Musing about “laziness”

I keep getting told that perception is everything. I don’t know about you, but I’m one of those guys who finds that statement puerile. It’s like telling me “Hypocrisy is OK, live with it”. Not getting my drift? Let me take an example. “Laziness”. Some people get called lazy because you see them lounging around … Continue reading “Musing about “laziness””

They don’t all use the same physics

When I was a mere stripling I used to enjoy playing text-based adventure games; as I grew older, I watched them morph into graphic representations,  as games like Larry The Lounge Lizard came out. But I never really made the cut into the later rounds of MMOG and virtual worlds. I did venture into Second … Continue reading “They don’t all use the same physics”

Facebook and the Enterprise: Part 8: Musing about signals

First catch your hare. So wrote Hannah Glasse, in the recipe for Jugged Hare, to be found in her 1747 book The Art of Cookery. [When I first heard the quotation, I was given the impression, mistakenly, that it was a quotation from Mrs Beeton]. In today’s globalised knowledge-worker-dominated world, most enterprises have figured out … Continue reading “Facebook and the Enterprise: Part 8: Musing about signals”

Musing about work patterns and wasting time

Sometime in the early 1980s I heard this (probably apocryphal) story about Pablo Picasso: The legendary artist was sitting quietly at a boulevard cafe in Paris, when his reverie was rudely disturbed by a passing tourist. Said tourist gushingly asked Pablo if he would run off a quick sketch for him, promising to pay for … Continue reading “Musing about work patterns and wasting time”

More musing about open multisided platforms

The Wall Street Journal, in today’s print edition page C8, has an article headlined Facebook’s software boon. [The link should lead to a summarised version of the article that has not yet been paywalled.] The article discusses the purchase of Where I’ve Been (a Facebook application) by Expedia (or, more accurately, Expedia’s TripAdvisor unit) for … Continue reading “More musing about open multisided platforms”