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  • Clearing the Morning Fog

    February 24, 2014

    It’s 8:53AM. I got out of bed about 53 minutes ago when the alarm went off, blaring NPR into my right ear. As I showered, I thought rambling thoughts about things I had to do today to feel like I was active. It occurred to me that I was being non-judgmental about it, too; I have learned to be kinder with myself, I suppose. I filed a mental note to not let that get to my head, which was a sign that I still had a ways to go with this “kindness” shtick.

    I made it downstairs and fed the hungry cats, who were patiently milling around the vicinity of my living room office, then sprinting toward the kitchen whenever it seemed I was going to move in that direction. Cats fed, I powered up the desktop workstation, a Windows 8.1 64-bit monster I’d built a couple years ago that was inexorably slipping into obsolescence. It takes a couple of minutes to fully come up to speed, so I like to have it ready when I’m ready to do work.

    Work. What work? So many possibilities. Also, I had decided that I would be MINDFUL today of how I went about planning and doing the creative work, as part of the Information Nirvana series of articles that popped into my head over the weekend. So here I am, in the cloud of fuzziness, watching and waiting to see what I’ll do so I can live-blog my own stupid head.

    Well, hm. First thing is to force myself to list things that I know I want to do. This takes surprising effort, so I am going to proceduralize it. First, the things I can remember:

    • Pay my commercial printer. I’m going to leave a credit card on file, one that earns Southwest Airline miles, and start paying that way. I’ll also funnel all the money received from sales into paying off that credit card, which would be amazing because it is one of two major debt sources remaining. And I’ll earn “points” that I can convert into airplane trips. However, to do this I need to set up one of my checking accounts as a “funding source” so I can pay electronically, and there is the inevitable accounting process I need to figure out. Technically I could just do some transfers, which I guess I can do. That means I need to keep track of this accounting somewhere, and there really isn’t a place for it yet.
    • Podcast Recording – Mondays are “me” days, and I try to record a local podcast with my buddy Sid at 11AM. Afterwards we get lunch. I’ve got a couple of hours. I can possibly combine a trip to the bank with this beforehand.
    • Side Project for Client – Although I am feeling kind of slammed, I took on a small project for a friend doing a startup. I had to defer …

    — OH AND HERE IS THE CAT TO SCREW UP MY WORK SESSION —

    One of my cats, Kat — WORK SESSION RESUME —

    … I had to defer the project until after my recent trip to UCLA, and today I need to put in some progress on it to at least get my head around it. It’s visual design for a report based on a cool concept, so I’m technically looking forward to it. It’s a big cloud of fuzzy uncertainty right now, as I don’t know what I’m going to do yet, but I trust that when I’m faced with it I’ll figure something out. So, in the meantime, I can just not worry about it.

    That’s everything that comes to mind. Oh, I’d like to make some progress on the whole “Information Nirvana” thing too. I’ve been thinking about what platform to start this with, and I think for now I’ll run a big InDesign document as my “continuity starting place” for the current projects. Not ideal, but it has the ability to layer multiple text blocks and images on the same page, and handle multiple pages.

    Ok, my thoughts exhausted (it’s now 915AM) I need to do due dilligence and check (1) my google calendar and (2) my Trello board.

    • Google Calendar Says: NOTHING SCHEDULED TODAY…WOO HOO! Other than the podcast, which I confirmed last night to start at 11AM. I also remembered that I was invited to “Women in Technology Hangout” tomorrow night for “show and tell tech”. I know a couple of the women in the group, and it’s nice to be invited into their women’s clubhouse. I guess that means I’m “cool” :-)
    • Trello Says: Oh, I need to call about my haircut on Tuesday next week to confirm which day it is. I can do that now. I really hate using the phone. But then I just remembered, I can SKYPE call numbers!!! And Skype is already open! I struggle momentarily with their terrible morphing UI to figure out how to find a contact. I power on the audio subsystem by thumbing the power switch of the vertically-mounted AV receiver to my right. I dial the number! Ooops…they are closed on Mondays, so no one picks up. Sigh. I try not to think of this is as a wasted bit of effort, because I already hate using the phone and don’t need any more negativity around it.

    There are a few things in Trello that I’ve been ignoring, like setting up appointments with the dentist and eye doctor, that I will continue to ignore. There’s also setting up SKUs for various products, which I’ve been blowing-off because they seem tedious. But at least they are there in Trello to nag me. And that is somewhat reassuring.

    It’s now 9:24, and I’m going to write up my three things for the day, plus any other sequencing chores. I’ve already forgotten what I wrote above, so I scroll up to see…

    • Pay the Printer: Accounting Setup, Transfer Money, Drop by to set up Credit Card. Before 11AM.
    • Record Podcast: Get to Sid’s by 11AM and setup. Lunch follows.
    • Look at Client Side Project: This also entails setting up the InDesign project file.

    Now I need a place to write this down. I grab an ETP Notebook and fill it out:

    ETP NOTEBOOK I also added a few extra things, because after 4PM or so the day becomes open. I usually am not very productive that late in the day, so I put light review (UCLA) and exploration tasks (Info Nirvana Platform) down as possibilities.

    It’s now 9:39AM. I’ve added about 25 minutes to my startup routine by blogging it, I estimate. I also have noticed what a difference having a clean desk makes in being able to find my ETP Notebook on it. All the junk that used to be on it is now on a shelf to my right. I’d post a picture of it, but it’s backlit against the sun so I’ll have to wait until it gets darker outside. Now, I keep my desk as clean as possible because the rule is NOTHING IS ALLOWED TO LIVE ON IT except for the keyboard, the mouse, and whatever project is at hand.

    A CLEAN DESK

    And with that…it’s time to start the day and see how it goes. In addition to the day’s work, my shadow goal is to monitor my creation progress and figure out how to support it better. I want to have one place to go and keep track of continuity of the day-to-day work. That “one place” doesn’t exist in perfect form yet, so I’m going to prototype it with my existing tools. Ultimately, though, I want to roll-up some software that will help in the ways that I outlined in the last post about information nirvana and creative support.

    It’s now 945AM. Time to do some (ugh) accounting! After I make some tea…

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    DSri Seah
  • Side Quest: Modeling a Better Process Journal

    February 23, 2014

    After writing about my missing “creative support” stack earlier, I pondered what to do next. It occurred to me that I wanted both a process and an improved set of tools, but I didn’t know exactly what that meant. I grabbed an index card and forced myself to write something down:

    King of Process Journals Yes, the king of process journals, or rather the process that would go into one. The first thing I thought of was having a single place where I could go and be immediately immersed in the work. This is a distinctly DIFFERENT ACTIVITY than planning to do the work. What I want is the mental equivalent of a well-stocked laboratory where I can shut out the rest of the world. The contents of the laboratory dictate the problem that will be worked on next.

    The moment I am in this mental lab, I should see everything that I need to pick up from where I left off:

    • the current list of problems to solve, and what is know about the problem, to the left. The current problem being solved is highlighted.
    • A larger working space, where I can easily write in Markdown formatted text and drag-in links and photos, linked to the currently highlighted problem.
    • A running list of questions to answer later, as they come up. Each of them can be highlighted and answered.
    • A running list of taxonomies, lists, or categories where related facts or links to blocks can be assembled.
    • A synopsis area that describes what is being worked on, and what is being learned. When the problem is closed-out, the useful deliverable should be made available too.
    • A time stamp when the current problem was entered.

    Essentially, a bunch of lists and words that can be related to each other and selected. I can sort of imagine what it looks like (similar to Scrivener in some ways, xmonad in others), and I think it might even been something I can prototype using NodeJS and Express, two bits of technology I have been getting familiar with for another project. But in the meantime, I think I can prototype the idea without code by using InDesign and a bunch of text boxes. I want to define the major objects and features in a day of experimentation.

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    DSri Seah
  • The Quest for Information Nirvana, Part II: Making the Distinction between Work and Productivity

    February 23, 2014

    Yesterday, I expressed my desire for a streamlined documentation and tracking system, because (1) I have too many tools to check and (2) I don’t feel they are supporting my work as well as I think they could. I still feel a lot of friction when I’m clicking on all these tools, which reduces my stamina in doing the actual work.

    This morning, it occurred to me that the problem isn’t that they’re bad tools; they are all “best of class” in one way or another. Where they fail is in supporting my way of doing work. So what is my way, exactly? Time for a bit of investigation! (more…)

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    DSri Seah
  • The Quest for Information Nirvana, Part I

    February 21, 2014

    I’m back from Los Angeles, where I met face-to-face for the first time with the UCLA-based investigators of Science Through Technology-Enhanced Play (aka STEP). I’m teamed-up once more as part of the learning science company Inquirium, and I’m rather excited to apply some of my game design experience in a live project involving science education. The interesting thing about STEP it’s about teaching science to much younger children, who are often thought not to have the required cognitive development for systematic thinking. However, the principle investigators (PIs) are conducting research into the use of play, supported by motion tracking and augmented reality graphics, to test the notion that collaborative storytelling may make a difference. That’s my understanding of it, anyway, as the guy who is helping implement the browser-based graphics engine as part of the Inquirium team.

    I had a number of insights while I was out visiting UCLA:

    • It’s pretty cool to be in a place where there is learning and research going on all the time. The group doing the research at UCLA is a multi-disciplinary collection of experts who are trying new approaches that they are not familiar with, which is hugely exciting and challenging. Such an approach works when the involved parties can communicate easily and openly, and this has filled me with a kind of joy that I haven’t experienced in a while.
    • I was surprised to find that I wasn’t freaking out over the number of things to do. Partly that is because most of the technical issues have been resolved for this project, but also it’s that I have a new-found tolerance for my own speed of progress. In the past, I would fret about how slow I was at making progress, because the qualitative assessment was based on the expectations that I should be SUPER FAST at everything. Now, I am assessing my progress by the number of uncertainties successfully resolved every day, and am FINE with it. Patience: level up!

    I’m feeling the need, though, to revisit my documentation and task tracking systems again. Each project I’m on has a different set of document stores, because each project has different knowledge storage and communication requirements. Off the top of my head, I’m using:

    • Trello, with shared boards
    • Basecamp, across multiple accounts
    • Google Docs, across multiple accounts
    • Dropbox, via shared folders with multiple people
    • nvAlt, for note-taking on the Mac
    • Sublime Text 2, on Mac and Windows, for source code management
    • Bitbucket, for internal project source code management, multiple projects
    • Github, for client-related project source code management, multiple projects
    • Scrivener, on both Mac and Windows, for longer-form journaling
    • WordPress, in network multisite configuration, for this blog and related process journals
    • Bugherd, for one client’s various projects and ticket tracking
    • Local project storage, synched between Windows and Mac via Dropbox, for each job’s static digital resources
    • Physical 9×12 notebook, for sketching

    This is incredibly scattered, and a good part of my “start the project” resistance is just remembering where I’m supposed to look to find what I’m looking for.

    There’s a tool called Taco that I backed through a Kickstarter campaign that integrates a lot of services together on the digital side, which I should revisit to see how it can work for me. But I think I am looking for something even more fundamental, which is a rethinking of how I store and access information.

    I am at 2% reserve battery power, so more thoughts will follow later.

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    DSri Seah
  • I’m on “Lean Into Art” Episode 96

    February 14, 2014

    This has been a busy week of guest appearances! Last night I was on Rob Drozd and Rob Stenzinger’s video podcast Lean Into Art, two creative artist for which I have enormous respect. They do quite a bit of outreach and education in comic books, teaching kids through workshops in addition to publishing their own media. It was a pleasure to return to the show and catch up.

    Have a listen to us exploring the theme of identifying and pursuing the nature of “heartfelt goals”. A great time, as always!

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    DSri Seah