darien
- Karma
- 282
- Created
- August 30, 2009 (16y ago)
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the best way to encourage (or to have) new ideas isn't to fetishise the "spark of genius", to retreat to a mountain cabin in order to "be creative", or to blabber interminably about "blue-sky", "out-of-the-box" thinking. Rather, it's to expand the range of your possible next moves - the perimeter of your potential - by exposing yourself to as much serendipity, as much argument and conversation, as many rival and related ideas as possible; to borrow, to repurpose, to recombine. This is one way of explaining the creativity generated by cities, by Europe's 17th-century coffee-houses, and by the internet. Good ideas happen in networks; in one rather brain-bending sense, you could even say that "good ideas are networks". Or as Johnson also puts it: "Chance favours the connected mind." (http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2010/oct/19/steven-john...
- Happy Halloween WebGL Mini-Game (webgl.com)
- WebGL Visualization of Obama's Reddit AMA (webgl.com)
- The reason we don't pay for online news (blogs.sfweekly.com)
Americans still spend much more time with print newspapers than they do with news online -- one Nielsen study found that Internet users spent an average of 38 minutes total per month on newspaper sites. "What that says…
- 9.5mm Firefox browsers use Adblock Plus Daily (addons.mozilla.org)
This means about 10% of all firefox browsers on any given day block online ads. (See http://blog.mozilla.com/addons/2009/08/11/how-many-firefox-users-use-add-ons/) Is it right for mozilla to advocate adblock? Is mozilla…