Author Archives: Michael

Another reason against the office

This is the first day I’ve had to myself in over a week of commuting 3 hours back and forth to the lab. Due to the frequency of my commute, I’ve noticed an additional problem with the concept of an office: it creates a “work vs. life” dichotomy.

I’m normally involved in some form of intellectual inquiry just about all of the time. That used to include my doctoral research. However, now that my advisor expects me back in the lab on a regular basis, I’ve come to think of my home days as “days off”, and have come to save my research-related activities for days in which I end up in the lab. Since, as I have stated previously, I am already less productive in the lab due to nothing more than a mismatched environment and a long commute, this has the effect of reducing my productivity in the only place in which it persisted: my home. In other words, I’d be much more efficient across the board if I did not have to make this commute on a regular basis.

It applies to the office as well. One only needs to look at a family’s typical weekend activities to see this. If we could all work from home, home would become the workplace. Instead, we’ve sharply defined places in which work is done and in which it is not.

"Frozen Lemonade"

  1. Fill a cup with ice.
  2. Fill the space between the ice with lemonade.
  3. Blend.
  4. Charge twice as much for a cup mostly filled with ice.
  5. Profit!

The effect of the economy on the restaurant industry is interesting, to say the least.

Introverted vs. Extroverted Music

In addition to composing music myself, I also know several composers. Most (including myself) appear to be introverts, but some are extroverted. One quality I’ve noticed is the differing nature of the music composed by the introverts and extroverts, as well as the ideological differences as to what music is:

Introverts appear to write music primarily concerned with emotion, thought, and reflection. They appear more likely to view music as a crystallization or actualization of emotion or some other internal state. The music itself even appears to be introverted, and can be described with terms such as warm, reflective, expressive, tormented, serene, tranquil, or haunting.

Extroverts, on the other hand, appear to write music in response to exogenous stimuli. They are more likely to compose music that evokes past experiences, and will usually cite a desire to return to the state of mind that such experiences placed them in as the motivation behind their music. Words that may be used to describe their music include evocative, motive, energetic, playful, smooth, clean, or humorous.

That’s not to say that either are “better”; they aren’t. They’re just two sides of the same human coin.

My idea works

Even though I’m not the one testing it. Apparently a group of researchers also had this idea, and they, of course, have the tools to actually perform the research:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/7460743.stm

I bet the other ones do too. Just think of what I could do with the bio training I can’t seem to obtain!

Fail early, fail often, and don't work with groups unless they can do things faster than you can individually.

Failure at something is far from the worst you can do. The worst you can do is wait, because there’s a good chance you’ll have a very difficult time getting started at it again. There are a few consequences of this that I have considered: The first is to start fulfilling your life aspirations early. Perhaps you will fail at them, but you’ll have plenty of time to pick up the pieces and keep trying, whereas if you wait, you’ll spend a long time learning nothing about how to attain these goals. Delay perpetuates itself. The second is not to wait for anyone to catch up to you. Working in a group is invariably a slowdown, and it very often takes orders of magnitude more time to get something accomplished as a group than you could accomplish it individually. This happens with all groups, no matter how competent; the most competent group I’ve ever put together is still guilty of it. If you find a group lagging behind on something very important to you, don’t wait for them – do it yourself and go around them. Finally, as it applies to groups, it applied to other exogenous factors. Don’t wait too long for conditions to be right, as they may never be perfectly suitable and you may lose one chance waiting for another.

I think that’s one of the reasons I have so many accomplishments under my belt: while everyone is busy waiting, I’m doing. I started programming at 8, and since then, the scope of my aspirations has only continued to grow, even in the face of harsher and harsher external conditions and more insurmountable roadblocks.

Subconscious thought is more powerful

Much as we like to proclaim our knowledge the result of conscious learning, learning is a subconscious phenomenon. When something truly comes naturally to you, you need not think of it anymore – it’s just there. In fact, for me at least, truly knowing how to use a technique seems to be a shift from rational processing of the problem to an intuitive understanding of it.

To me, this indicates that techniques designed to enhance the conscious aspect of learning in neglect of the subconscious are counterproductive, and it pays more to focus on techniques for promoting an environment in which your subconscious can learn.

LanceRates is out!

I’ve just launched LanceRates.com, a website designed specifically to answer the question “How much should I charge?” in relation to freelance work. Users can post or look up market rates for any sort of freelance job, and the site integrates some rather advanced analysis techniques, including several machine learning algorithms, to give visitors an unprecedented level of information.

And just in case it still isn’t enough, we make the raw data available. All for free.

Some of today's ideas…

“New religions tend to resemble old ones because their founders tend to be religious.”
“The lack of role models during childhood is actually a precipitator of independent thought.”
“There are many ways to make money, but there is no restoring lost time.”
“Of all the evils of a society, the greatest is resistance to improvement.”