August-ish 2007 Roundup
Okay, so I am not clockwork regular in posting roundups, but at least it's here. August and the first week of September saw a good deal of interesting activity on Ribbonfarm. Two minor milestones: first, I crossed 100 comments for a base of 27 articles, so that's still nearly 4 comments per article, which makes me happy. Second, I got my first ever traffic spike from a social bookmarking site (StumbleUpon) -- the piece on cartograms generated the spike (probably thanks to reader Kapsio posting a link to it at a popular data visualization site -- thanks Kaps!). Anyway, here is a summary of the posts since the last update:
I had a total of 11 articles. So I am slowing down compared to my frenetic pace in July (with 17 articles in 4 weeks), but hey, the first-stage booster rockets have to be the most powerful!
In the science and technology bucket we have:
- Digital Philosophy I: Is the Real Line Real? the first of a three part series on whether the universe is really a a discrete place, looks at the interesting questions raised by Chaitin's constant and algorithmic information theory
- The second part, Digital Philosophy II: Are Cellular Automata Important? takes a look at 2d and 1d cellular automata, self-replicating machines and ponders the imponderable question "Should we take Stephen Wolfram seriously?" Look out for Part III on quantum computing and digital physics in the next few weeks
- I offer up my own modest contribution to digital-age sociology by proposing a revamped version of the famous "50 foot rule" of collaboration in The Twitter Zone and Virtual Geography. The piece owes a lot to an antipodal collaboration with reader tubelite in India, via comments on the precursor piece The 50-Foot Rule Reconsidered.
- In yet another anchor post preparing for future posts, I cover the idea of Open Innovation, famously championed by Henry Chesbrough, in Open Innovation, or is Business War?
- This could have been in the science/technology bucket -- Seth Godin's Dip and Multi-Armed Bandits, a piece on the bestselling The Dip by marketing guru Seth Godin, establishing a connection to the bandit problem in decision science.
- In the first ever skewering on Ribbonfarm, I review Blue Ocean Strategy and come to the conclusion that it is a really bad book. In fact the piece proposes a whole 7 sins of bad business books for your entertainment based on BOS.
- Finally, in Dan Pink, Howard Gardner and the Da Vinci Mind, I cover some recent ideas on the kind of personality and mind it will take to be successful at the innovation game in the 21st century.
- In The Parrot I talk about a parrot for reasons that will become clear if you read the piece
- In 10 Years in America, I celebrate my 10th anniversary as a resident of the US by mulling some random observations on ducks, racoons, sandwiches and hamburgers. This one has cool pictures!
- And finally, in Meditations on Cataloging the Telluride Library, I talk about the metaphysics of taxonomies