I'm an Aikido practitioner. Of course, I don't have nearly as much time to train as I like but I guess nobody really does. One of the great Aikido chestnuts is a story from Terry Dobson about a trip on the Tokyo subway. In short, a belligerent drunk guy gets on the train and begins to threaten people. Terry was getting ready to uncork some whoop-ass (he had been training eight hours a day for months) when an old man intervenes with compassion. The drunk weeps and the student is humbled.
It seems that the lesson has been updated. A man broke up a fight on a NYC subway with... a bag of chips. It's hard to be threatening when your snacking on crisps. And who would actually strike someone holding a cellophane bag with a mouth full of potato products?
Is this 21st century Aikido?
The empty inbox is a myth. We can never get rid of all of our concerns. We can, however, spend time dealing with the top three issues. The Inbox is simply a metaphor. We are assailed with a variety of different worries and concerns and I explore simple strategies for dealing with them.
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
Wednesday, February 22, 2012
Standardization of graphical content... it's tough!
I recently stumbled across an interesting paper:
Chandar, Collier, and Miranti (2011). Graph Standardization and management accounting at AT&T during the 1920s. Accounting History, 17(1), 35-62.
The authors tell an interesting story about the growth of telecom and the need to organize a large, diverse, and sprawling enterprise. During the 1910s and 1920s AT&T needed a way of controlling its various operating units and it turned to standardization of communication, particularly through the use of graphical representations of data. They note:
"The high degree of common language absorption, thus, facilitates the smooth transition of information and knowledge through complex organizational settings."
AT&T pursued the goal by creating standards for the presentation of time trend charts, frequency charts, and bar charts. It also created extensive guidelines on how to actually create these things.
A few things struck me as I read the paper and reviewed some of the referenced articles from the time period in question (e.g., Bateman's 1922 "A method of graphical analysis"). The first is that the figures are remarkably modern. They could have been generated by a recent release of Excel (without the chart junk). The graphs certainly represent a sign post to the future. The second thing that struck me is the amount of effort required to generate these documents. AT&T's graphical standards departments included over 100 staff and the production guidelines are incredibly detailed. Standardization is never easy!
The paper is an interesting historical journey into the birth of graphical presentation. It is not, however, critical or overly analytical. I wish the authors had taken the paper in a different direction. In particulary, I wanted more guidance on "how" this standardization occurred, not just what was standardized.
We know that standardization is tough. Bowker and Star (among many others) tell us this much. And we know that not every stakeholder within AT&T would be amenable to the changes. An analysis using some sort of SCOT (Social Construction of Technology) or Actor-Network framework would give us some insight into the groups that had to use these graphs and, perhaps, the resistance that they demonstrated. Furthermore, it would give us some perspective on how AT&T overcame this resistance (I'm assuming it did). Of course, these issues are tough to address. The source material may not be sufficiently rich to get to them but the analysis would certainly be interesting... to me at least.
Monday, February 20, 2012
Big Food is ahead of us: David Schleifer on trans fats
I haven't completely given up my academic habits. There are still a few journals that I monitor and I still consider myself an aspiring sociologist and/or historian of science and/or technology (I'll keep my options open). This mostly asleep interest recently collided with some of my other interests due to a recent article in Technology and Culture by David Schleifer. It reads like a missing chapter from Gary Taubes's Good Calories Bad Calories (fitting, perhaps, since Taubes contributed a missing chapter to Timothy Ferriss's Four Hour Body).
I haven't read the article -- my library rights have become a bit complicated -- but I did look up some of Schleifer's earlier work.
It seems that our recent phobia of trans fats is nothing new. In fact, the food industry is ahead of us. Schleifer notes:
"Trans fats’ ongoing exit from the American food system is due less to the regulatory actions of any government—nanny, iron-fisted, or latex-gloved—than to an underlying tenet of the food industry: Fear sells."
The partially hydrogenated oils were initially positioned as the solution for saturated fats! I now know too many people of the older generation who maintain this view and still eschew butter for big-box margarine. No paleo for them. So where did this stuff come from?
In 1905 P&G created hydrogenated oil for candles... but it looked like lard. Electrification (queue Hughes on Edison) was quickly undermining the candle market so P&G needed a new market and lard-replacement looked good. The name "Krispo" was taken so they opted for Crisco in 1911. It was initially a combination of hydrogenated oil and liquid oil
By the 1940s, it was all hydrogenated oils. It had a high smoke point and didn't go rancid. And they were cheap because they were made from left over soy beans. Then, in 1961, Ancel Keys announced via the cover of Time magazie that saturated fat is killing us (queue Taubes). We replaced butter with margarine (containing about 25% trans fats) and in the late 80s restaurants replaced lard, beef tallow, palm oil, and coconut oil with partially hydrogenated oils due public outcry.
The danger of trans fats was recongized in 1990 by two Dutch researchers. Big Food reacted in a predictable fashion. It tried to buy science and when that failed it quickly looked for alternatives. It apparently cost Frito-Lay $22-million to get trans fats out of Doritos, Tostitos, and Cheetos. Meanwhile, palm oil is making a big comeback for bakeries. Everyone is preparing for change in ingredients while trying to avoid a change in taste. Nobody wants to be the next New Coke.
So, what's next for the food industry? Not surprisingly, it's omega-3s. Of course, they're not shelf-stable and the new oils that have been bred to eliminate hydrogenation have almost no omega-3... but that's a problem for the next generation.
What's interesting to me about Schleifer's work is that it all just seems like normal science. It's not nefarious or deceitful; it's just Big Food wanting to stay a few steps and a few dollars ahead of us. I got the same feeling from Kessler's End of overeating... perhaps I shouldn't be surprised since Schleifer did reference Kessler's A question of intent.
Bottom line: Don't worry. Big food is ahead of you. Perhaps it's best just to eat where Big Food can't go!
Fear of Frying: A brief history of trans fats.
We spend a million bucks and then we had to do something: The unexpected implications of industry involvement in trans fat research
Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society.
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
Manifesto... no just some hacks to get started
This is my first post of a new blog. There's something refreshing in that: a new start, a new beginning...
I should write a manifesto of life!
But I'm not. I'm writing about some of the mundane things that are bothering me the most in simply getting stuff done. For starters, I have to get my entire social networking life back under control. I've turned my back on the whole field but it's time to jump back in.
Here's my strategy:
I should write a manifesto of life!
But I'm not. I'm writing about some of the mundane things that are bothering me the most in simply getting stuff done. For starters, I have to get my entire social networking life back under control. I've turned my back on the whole field but it's time to jump back in.
Here's my strategy:
- Social network of choice? Google+ Why? Well, I never got into Facebook and now there are really just too many people there that that have bad posting habits. Since pretty much everything else I do is on Google, I'm just going to simplify and stay with Google.
- Twitter. I'm doing more conferences and Twitter is simply an important way of showing both appreciation to my hosts and letting my colleagues (in the broader sense) know what I'm up to.
- Blogger. It's not new but I'm coming back to it. Wordpress is a far more capable platform but I really looking for simplicity and Blogger offers it in spades (particularly due to the Google+) decision. But why blog at all? I find that I know have to express some of the ideas that I'm working through in a more participatory way so it's back to blogging.
- Integration: Google+ and Blogger. It's relatively easy to get content from Blogger to my circles on Google+. I'm asked to share content with my circles when I post a new blog. I can also go the other way. I have created some circles in Google+ that just contain the email address for my different blogs. So when I post to Google+ I share with those circles and automatically post out to the blogs. Goodness. Given some of Google's promises I expect this capability to get better in the future.
- Integration: Google+ and Twitter. Not great. I have a Chrome extension that enables me to post to Twitter from Google+ but I still don't get the integration. Well, nothings perfect.
So at least I've dealt with three of the things in my inbox:
- Social network? Check.
- Messaging (short via Twitter and long via Blogs)? Check.
- Integration? Not so much...
I'll take it for now. If anyone has any other suggestions, please let me know.
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