My friends have been asking me how important I consider experience (again in the context of the election), enough to write the answer down. read more »
Getting Lost
I like to travel in style. Two different styles, in fact: exploratory, and direct.
When I’m late to an appointment, I take the most direct, familiar, route I know. I don’t try any tricks — roads that vaguely ring a bell, or look like they might connect — I stay with what I’ve known.
But when I’ve time to spare, I get lost. Given a choice between a 15 minute route I know, and one that might take twice as long, I’ll take the road less traveled (by me). I’m paying for knowledge, with time.
I discover a lot of good routes this way — not always to the place I was going at the time, but often to somewhere I want to go later, when I’m in a hurry and wouldn’t have time to look for them. And, when I am in a hurry and I do get lost — because I’m coming from or going somewhere unfamiliar, or have to detour — I’m more likely to come across a place I recognize, and place myself back onto my mental map. read more »
Bio
Oliver Steele is a consultant and entrepreneur living in Amherst, MA with his wife and two children. Oliver’s interests include programming language design, knowledge representation, information visualization, and mathematics education.
Most recently, Oliver was founder and CTO of Dotted Pair, Inc., which created the Browse Goods product catalog browser. read more »
Colophon
This site is created with Aquamacs, Omnigraffle. and MacOS X. Ruby, Rake, ImageMagick, and OpenLaszlo are used to build it. read more »
Projects
About
Oliver Steele is a software consultant and entrepreneur living in Amherst, MA — two hours west of Boston, on the banks of the Connecticut River. He is the author of the PyWordnet, Functional JavaScript, and numerous other open source libraries; he was the architect of OpenLaszlo, and worked at Apple Computer on Apple Dylan, Quickdraw GX. His interests include software visualization, programming languages, and math education.
This web site host read more »
Single Minded
It’s easier to learn one thing at a time.
Illustrate with story about learning to waltz.
Vygotsky, social vs. physical, ebonics, gay high school, word chess, Japanese reconstruction
Better Living Through Bigger Text
Today my office is an airplane. I’m visiting the home office in San Francisco for the week. I get to remind everyone that those of us in the Boston office are real people (insert your favorite joke here), and come back with enough to understand what’s behind the email and phone conferences for another month.
One of the geek games you can play on an airplane is stretching out the battery life of your computer. I have enough batteries to last me through a six-hour flight now, but old habits die hard.
Since I save my files every minute or two, spinning down the hard disk isn’t an option. (I tend to use programs that communicate use the file system to communicate. And I don’t want to be in a position to lose more than a few minutes of work anyway.) I don’t usually use a CD or DVD player, so I’m already optimizing there. The CPU that I’m using steps down to 800MHz when the plug is out, so that’s taken care of for me. That leaves screen brightness. read more »
Factoring Life
Connections: sixth profession, pacing, fitness reserve