Updated: 3/1/08; 7:43:07 PM.
Gary Mintchell's Feed Forward
Manufacturing and Leadership.
        

Monday, February 18, 2008

Here's another great idea from Kevin Kelly for my friend John from NI--what's on your iPod, and how can you get better stuff on it. My son clues me in to some pretty cool stuff (Belle & Sebastian, for one) that goes along with my Pink Floyd, Mozart and Maynard Ferguson (I never use shuffle!). I like this:

When it came to music, I was an old fogie. I had a shelf full of Bob Dylan, Allman Brothers, Brian Eno, and more Bob Dylan. You know, old guy's music. I actually liked a lot of the new popular music I overheard, I was just not up on it. Didn't know what was what. Recently I've found two tools to keep me current with great contemporary music that wasn't just top 40. My iPod is now full of some pretty hip music, which I thoroughly enjoy.

Here's what works for me. At my birthday or Christmas, I request as my only present that my kids, nieces and nephews burn me a disc of their favorite music in the last year, or so. It is an easy gift for them to make, and a great learning experience for me. The few tracks I can't stand, I just delete. The stuff I love I seek out on iTunes to purchase more of. From this I get the fashionable tunes.

This trick actually works even better with kids not your own. When I am traveling overseas I ask students who befriend me to burn me a CD of their favorite local tunes, and boy does this beckon forth some great unknown stuff. I landed some lovely Polish rock this way. I've learned to not be bashful asking because everyone loves to share their favorites. The main thing is to not ask your friends; they think too much like you. Instead you want the "other-ness" from fans in other lands and other generations. In my experience this method works better than following random play lists on iTunes, or random recommendations on Amazon. The winnowing process to burn to a CD is more selective, and perhaps because it is being made for a specific person -- me -- it is, well, more personalized.

My second method is a more automatic version of "what's on your iPod?", yet brings me a wider range of songs. For one or two days a month I queue up David Byrne's Radio Station on the web and listen to his two-hour loop of new, wonderful, delicious tunes. Rock-star Byrne is a professional musical pioneer, admirably eclectic in his taste, yet astutely discriminating at the same time. Over years of listening to all kinds of music -- experimental, indie, international, fringe, classical, pop -- he's heard enough to make some great recommendations. Given his reputation he is constantly asked what he is listening to. In answer he has generously turned his play list into a streaming audio station. When you tune in, you are hearing the music he plays in his office.

9:36:19 PM    comment []


I've started reading Kevin Kelly's blog regularly. He wrote "Out of Control," one of my favorite books. The question here is--are you raising your kids to be geeks? or engineers? Here's a sample:

Science fiction author Neal Stephenson once told me something memorable as we were hanging out in his back yard. He pointed to an unfinished kayak under a tarp. He said he was slowly working on it, in part to mentor his kids, even though they did no work on the boat, nor express the least bit of interest in this project. None-the-less he continued puttering on the undertaking while they were home. Stephenson said when he was a kid, his dad was constantly tinkering on some garage project or another, and despite Neal's complete indifference for any of his dad's enthusiasms at the time, he was influenced by this embedded tinkering. It was part of the family scene, part of his household, like mealtime style, or the pattern of interactions between siblings. Later on when Neal did attempt to make stuff on his own, the pattern was right at hand. It felt comfortable, easy. Without having to try very hard, he knew how to be a nerd.

So he continued the tradition in the faith that while his kids showed no outward enthusiasm for his weekend projects, and didn't pick up a tool to help, they were being trained and coached in a subterranean way.

9:27:26 PM    comment []

I've been in Florida for most of two weeks, and I finally made it to the beach Saturday. Had a relaxing day yesterday at a very nice park in Melbourne. Every great once in a while I need one of those. Although I'm reading a great book--"The Congruent Life" by C. Michael Thompson. More on that later when I digest it. Parts are applicable to this blog and parts to my other blog on philosophy. He's talking about adult personality development and how increasing maturity and spirituality are important in today's workplace--both for the individual and for the organization. Give that some thought before I hit all his points. Just how mature are you? (Don't have to answer out loud ;-) And, how mature is your boss (Wes and Mike don't have to answer that--but if they want to... ;-}  )

11:31:51 AM    comment []

I'm beginning to work on an article on safety, and it looks to be timely. First there was an explosion at a sugar refinery (last I heard thought to be caused by dust igniting), now I just saw on Yahoo News from AP about an explosion at an oil refinery in Texas. Safety certainly isn't a done deal in manufacturing of all types. It's a constant battle.

11:26:06 AM    comment []

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