
For the past few months I have been seeing an executive coach, which has been really helpful for me. One of my issues is that I tend to keep too much work bottled up in my inbox / in my to do list. This is a drain on productivity and a source of stress. Part of what I’m working on is keeping things moving - through me and outside of me, and so far it’s been working. Part of the coaching process has been sussing out *why* i tend to do this (as opposed to how, or to jumping to surface solutions). Clearly fear — of some kind — is a part of it. One thing that occurred to me last night is that working on a lot of things simultaneously and keeping them all moving is kind of like skiing — at a certain point you have to stop fighting gravity and jump down into the fall line. In other words, point the skis down the hill, let gravity do its thing, and adapt as you pick up speed. But get moving and stay moving. There is something in this that’s similar to being naked online. Maybe the answer is to ski naked online. Maybe I’m taking things too far now… // image: http://bfitsandiego.com/bfit/category/fitness-locations/adventure-ski-school-encinitas


I’ve always loved Mozilla's mission and tactics - using awesome consumer products as the lever to make the web a better place to be. That’s why I’m happy to join their WebFWD accelerator program as a scout. That just means that I’m one of many folks who are on the lookout for products and companies that would be a good fit for the WebFWD program. WebFWD is a slightly different kind of accelerator — it’s not a full-court-press in-person bootcamp, and it doesn’t take an equity stake for participation. The idea is to give promising projects that advance the mozilla mission that extra boost they need to become real (or even more real). WebFWD recently graduated its second class, and has just welcomed its third. You can see the whole list of projects and companies in the WebFWD family here. Here’s to the continued development of products and businesses that promote openness, innovation & opportunity on the Web.
I consider myself an accidental policy person. In other words: I didn’t set out to study and understand how our policy decisions impact the world we live in. Rather, I came at it from the perspective of design and experience (both real world and virtual) and ended up backing into the policy implications, almost my accident. This was the case both in my early career when I worked in city planning and in my more recent career in technology. When I first started studying cities, my core interest was at the design level. What makes one building “feel” better than another? Why are some streets nice to walk along and others aren’t? What makes one neighborhood feel comfortable, intimate and vibrant, and another cold, lifeless and isolating? My initial idea was: well, they are just designed better. As if any one person (an architect, say) had the power and vision to create a place that felt a certain way and that fostered certain kinds of activities. So I studied architecture and urban design. What I ultimately learned was: good design is an important part of the mix, but it’s hardly enough. Given any physical place, what it “feels” like is as much a result of the policy, political and historical contexts as it is a result of the design itself. And: it takes a whole lot of effort to align the various forces present in any project in such a way that something interesting and wonderful can happen. Take any great place, and there is no doubt a history of high drama behind how it got hat way. For instance, the streets of NYC are nicer to walk around these days because lots of people fought hard to make them that way. It takes big balls and political toughness to make these kinds of things happen. It’s the same way with technology and the internet. I was drawn into tech from the design side — I liked to design websites and build applications that looked good, felt good, and created a nice experiences. But yet again, that was just the entry point for drawing me — unwittingly at first — into conversations about things like web standards, open data, network architecture, copyright, patents, privacy, and spectrum policy. It’s easy to look at the things we like on the internet: wikipedia, twitter, kickstarter, etc etc etc, and assume that they are the result of good design alone; and clearly they are the product of tremendous design effort. But they are also able to exist because of the infrastructure — both technical and legal — they’re built on. Clearly I am drawing on my internet centrism here by using cities and the internet as examples, but that’s just what I think about. I’m sure you could look at other fields and tease out similar connections between design, experience and the underlying policies and infrastructure that make them possible. Anyway, I guess what I’m saying is that it’s important for us not to take for granted what we have, to try and understand what it really is that makes things great, and to get upset when we feel like we’re going down the wrong path.

For the past few months I have been seeing an executive coach, which has been really helpful for me. One of my issues is that I tend to keep too much work bottled up in my inbox / in my to do list. This is a drain on productivity and a source of stress. Part of what I’m working on is keeping things moving - through me and outside of me, and so far it’s been working. Part of the coaching process has been sussing out *why* i tend to do this (as opposed to how, or to jumping to surface solutions). Clearly fear — of some kind — is a part of it. One thing that occurred to me last night is that working on a lot of things simultaneously and keeping them all moving is kind of like skiing — at a certain point you have to stop fighting gravity and jump down into the fall line. In other words, point the skis down the hill, let gravity do its thing, and adapt as you pick up speed. But get moving and stay moving. There is something in this that’s similar to being naked online. Maybe the answer is to ski naked online. Maybe I’m taking things too far now… // image: http://bfitsandiego.com/bfit/category/fitness-locations/adventure-ski-school-encinitas


I’ve always loved Mozilla's mission and tactics - using awesome consumer products as the lever to make the web a better place to be. That’s why I’m happy to join their WebFWD accelerator program as a scout. That just means that I’m one of many folks who are on the lookout for products and companies that would be a good fit for the WebFWD program. WebFWD is a slightly different kind of accelerator — it’s not a full-court-press in-person bootcamp, and it doesn’t take an equity stake for participation. The idea is to give promising projects that advance the mozilla mission that extra boost they need to become real (or even more real). WebFWD recently graduated its second class, and has just welcomed its third. You can see the whole list of projects and companies in the WebFWD family here. Here’s to the continued development of products and businesses that promote openness, innovation & opportunity on the Web.
I consider myself an accidental policy person. In other words: I didn’t set out to study and understand how our policy decisions impact the world we live in. Rather, I came at it from the perspective of design and experience (both real world and virtual) and ended up backing into the policy implications, almost my accident. This was the case both in my early career when I worked in city planning and in my more recent career in technology. When I first started studying cities, my core interest was at the design level. What makes one building “feel” better than another? Why are some streets nice to walk along and others aren’t? What makes one neighborhood feel comfortable, intimate and vibrant, and another cold, lifeless and isolating? My initial idea was: well, they are just designed better. As if any one person (an architect, say) had the power and vision to create a place that felt a certain way and that fostered certain kinds of activities. So I studied architecture and urban design. What I ultimately learned was: good design is an important part of the mix, but it’s hardly enough. Given any physical place, what it “feels” like is as much a result of the policy, political and historical contexts as it is a result of the design itself. And: it takes a whole lot of effort to align the various forces present in any project in such a way that something interesting and wonderful can happen. Take any great place, and there is no doubt a history of high drama behind how it got hat way. For instance, the streets of NYC are nicer to walk around these days because lots of people fought hard to make them that way. It takes big balls and political toughness to make these kinds of things happen. It’s the same way with technology and the internet. I was drawn into tech from the design side — I liked to design websites and build applications that looked good, felt good, and created a nice experiences. But yet again, that was just the entry point for drawing me — unwittingly at first — into conversations about things like web standards, open data, network architecture, copyright, patents, privacy, and spectrum policy. It’s easy to look at the things we like on the internet: wikipedia, twitter, kickstarter, etc etc etc, and assume that they are the result of good design alone; and clearly they are the product of tremendous design effort. But they are also able to exist because of the infrastructure — both technical and legal — they’re built on. Clearly I am drawing on my internet centrism here by using cities and the internet as examples, but that’s just what I think about. I’m sure you could look at other fields and tease out similar connections between design, experience and the underlying policies and infrastructure that make them possible. Anyway, I guess what I’m saying is that it’s important for us not to take for granted what we have, to try and understand what it really is that makes things great, and to get upset when we feel like we’re going down the wrong path.
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