Category: Reading
Books, & links to all kinds of stuff I found interesting
[Link]: No Dream Can Do Justice to You
The written word is powerful. Read aloud, it’s even more so.
Robert Caro’s Calendar As Inspiration
Amazing for anyone who has ever tried to write: Robert Caro’s calendar. He tried to write 1,000 words a day. On days he fails he includes his excuses in parentheses. (“lazy”)
From @wsj pic.twitter.com/DE69xIbImo— carolynryan 🏳️🌈🏓 (@carolynryan) November 23, 2021
[Link] The Third Space
Rob Miller on “third spaces” or Non-Offices as an alternative to the office:
In the old world, going to the office was a source of important social capital; it provided you with autonomy, mastery, and purpose, and with human connections and friendships, too. If you can get those things just as readily from other physical places, what does that mean for the future not just of offices, but of conventional employment?
Carlota Perez: Designing the transition: From Consumerism to sustainable ways of living
[Link] Remystifying Supply Chains
Venkatesh Rao’s post on the complexity – and more – of contemporary supply chains is a fantastic read:
Many engineered artifacts can be viewed largely in terms of their designed function without much loss in understanding. If you’re designing a truss, material properties and stress/strain calculations tell you almost everything you need to know about how it will perform in the field. You can go from paper-napkin sketch to CAD design, to prototype, to production artifact, via a largely one-way flow, with very little iteration, and not go too wrong.
This is not true of supply chains. Even though many of the pieces are designed and put together the way other engineering artifacts are, the effects of those behaviors are different. And they evolve over time.
Humor: Kickstart My Life
[Link] The Truth About Open Offices
Like many others, Ethan Bernstein and Ben Waber question the value of the open office in this article in the HBR from 2019. It’s particularly relevant when several companies are nudging their employees to return to the office, ostensibly for ‘collaboration‘ or ‘valuable human interaction‘:
When employees do want to interact, they choose the channel: face-to-face, video conference, phone, social media, email, messaging, and so on. Someone initiating an exchange decides how long it should last and whether it should be synchronous (a meeting or a huddle) or asynchronous (a message or a post). The recipient of, say, an email, a Slack message, or a text decides whether to respond immediately, down the road, or never.
Interestingly, the article also has this nugget, months before the pandemic driven remote-working enforcement:
If team members need to interact to achieve project milestones on time, you don’t want them working remotely.
[Link] More Sleep Stuff
A recent McKinsey post on addressing the sleep-loss epidemic through technology.
[Link] Ritual4Return
via “Reasons to be Cheerful”
Rituals abound when it comes to bringing people into the criminal justice system. Yet, there aren’t formal rituals to welcome people back to society after they serve time.
“No one can tell your story except for you and no one has gone through that type of suffering except for you. We can learn from each other’s pain, writing and any type of art”