alexknows...stuff

this is totally an ego-blog. people say nice things, and mean things. I do awesome things, i do stupid things. It's all going on here.
Jun 02
Permalink
If I’ve learned anything from Spread Firefox, BarCamp, coworking and the like, it’s that propaganda needs to be free to be effective. In other words, you’re not going to convince people of your way of thinking if you lock down what you have, especially if what you have is culture, a mindset or some other philosophical approach that helps people narrow down what constitutes right and wrong.”
and
“On the one hand, there’s uncertainty about how to build a “national identity”-slash-business on top of lots of user data (that, oh yeah, I thought was supposed to be “owned” by the creators), and on the other, a model of the web, that embraces all its failings, nuances and spaghetti code, but that, more than likely, will stand the test of time as a durable provider of the kind of liberty and agency and free choice that wins out time and again throughout history.”

-Chris Messina, writing at factory city about open standardsm data portability, and market competition, in this case for data, protocols and so called “open” code.
May 14
Permalink
Bad culture happens as well. Trying to unlearn the bad habits of two years in a public company with a lot of high level control is difficult. Basically, it’s the same no matter how you do it: force yourself into good habits. Encourage those in others. Enable your employees. But throw the mission statement document in the fire.
May 12
Permalink
They call it “creative” because they want a wide enough range of industries to show economic impact. They put “economy” on the end so they can justify the city spending money on it. Or at least that’s my perspective.
— Matthew Fisher, regarding the so-called “creative economy”
May 09
Permalink
At my wedding, I’m going to have 200 guests. Not 200 users.
May 08
Permalink
Planned economies have as many unintended consequences as the free-for-all we have in the United States.
Permalink
On the one hand, the event struck me as an effort by the city-funded Innovation Philadelphia organization to make a case for why the Nutter administration should provide funding for it. Currently, the city budget contains no money for the agency, which was created during Mayor Street’s first term.
Permalink
We decided to lose all regard for professionalism in Philadelphia. We were three hours late for an interview after struggling with Manhattan traffic. I conducted the interview in a backwards San Francisco Giants hat and a muscle tight Uppercut Boxing T-shirt. Alex Hillman, founder of Independents Hall, didn’t seem to mind.

Independents Hall is like a gym for entrepreneurs. Young business people normally working from home can come together to feed off the entrepreneurial energy bouncing around in the building.

The two story building is only a few blocks away from the real Independence Hall. The bottom floor is home to about ten scruffy males in their twenties sipping coffee and intensely staring at computer screens. We headed upstairs to the loft for a bird’s eye view of the computer lab before sitting on a hand-me-down couch for an interview with Alex.

Alex is twenty-four years old and fits in nicely with the demographic of customers attracted to Independents Hall. He sports a look that suggests he hasn’t shaven in a few days. The t-shirt he wore says “Viddler,” advertising the newest video sharing website he was into.

The most interesting response in the interview was what Alex would say to his twenty-two year old self.

“Embrace chaos. I don’t know if I didn’t do it then, but I didn’t consciously do it then,” Alex thoughtfully said. “Now, it’s like every day I know something crazy is going to happen and there’s nothing I can do about it. How can I capture that energy and spin it someplace positive?”

The piece of advice was perfect for where I was at that point in the journey. I had gotten a taste of what embracing chaos was like in New York, but could the craziness actually be spun into someplace positive on the road from Philadelphia back to Phoenix?
— Brett Farmiole-Pursue the Passion
May 07
Permalink
most of my successes in life are the result of a series of well planned accidents.
— me, of course
Apr 30
Permalink
I believe the best software is written by small groups of people who have both passion and vision. Passion is easy to define; you care so deeply about something that it wounds you if it’s done poorly. Vision can mean different things, but I mean the ability to not just come up with new ideas, but to actually be able to see how they would integrate with people’s lives. Vision without passion gives you a guy who sitting on couch saying, ‘Flying cars! Wave of the future! Mark my word, the guy who invents that’s going to be rich… pass the chips.’ Passion without vision gives you America’s current political situation, where we allow huge companies to destroy the world but pass laws to make sure nobody marries a turtle.
— Wil Shipley, via evhead
Apr 14
Permalink
Tara Hunt: “Marketing is the price you pay for creating mediocre products.