Francis Hemingway on Business Innovation

Aug 22
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Why bother filing at all? Everything we know about the workplace suggests that few if any knowledge workers ever refer to documents again once they have filed them away, which should come as no surprise, since paper is a lousy way to archive information. It’s too hard to search and it takes up too much space. Besides, we all have the best filing system ever invented, right there on our desks—the personal computer. That is the irony of the P.C.: the workplace problem that it solves is the nineteenth-century anxiety. It’s a better filing cabinet than the original vertical file … The problem that paper solves, by contrast, is the problem that most concerns us today, which is how to support knowledge work. In fretting over paper, we have been tripped up by a historical accident of innovation, confused by the assumption that the most important invention is always the most recent. Had the computer come first—and paper second—no one would raise an eyebrow [at people using paper]
Aug 20
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Olympic Medals by Country

Here’s a map I created using Google Spreadsheet and data from the New York Times: I’m hoping to improve it to give include data about medals per dollar of GDP per capita, inspired by this article on the BBC website.

And here’s the BBC data mapped showing Medals per $US million million GDP:

Aug 19
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Aug 16
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That’s where the money is
— Willie Sutton on being ask why he robbed banks.
Aug 15
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Fascinating talk on a really neat piece of technology: I’ve used the open-source implementation (Avahi) several times to connect my laptop to my printer at home and it works with absolutely no hassle.

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You won’t read a better book on teams anywhere else this year
— FT reviewer Stefan Stern on the book “The Last Amateurs: To Hell and Back With The Cambridge Boat Race Crew” by Mard de Rond
Aug 14
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A photo of me at the Physics Dinner 2007.

A photo of me at the Physics Dinner 2007.