Sunday, September 26, 2010

Long hunches and the connected mind: where good ideas come from

Ideas and innovation seems to be a favorite theme of mine. Here is nice short discussion of where good ideas come from. I love the connection Steven Johnson of TedGlobal (July 2010) makes between coffee houses and GPS. My main takeaways from the 18-minute video below might be familiar to you already:
  1. Chance favors the connected mind.
  2. Good ideas come more from long hunches than from flashes of insight.



Related to the above, you might enjoy Jessa Gamble's 4-minute talk "Our natural sleep cycle". It helps me justify my own early morning awake moments.

Saturday, September 25, 2010

Using Songs for Second Language Acquistion

Let's just say that at least two professors, not both who teach French, have concurred with me on the value of using songs in the "second" (L2) language one is learning. My L2 is French. Here is a treasure trove of French songs, all by Georges Brassens.
My time is short these days, but I will come back to Georges Brassens, I'm sure. In Spanish we have a word "cantautor" (singer-author) for a singer who is also a song writer. I'll have to check to see if there is a special word for it, but I am certain that Georges classifies as singer-poet. Yes, the order of the words matters. The singing attracts our attention, but the poetry holds us.

Some of the songs are on the risqué side, such as Vénus callipyge (video on YouTube). But then, this is also a source of motivation in L2 learning!

Monday, September 20, 2010

Crowd Accelerated Innovation ≠ Shallow Thinking

I've thought much about and enthusiastically participated in local crowd accelerated innovation on the web in my organization. With Google's introduction last week of instant search results as we type our queries, the realization of how the web and online video affects how we share and think has risen again. Here are two articles that highlight the possibilities very nicely:

  1. The secret power of YouTube
    by Chris Anderson of TED.com for CNN.com
  2. Mind control: Is the internet changing how we think?
    by Matt Ford of CNN, quoting Nicholas Carr's book The Shallows: What the Internet is Doing to our Brain
Before it slips my mind, because indeed, I do think in shorter bursts than before the internet became so ingrained in my lifestyle, I am now even more motivated to learn how to create and use video as a tool to share ideas. And I will embrace the solitude and clarity of thinking that waking up early in the morning provides me to think at length on a particular topic.