Real clowns protest murder by imposter clowns

June 11th, 2010

Real clowns protest murder by imposter clowns

On Monday in San Salvador, two men dressed as clowns shot and killed a man on a public bus after he refused to turn over his money. Yesterday, 100 professional clowns, who perform frequently on buses, marched through the city to show that most clowns are happy-go-lucky and not cold-blooded killers. From the Associated Press (painting by John Wayne Gacy): “We are protesting so that people know we are not killers,” said professional clown Ana Noelia Ramirez. “The people who did this are not clowns. They unfortunately used our costume and our makeup to commit a monstrous act.” Clown-union leader Carlos Vasquez says he plans to issue IDs to all real clowns and urge police to detain those who do not have them. Angry clowns decry armed robbery by imposters…

Friday, June 11, 2010 4:03:30 PM – Link

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The Kung Fu Kid (and why it’s OK the new movie isn’t called that)

June 11th, 2010

The Kung Fu Kid (and why it’s OK the new movie isn’t called that)

Friday, June 11, 2010 3:01:47 PM – Link

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A Little Time Off…

June 10th, 2010

A Little Time Off…

Thursday, June 10, 2010 2:29:01 PM – Link

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Warm Robiola Cheese with Pine Nuts, Olives, and Golden Raisins

June 1st, 2010

Sunday Suppers :: Warm Robiola Cheese with Pine Nuts, Olives, and Golden Raisins

Tuesday, June 01, 2010 5:35:00 PM – Link

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The Vast and Endless Sea

June 1st, 2010

The Vast and Endless Sea

After we created Stack Overflow, some people were convinced we had built a marginally better mousetrap for asking and answering questions. The inevitable speculation began: can we use your engine to build a Q&A site about {topic}? Our answer was Stack Exchange. Pay us $129 a month (and up), and you too can create a hosted Q&A community on our engine — for whatever topic you like!

Well, I have a confession to make: my heart was never in Stack Exchange. It was a parallel effort in a parallel universe only tangentially related to my own. There’s a whole host of reasons why, but if I had to summarize it in a sentence, I’d say that money is poisonous to communities. That $129/month doesn’t sound like much — and it isn’t — but the commercial nature of the enterprise permeated and distorted everything from the get-go.

(fortunately, the model is changing with Stack Exchange 2.0, but that’s a topic for another blog post.)

Yes, Stack Overflow Internet Services Incorporated©®™ is technically a business, even a venture capital backed business now — but I didn’t co-found it because I wanted to make money. I co-founded it because I wanted to build something cool that made the internet better. Yes, selfishly for myself, of course, but I wanted to build it in conjunction with all of my fellow programmers, because if I’ve learned anything, it is that none of us is as dumb as all of us.

Nobody is participating in Stack Overflow to make money. We’re participating in Stack Overflow because …

  • We love programming
  • We want to leave breadcrumb trails for other programmers to follow so they can avoid making the same dumb mistakes we did
  • Teaching peers is one of the best ways to develop mastery
  • We can follow our own interests wherever they lead
  • We want to collectively build something great for the community with our tiny slices of effort

I don’t care how much you pay me, you’ll never be able to recreate the incredibly satisfying feeling I get when demonstrating mastery within my community of peers. That’s what we do on Stack Overflow: have fun, while making the internet one infinitesimally tiny bit better every day.

So is it any wonder that some claim Stack Overflow is more satisfying than their real jobs? Not to me.

If this all seems like a bunch of communist hippie bullcrap to you, I understand. It’s hard to explain. But there is quite a bit of science documenting these strange motivations. Let’s start with Dan Pink’s 2009 TED talk.

Dan’s talk centers on the candle problem. Given the following three items …

  1. A candle
  2. A box of thumbtacks
  3. A book of matches

… how can you attach the candle to the wall?

It’s not a very interesting problem on its own — that is, until you try to incentivize teams to solve it:

Now I want to tell you about an experiment using the candle problem by a scientist from Princeton named Sam Glucksberg. Here’s what he did.

To the first group, he said, “I’m going to time you to establish norms, averages for how long it typically takes someone to solve this sort of problem.”

To the second group, he said, “If you’re in the top 25 percent of the fastest times you get five dollars. If you’re the fastest of everyone we’re testing here today you get 20 dollars.” (This was many years ago. Adjusted for inflation, it’s a decent sum of money for a few minutes of work.)

Question: How much faster did this group solve the problem?

Answer: It took them, on average, three and a half minutes longer. Three and a half minutes longer. Now this makes no sense, right? I mean, I’m an American. I believe in free markets. That’s not how it’s supposed to work. If you want people to perform better, you reward them. Give them bonuses, commissions, their own reality show. Incentivize them. That’s how business works. But that’s not happening here. You’ve got a monetary incentive designed to sharpen thinking and accelerate creativity — and it does just the opposite. It dulls thinking and blocks creativity.

It turns out that traditional carrot-and-stick incentives are only useful for repetitive, mechanical tasks. The minute you have to do anything even slightly complex that requires even a little problem solving without a clear solution or rules — those incentives not only don’t work, they make things worse!

Pink eventually wrote a book about this, Drive: The Surprising Truth About What Motivates Us.

Drive by Daniel H. Pink

There’s no need to read the book; this clever ten minute whiteboard animation will walk you through the main points. If you view only one video today, view this one.

The concept of intrinsic motivation may not be a new one, but I find that very few companies are brave enough to actually implement them.

I’ve tried mightily to live up to the ideals that Stack Overflow was founded on when building out my team. I don’t care when you come to work or what your schedule is. I don’t care where in the world you live (provided you have a great internet connection). I don’t care how you do the work. I’m not going to micromanage you and assign you a queue of task items. There’s no need.

If you want to build a ship, don’t drum up the men to gather wood, divide the work and give orders. Instead, teach them to yearn for the vast and endless sea.
– Antoine de Saint Exupéry

Because I know you yearn for the vast and endless sea, just like we do.

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Tuesday, June 01, 2010 11:05:41 AM – Link

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“Contested Will.”

May 31st, 2010

Books: “Contested Will.”

In this fascinating study, Shapiro, an English professor at Columbia, casts skepticism about the authorship of Shakespeare’s works as a “long footnote to the larger story of the way we read now” and traces shifting assumptions about the relation between art and autobiography. Some fifty alternative . . .

Monday, May 31, 2010 4:00:00 AM – Link

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“The Dead Republic.”

May 31st, 2010

Books: “The Dead Republic.”

Doyle’s ninth novel, the concluding volume of a trilogy that began with “A Star Called Henry,” chronicles the return to Ireland, after almost thirty years of exile in America, of Henry Smart, a former I.R.A. assassin. The first section, in which Henry works with John Ford . . .

Monday, May 31, 2010 4:00:00 AM – Link

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Cartoons from the Issue

May 31st, 2010

Cartoons from the Issue

A collection of cartoons from the issue, plus this week’s Cartoon Caption Contest.

Monday, May 31, 2010 4:00:00 AM – Link

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“The Father of My Children” and “Solitary Man.”

May 31st, 2010

Anthony Lane: “The Father of My Children” and “Solitary Man.”

From the fact that the hero drives a car with a cell phone in one hand, a cigarette in the other, no hands on the wheel, and no seat belt, it can swiftly be deduced that “The Father of My Children” is a French film. At one superb . . .

Monday, May 31, 2010 4:00:00 AM – Link

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“The Literary Conference.”

May 31st, 2010

Books: “The Literary Conference.”

Aira, an experimental Argentine writer, has published more than sixty books, though only a few have appeared in English. At a literary conference, César, the protagonist—author and translator by day, mad scientist by night—hatches a plan to rule the world by creating an army . . .

Monday, May 31, 2010 4:00:00 AM – Link

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