid and wifeAnd somewhere, maybe someday,
Maybe somewhere far away,
I’ll find a second little person
who will look at me and say,“I know you
You’re the one I’ve waited for.
Let’s have some fun.”Life is precious every minute,
and more precious with you in it,
so let’s have some funWe’ll take a road trip way out west. You’re the one I like the best.
I’m glad I’ve found you,
Like being around you
You’re the one I like the best.Somewhere, maybe someday,
Maybe somewhere far away,
I’ll meet a second little person
And we’ll go out and play.
— Little Person, “Synecdoche, New York”
The lines bring me back to the movie “Synecdoche, New York” which is extremely provocative. I’m not sure i would call it entertaining but i definitely enjoyed it. I’m pretty sure i need to see it again. I do think Charlie Kaufman (the writer and director) is a genius. He’s written some incredible films – all about the mind and how we intereact with it. In fact, here’s how i categorize all his films:
I’m not sure which one is my favorite as they are all good in different ways. Which ones do you like?
I decided that i needed to give you all (my readers) more music. I get lots of requests for recommendations and thus i decided to expand my minuature blogging empire a little bit. So, starting today there is a new site assciociated with Loo.me and it’s called ILikeThisSong.com
What is ILikeThisSong.com? It’s a site which will have a new song posted there every day. These are my favorite songs of the moment. Also, there is a popout player that will play ALL of the site’s tracks for you like a radio station. This radio station will soon be linked on Loo.me. I’m currently working on that.
For now though there is limited integration. But feel free to check out the new site and let me know what you think
Last week i went and saw Pixar‘s latest masterpiece called Up. If you’ve never heard of the film, it’s an animated movie about an old man, Carl, who is a recluse. He’s at the end of his days and is holding out against the world. He keeps his home as a memorial and still talks to the absent wife Ellie. One day Carl decides to pack up and fly away–literally. Having worked all his life as a balloon man, he has the equipment on hand to suspend the house from countless helium-filled balloons and fulfill his dream of seeking a beautiful Argentinian waterfall called Paradise Falls.
First, let me just say that the film begins with a montage of Carl and Ellie that is one of the best 10 minutes of film that i have ever seen. It is so sweet and wonderful that i’d go back and pay just to see that part.
The film is a funny adventure and the characters are often more real than human actors. I find it refreshing that the main character is a 70-year old man instead of the latest hearthtrob of the moment. Where Star Trek felt it had to have all youngsters dominate the film, Pixar handed the reins to what would seem a total unsympathetic character. Instead, he’s completely refreshing.
It’s a funny thing to say but I wish more movies had the creativity of Up, the realism of Carl, and the emotional weight of this animated film.
Am i alone on this?
I’m an iPhone users and i love it. It has transformed my mobile phone usage and dare i say, my life. With the internet at my fingertips, i no longer go more than 10 seconds without knowing the answer to a question. I have come to realize that the world of computers and the internet will always be with me, following me around and enriching my life. It also makes me realize that my relationship with my computer is going to change. Because i can Google, email, YouTube, Facebook, and check sports scores from my cell – my desire to have my computer near me is dwindling.
The new iPhone 3GS makes me think about the landscape of the computers out there. If you don’t know it, there’s a new type of machine that’s becoming popular called The Netbook. It’s a $200-400 machine that is quite small and sometimes comes attached to a wireless contract so it can be connected at all times. In this regard, it is very similar to a cell phone purchase except in a bigger form factor. (click here to check out HP’s 200 dollar machine)
When i think about the machines out there, i think of this continuum:
One thing that is interesting is how Apple is has high priced machines in their Macbook Pro’s and Air devices and “lowend” machines in their iPhone. Whatever market you’re at, Apple will have the slickest machine. Microsoft, on the other hand, has less slick highend machines, and netbooks on the lowend. Personally, i like Apple’s direction more but it’d be even better if they had a tablet or smaller sized laptop that was an iPhone/laptop hybrid for $400. I think the regular PC starts to disappear and all sales are Netbook sales. Why would anyone pay $1000 when they can get a decently powerful machine for $200?
What will be great is the day day when all i have is my cell phone and i just plug it into monitors and keyboards when i want to work at a desk. My iPhone cradle gets a lot more functional and my need for a second machine disappears.
I read a great article by Malcolm Gladwell last week called How David Beats Goliath. It talks about a Silicon Valley CEO who has never coached basketball before and how he takes a novel approach towards basketball strategy when coaching his 12-year-old girl’s team.
Realizing his girl’s team is lacking the talent needed to compete, he decides to change the rules. Instead of falling back into their half to play defense, they do a full-court press each time. Their number 1 goal is to steal the opening pass. After that, they try to keep the team from crossing the halfway line. This approach is never used and its unconventional nature results in great success. He also pulls in the former San Francisco 49er, Roger Craig, as his assistant coach which makes the story that much more entertaining.
If that was the end of the story, it’d be an interesting piece but he overlays into the piece other stories of underdogs. He talks about the battle of David vs. Goliath and Lawrence of Arabia’s revolt against the Ottoman Army near the end of the First World War. In both cases, changing the nature of the game was the difference. Gladwell remarks:
David’s victory over Goliath, in the Biblical account, is held to be an anomaly. It was not. Davids win all the time. The political scientist Ivan Arreguín-Toft recently looked at every war fought in the past two hundred years between strong and weak combatants. The Goliaths, he found, won in 71.5 per cent of the cases.
He always jumps back to the basketball example and has interviews with amazingly successful NCAA basketball coach Rick Pitino who talks about the press and overachieving.
Great article, check it out
A few months ago i plowed through the book Slash which is “written” by the Guns N’ Roses guitarist Slash. I’m a huge fan so i really enjoyed the read. Here are some interesting things i learned in the book:
It’s a good book and really interesting if you’re a Guns N’ Roses fan. It’s a bit longer than The Dirt – Motley Crue’s autobiography – and it only focuses on one member so it has much more depth. I recommend it. 3.5 to 4 stars (out of 5).
This is from my recent reading of the book Elsewhere USA. In the book it describes that similar to the African areas of Mali and Malawi, America also practices a form of polygamy. All thanks to the laws of economics and biology.
A the book describes, one of the best predictors of polygamy in a society is income inequality. While America doesn’t approach at all those of some African villages, we are certainly number one in the Western world in income inequality.
As Elsewhere describes:
The linkage between economic inequality and polygamy is two-way – that is, polygamy both causes and is caused by inequality. Let’s start with the basic fact that a man can produce thousands of offspring by spreading his seed while a woman is limited to around twelve or so. But when women choose their mates, they are not just after who can provide good sperm; they also want to make sure that a would-be father both has enough resources to support a child and will, in fact, invest time and money in that child.
Confronted with a distribution of income in which the distinctions across potential suitors is not terribly great, a woman will still try to land the best catch, but she probably will not be willing to share her man. If there are a thousand fish in the sea; it’s not worth it to take one half (or 1/3, or 1/4) of the resources of any given man. Better to go down a notch and enjoy the complete attention, time and money of the next richest fellow. However, sometimes the distinctions between men are so great as to alter the calculations. If a few men control almost all of the wealth while the vast majority have very little to offer in terms of a stable source of income, then it may be worth it to be the 4th wife of the very rich man rather than the first and only of a very poor one. At least you can guarantee your babies will eat well.
Now that the US income is becoming increasingly unequal, we’re becoming polygamists as well. Our version however are different than the African versions in these ways:
The first point called “dynamic polygamy” can also be called “serial monogamy” It’s a semantic difference. As the author says,
If “being married” means producing offspring and/or having ongoing mutual responsibilities, then when you get a divorce, you are not really pressing the erase button, you are just building another thatched hut across town where you may set up with another wife while still paying child support, alimony, or plain old respects to the first. It doesn’t matter if the 2nd marriage started as an affair during the first, the end result from the point of view of family responsibilities is more or less the same: you have two wives (or husbands).
Our tendency to divorce is in many ways extremely similar to the form of polygamy that’s occurring in Africa. This results in something interesting things in America. For instance, many women today don’t get married at all as not all men have the means to support a family. It’s been calculated that there are now 60 eligible men for every 100 women.
Over the past 20 years, other things are happening in society. According to the book, the concept of a “starter wife” is becoming more and more uncommon whereas dual-earner mairrages (both people earn high wages) dual-poor marraiges are rapidly increasing. The rich are getting more rich and the poor are getting more poor (two low earning folks).
It’s interesting to think of divorce as a form of polygamy. When you hear that – how does that make you feel? Is it fair?
Pretty good clip of movie quotes
A few months ago i read the book Elsewhere USA at danah boyd’s suggestion. It didn’t disappoint. While it wasn’t as good as last year’s Generation Me (which i couldn’t stop blogging about), it did have some good insights.
The point of the book is the strange paradox that is occuring in America. People used to work and struggle so their kids wouldn’t have to. Leiseure was something you attained at a certain income level. Today however, this isn’t the case. For the first time in history, the more we are paid, the more hours we work. The rewards for working are so great they make the “opportunity cost” of not working all the more great. The result is that there is no longer a leisure-class of elites. The rich are working harder than ever. Now, leisure is something for the poor. There is now a crazy measure of the income elasticity of leisure and this fundamentally changes how many of us (including me) live. As it says in the book,
Obviously, this change has affected not just when we work, but also how we play, how we love, how we raise our children – how we live
Some interesting parts in the book are:
In medieval Cathoic Europe, poverty was a virtue and to profit off one’s fellow man was considered evil. The Protestant Reformation changed all that which led to one-on-one relationships to go and also spiritual insecurity. This led to working harder and acculating lots of money. Success as salvation was a new incentive structure. However, the Great Depression, the New Deal, and the trade unionism eclipsed the Protestant Work Ethic in the mid 1900’s. There was a truce found between expansive corporate America and organzied labor such that a communitarian eithos could reign supreme.
The rift remained though as Protestants valued thrift over consumption, work over leisure, and meritocracy over social connections. But large organizations like IBM and GM put a premium on teamwork, compromise and being a “company man.”
Today these have been resolved through the redefinition of: leisure is work and work is leisure. Consumption is investment (home equity loan is savings). Social connectoins don’t indicate nepotism but rather social capital and entrepreneurial skill. Loyalty is replaced by value (you show your value by calculated displays of disloyalty – displaying offers from competitors).
——-
While it doesn’t offer many solutions, the book is thought provoking and a good read. I recommend you pick it up.