Creativity: Effort > Results

A Box? Or a Spaceship? What Makes Kids Creative – WSJ.com

“It is best to avoid paying too much attention to the outcome of kids’ creative efforts, says Dr. Kaufman, the professor. “The more emphasis put on the final product—’It’s so beautiful I’m going to frame it and tell my friends about it,’ ” he says, the greater is “the risk that the kid is going to do pictures for the praise, and not for the enjoyment.” Instead, emphasize effort over results.

Comparative Geography (mountains + rivers), 1854

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Gotta love these old infographics...

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Dual Screens

We utilize dual monitors at home with an old Dell screen hooked up to our iMac. I highly recommend it! Below is a short list of good uses of dual monitors. Visit the link to see some “bad” examples…

Dueling thoughts on dual monitors | practicallyefficient.com

Good uses of dual screens

These are all instances where you’re using one screen to “lift” the other.

  • Keep your task list on one screen while you do work on the other. I find it powerfully productive to have a mind map on one screen while I work on the other. It’s especially helpful if I’m doing highly technical work with lots of steps, and I want to record a mixture of completed tasks, future tasks, and thoughts.

  • Put a remote server display on one; your local desktop on the other. This lets you easily drag and drop files or use one screen as a reference screen while you work on the other.

  • Make spreadsheets wider, or put two related spreadsheets side by side.

  • Read PDF on one; write or work on the other."

Digital Bullies

As Bullies Go Digital, Parents Play Catch-Up | NYTimes

“It is difficult enough to support one’s child through a siege of schoolyard bullying. But the lawlessness of the Internet, its potential for casual, breathtaking cruelty, and its capacity to cloak a bully’s identity all present slippery new challenges to this transitional generation of analog parents”

Data Protection and Storage

Recently I have had some of my family members, as well as friends, lose some important files because they only had one copy that somehow managed to become corrupted, misplaced, deleted, or lost. I have always said that an important file needs 3 copies! Here is where I first learned the “3 copy” concept…

Back Up Overview | dpreview.org

The 3-2-1 Rule

The simplest way to remember how to back up your images safely is to use the 3-2-1 rule.

We recommend keeping 3 copies of any important file (a primary and two backups) We recommend having the files on 2 different media types (such as hard drive and optical media), to protect against different types of hazards.* 1 copy should be stored offsite (or at least offline).

*While 3-2-1 storage is the ideal arrangement, it’s not always possible, particularly for images in the early stages of the lifecycle. A second media type, for instance, is impractical for many people in the ingestion or working file stage. In these cases, many people make do with hard-drive-only copies of their data. Best practices, however, still require 3 copies and some physical separation between the copies.

Personally I keep one local copy, a copy backed-up to an external disc (or 2) that I sync using SuperDuper! or Time Machine, and a copy away from my house via a combination of MobileMe, Dropbox, and SmugMug (for family videos and family/client photos).

Markdown Test via Posterous

Time to test this out.

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