Told the Snook I’m going to Classy Coding this weekend and he responded with some absolutely brilliant Wodehouse-inspired pseudocode:
if (chum.isSpiffing()) { chum.greet("What, what?"); THE_DRONES.goToWith(chum); }
Told the Snook I’m going to Classy Coding this weekend and he responded with some absolutely brilliant Wodehouse-inspired pseudocode:
if (chum.isSpiffing()) { chum.greet("What, what?"); THE_DRONES.goToWith(chum); }
City Of Sydney Pledges No Resident Will Be More Than 800m Away From An Outdoor Exercise Station – Very cool. And Chippendale is specifically mentioned! I wonder if they’ll put it in the Peace Park or over on the green by Central Park.
Forest Walks Lodge, Tasmania: Walking the wild forest trail in northern Tasmania – Lovely review of the lodge we stayed in last November.
An Introvert’s Guide to Better Presentations — Medium – Following on from that last post, here’s Matt Haughey talking about how he prepares to give talks. I don’t think he’s as much of an introvert as he thinks he is. I have the exact same thoughts when I’m about to get up on stage. It’s unnerving and scary to have that many people look at you, regardless of how much of an extravert you are.
I took Matt’s advice recently and purchased the Beyond Bullet Points book. I haven’t finished reading it yet, but it’s already made a difference in how I approach giving talks. It’s quite heavily oriented around PowerPoint, but it’s pretty easily to ignore that stuff and focus on the approach to crafting a narrative for the audience.
Will the Real Introverts Please Stand Up? – Beautiful Minds – Scientific American Blog Network – Fascinating article. It seems that extraversion is more about “reward sensitivity” than gregariousness. I definitely get a dopamine rush from giving talks. (I was on a high for several hours after my talk at the Dream Collective Career Summit last week.)
This is particularly interesting: the 10 behaviours most uniquely predictive of extraversion (out of a list of 400):
Uh, other than going to a city council meeting, I’ve done all those. (I’ve pretty much given up on tanning though.)
Just as I did the last couple years, I will be participating in Frocktober 2015. If you haven’t heard of it, Frocktober raises funds and awareness for the Ovarian Cancer Research Foundation. Ovarian cancer is pretty awful, and one woman dies every ten hours from it. There is currently no early detection test, and women are usually diagnosed in the late stages of the disease – when the cancer has spread to other organs in the body. Since its inception, Frocktober supporters have donated more than $1 million to the OCRF. My challenge is to wear a different dress (i.e. “frock”) every day for the month of October. If you’d like to cheer me on and support this excellent cause, I have a fundraising page here. Last year my amazing supporters donated $924.30, and this year I’m aiming to hit a full $1000. Dig deep, people!
I’m also an official “Frocktober Ambassador” this year, so be prepared for a lot of posts and sharing about this excellent cause. And for any women out there – or even men! – you should definitely sign up and frock up. 🙂
The Eloquent Woman: Use a script or transcript to manage your speaking speed – Really good advice, and something I will be trying myself. I always worry that I speak too fast when presenting.
auntie pixelante › level design lesson: to the right, hold on tight – A detailed analysis of the opening level of Super Mario Brothers. Wow. I never thought about clever it was. So much thought went into it!
The ethics of modern web ad-blocking – Marco.org – In other news, I just installed Ghostery. I think of it as psychic penance for working (in the past) on websites with a truly evil set of tracking/advertising scripts.
A brief history of yarn in video games – Offworld – The sight of that Nintendo Knitting Machine ad made me hyperventilate until I got to the admission that it was never manufactured. DAMN.
Unravel looks pretty cool though!