Posts Tagged “video”
On this page:
- Jonah Lehrer – How Creativity Works (Apr 22, 2012)
- What Am I Doing? (October 2010) (Oct 13, 2010)
- The iPad (Apr 04, 2010)
- What Am I Doing? (February 2010) (Feb 10, 2010)
- TED: Janine Benyus: Biomimicry in Action (Aug 07, 2009)
- Mae Jemison on teaching arts and sciences together | Video on TED.com (May 19, 2009)
- Learning from TED (May 13, 2009)
Posted
22 April 2012Tags:
bob dylan, brainstorming, collaboration, connections, creativity, jonah lehrer, steve jobs, talk, videoWhat Am I Doing? (October 2010)
White Collar Brawler
What have I been doing? Not too much on the creative front. Just work, and trying to do my part to promote the new web series that my former freelance client Kai and Nate from Portal A Interactive are doing.
It’s called White Collar Brawler, which is about them training to become boxers. At the end of the series (in December), they’ll have to box each other.
Check it out, and Facebook Like it and follow them on Twitter and share episodes to your friends as much as you can!
Lawrence Guzman designed the website.
Flush.
Posted
13 October 2010Tags:
boxing, Kai Hasson, Lawrence Guzman, Nate Houghteling, Portal A Interactive, series, video, web, White Collar BrawlerCategory:
What Am I Doing?Comments:
No Comments Yet »The iPad
I don’t have one, yet.
The day has finally come. And I had to watch people experience the joy of being one of the first ones to own the new device. I don’t mean to overhype it, but I’m pretty certain this is going to be the next big thing in media consumption.
There are of course skeptics who still think this is a useless piece of technology, because it can’t be carried around like a phone, nor can one do as many things on it like on a laptop or desktop. Those may be valid reasons, but they’re not important reasons.
Read the rest of this entry »
What Am I Doing? (February 2010)
PetVille
Still working on PetVille. We have so many milestones and exciting things happening in the past few weeks as well as in the coming weeks. It’s definitely not a boring job (not that I suggested it in the first place).
iPad
I’ve ridiculed its limitations, and others have ridiculed it as well. But I still want to get it, for two reasons. 1) I think this is a good family sharing device. I can picture my parents looking at photos and watching videos on it. 2) I want to learn to develop stuff for it; so it’ll be my testing device. But I have to get a full-on Mac first though so I can use Xcode. I would like to get back into coding.
I don’t think my family nor I will use it for it’s “primary intention” which is reading books. Though, I wonder if they do more than just text, so that my baby nephew can use it as an interactive children’s book as well.
That’s all for this month.
Flush.
TED: Janine Benyus: Biomimicry in Action

Saw this TED presentation by Janine Benyus, who enthusiastically listed so many wonderful ways we can learn from nature for design solutions that would improve our way of living while improving the world. Almost every function she mentioned is filled with both ingenuity and inspiration, and the way she talked about them just make you feel everything is possible.
I’m not particularly a nature person, but this is worth a watch: http://www.ted.com/talks/janine_benyus_biomimicry_in_action.html
Flush.
Mae Jemison on teaching arts and sciences together | Video on TED.com
Mae Jemison on teaching arts and sciences together | Video on TED.com.
(Testing WordPress’s “Press This” bookmarklet app.)
Today I watched a TED presentation (link above) of Ms. Jemison speaking about art and science as two seemingly opposite fields that stem from one human characteristic: creativity. Basically both involve thinking and using our minds to arrive at certain outcomes.
That’s a really interesting way of looking at these two fields, as it makes me feel more comfortable about my interests and passions in design and science. The video is worth the watch if you’re interested in both.
Incomparable Comparison of Life Accomplishments
During the presentation, she mentions her academic experience in college, where she was studying all these physics courses with complicated sounding names while putting together a dance show that she was also passionate about. After that she mentioned that she went to space, which made her super impressive in my book.
Learning from TED
I sort of left out something from the monthly review that I forgot to mention. For the past month, I started watching through a bunch of TED videos at a time on the Adobe Media Player. I wanted to see what some of the smartest and and most successful people have done and can inspire me with. Some were hits, while others misses.
I am often amazed at how some of these presenters think so differently and creatively to solve their particular problems. I’m sure some of it was BS in their presentations, but the rest is quite impressive.
This evening, I watched IDEO CEO Tim Brown’s presentation on creativity and play. He explained how as children grow up, they learn to self-edit and develop judgment of their actions, thus the ability to create freely and to brainstorm diminishes.
I certainly feel that way. Based on the environment in which I grew up, it’s practically inevitable that I’d learned to be all about perfection and accuracy. But I’ve also since learned to pull myself away from that and am now finding a balance between entropy and order (this explains my equal love for visual design and programming).
At the same time, my head is constantly filling with so many ideas about everything, it’s ridiculous. For the past few years, I’ve used many tools to download those ideas, with different levels of success. Currently, I have this blog Flush, though you can tell how much success I’ve had with it as my ideas-unloading medium (but hopefully that will all change now that I’ve switched to WordPress), I have my GTD “Someday/Maybe” system that safely stores my ideas for a later time, and I have Twitter, to my followers on which I apologize, for the thoughts there are less design and more… unusual.
And now, I am working on another medium that is the most related to design, the Experiments. It’s one of the main sections of my website that I am redesigning, similar to what I’ve done to Flush, and hopefully, this will be an easy medium for me to work with and that the convenience will encourage me to finally do experiments on a regular basis. Here is a screenshot of the design I’ve worked on today:

Yes, it’s going to be blog-based, but the individual categories will be in a slightly different format. This is going to cut down on the programming but still have room for me to be creative and explore with code and design.
So with the opening of the Experiments section in the coming days, I am optimistic that I can more easily take Tim Brown’s advice to explore and to play, and to keep creativity regular.
Flush.
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