• Stop Searching for Your Passion: Do What You Do

    In many self-help and career blogs, people wax lyrical about how you should not cease searching for your ‘passion’; that elusive cause that you would be happy to devote your life to… something that makes ‘work’ feel like ‘play’.

    Gretchen Rubin of The Happiness Project, however, believes that asking yourself, “What’s my passion” may not be helpful.

    A twenty-something guy […] asked whether he should stay in a job that, although the people and the work were interesting, and the pay was good, wasn’t his passion.

    I’m paraphrasing, but in part Dan Pink answered, “I never ask myself ‘What’s my passion?’ That question is too huge. It’s not helpful.”

    It can be hard to identify your “passion,” but you can identify what you did last Sunday afternoon. “Do what you do” is useful because it directs you to look at your behavior, rather than to your ideas – which can be a clearer guide to preferences.

  • List of Eponymous Laws and Adages

    We’ve all heard of them: Boyle’s Law, Keynes’ Law, Metcalfe’s and Murphy’s.

    Wikipedia’s list of eponymous laws is your one-stop resource for those observations and predictions that are named after a person.

    For others that don’t make the cut, see the ‘adages’ category.

  • American Conservative Intelligentsia Voting Obama

    I’m slowly losing interesting in the U.S. presidential election now that the result seems inevitable (get on with the inauguration already). However, the Obama–McCain dance-off video (via Kottke) combined with a feature in the latest The American Conservative, has temporarily piqued my interest again.

    In said feature, The Right Choice?, 18 prominent conservatives were asked to discuss “how they are voting, whether they see their vote as advancing a particular issue or fitting into a larger strategy, and what conflicts their choice might entail”. This from Francis Fukuyama:

    America has been living in a dream world for the past few years, losing its basic values of thrift and prudence and living far beyond its means, even as it has lectured the rest of the world to follow its model. At a time when the U.S. government has just nationalized a good part of the banking sector, we need to rethink a lot of the Reaganite verities of the past generation regarding taxes and regulation. Important as they were back in the 1980s and ’90s, they just won’t cut it for the period we are now entering. Obama is much better positioned to reinvent the American model and will certainly present a very different and more positive face of America to the rest of the world.

    The split between those polled is overwhelmingly pro-third party, closely followed by Obama. McCain brings up the rear, drawing level with ‘no vote’.

    More Fukuyama? I implore you to read The End of History and the Last Man.

  • How to Win the Man Booker Prize

    Earlier this week I started reading a Man Booker winner for the first time: Vernon God Little. I’ve heard on good authority that it’s a great book and so far it’s living up to its reputation.

    As chairman of the 2008 Man Booker panel, Michael Portillo has been interviewed by The Economist and reflects on “what it feels like to read 50,000 pages of non-fiction in one go”. He discusses “the fine state of contemporary fiction, the importance of plausible endings (steering clear of implausible coincidences) and the value of good reading glasses.”

    via Intelligent Life

  • Charlie Brooker’s American Road Trip

    With a lengthy US road trip in the pipeline (’09 or ’10, hopefully), I was pleased to read Charlie Brooker’s commentary on his recent excursion to “the Kingdom of Road Trips”.

    My ideal holiday is a road trip. All that variety! And sitting down! It’s like watching television, but better, because every so often you get to step out into the landscape you’re watching and interact with it. And it’s in 3D! Perfect.

    Apart from one tiny problem. I can’t drive.

    We arrived in San Francisco and picked up our car: an unsexy people carrier the size and shape of an industrial refrigerator. A sports convertible may sound fun, but just try driving through the desert in one: within the hour you’d be hallucinating with sunstroke so badly, you’d swerve off the road, thinking you were traversing the rings of Saturn or driving inside Joan Collins’s face.

  • Eunoia: Beautiful Thinking

    Christian Bok’s Eunoia sounds like an interesting read. The BBC has a review of the book, complete with some (interesting) excerpts:

    Eunoia is the shortest word in English containing all five vowels – and it means “beautiful thinking”. It is also the title of Canadian poet Christian Bok’s book of fiction in which each chapter uses only one vowel.

    Mr Bok believes his book proves that each vowel has its own personality, and demonstrates the flexibility of the English language.

  • Higher IQ = Longer Life

    According to Lab Notes, new research is suggesting that a higher IQ is an indication that you may live a longer life.

    A number of recent studies have been finding that people who score lower on intelligence tests (notice how careful I am not to say “smarter people”) tend to die earlier than those who score higher. The effect doesn’t seem to arise from socioeconomic factors (well-off people score higher on IQ tests and also tend to be healthier), leaving scientists to reach for hypotheses. Maybe high-IQ people smoke less? eat healthier? follow doctors’ advice more?

    Now a new study, reported in the September issue of the journal Psychological Science, finds an even more intriguing connection.

    via Seed

  • Sex Map

    Remember xkcd’s map of online communities? Well, Franklin Veaux has gone and done the same… but for sex.

    I always thought I was pretty well-versed in slang of all types, but the sex map tells a different story. Hopefully this isn’t a sign of ageing.

    via Rudius

  • 10 Tips for Achieving Intense Productivity

    RSD’s Tyler gives us some tips for achieving periods of intense productivity by avoiding the ‘garbage in, garbage out’ problem (plus some comments):

    1. Remove the Internet from your house
      A bit extreme for me, but limiting its use is undoubtedly a good idea.
    2. Remove television from your house
      I don’t watch ‘broadcast’ TV anyway: it’s too mind-numbing.
    3. Eat more fruit (especially berries), vegetables, and clean meats
    4. Black out your bedroom and sleep in the pitch dark
      Unbelievably great idea.
    5. Turn your cell phone off
      My philosophy: my mobile phone’s for my convenience, not yours. I keep mine on ‘silent’ mode 100% of the time already.
    6. Recognise drama and avoid it
    7. When you do something fun, make sure it’s something you really enjoy
    8. Meditate for 20 minutes a day
      I’ve never meditated before, but shall attend a Vipassana meditation course in the new year.
    9. Increase the flow of oxygen-rich blood to the brain through exercising
      My eternal nemesis: exercise. My PodRunner routine will be starting again soon now that my shin’s healed.
    10. Read books that have the vibe that you want for yourself
      This year, my reading habits have been excellent.

    Thanks, Andy

  • Web App User Flow Library

    In designing any application, creating efficient and easy user flows is crucial to user engagement. Of course, this isn’t as easy as it sounds. Product Planner provides user flows from successful web applications to help others learn from them.