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Take a whack at it: you might be surprised

All summer long, my eight-year-old son has been struggling to complete a five-minute math quiz sheet, thinking that he would never be able to complete the 100 subtraction questions in the time allowed. All summer, he’s inched up from 60 questions out of 100 all the way to completing 90 within five minutes. But he was frustrated that he would not be able to complete all 100, without even bothering to try, he’d utter the classic phrase “I’ll never be able to do that!”


I explained to my son that he could do it, as he had overcome “incredible odds” (at least in his mind) when tackling addition at the beginning of the school year. “If you believe you can do it, you just might surprise yourself and find that you can do it.” 


As we discussed the quiz sheet, I thought about  Roger von Oech’s creative thinking books, “A Whack on the Side of the Head” and “A Kick in the Seat of the Pants.” In particular, this pane from his web site on believing in yourself:


Believe in Yourself. (c)1999 Roger von Oech.“What concerns me,” remarked the philosopher Epictetus, “is not the way things are, but rather the way people think things are.”


If you think you’re creative, you’ll act that way — and vice versa. It’s a self-fulfilling prophecy. As you think, so you are.


In what ways are you creative?


What strengths do you have that you can apply to your issue?


– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –


So I explained that if you think you’re going to complete the sheet, you’ll go ahead and do it. “As you think, so you are.”


Still unmoved, with lots of excuses, lots of delays… classic eight-year-old procrastination. I explained that he would just have to do it.


Nothing. Classic dog-staring-into-a fan-moment.


Finally, I explained in terms that he could understand, in the immortal words of Yoda: “Try not. Do, or do not. There is no try.”


This evening, he completed the sheet, with nearly half a minute to spare. And he did it a second time as well, just to show that he could. Sometimes, you just need to take a whack at it: the results may surprise you.


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Friday Humour: Cartoon characters as Korean art

Thanks to boingboing for the reference to this exhibition at the Arario Gallery in Korea, Hyungkoo Lee’s”Animatus” …



“This Korean art exhibition explores the fictional anatomy of cartoon characters, with elaborate faked-up skeletons for Looney Toons characters, anatomical drawings of Mickey and friends, and many other artifacts from the study of toon anatomy.”


You gotta see this to believe it. My favourite: Mickey Mouse.


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Seth Godin and the impact of compromising

As you enjoy your long weekend in the States, something to think about in this post from seth godin today



“Once you start compromising, when do you stop?


“If your goal is to be remarkable, please understand that the easiest way to do that is to compromise less, not more. And no, this wasn’t a post about breakfast.”


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Huh? Mary Jo Foley quotes corporate user: “Vista will NEVER run on a $1000 PC”

Mary Jo Foley has an article on eweek today



“I think Microsoft may have a tougher time making the business upgrade case than the home one for Vista. Here’s why. One enterprise user, who asked not to be named, recently posed an interesting question to me (via instant messaging), regarding how Microsoft is expecting to make a business case for Vista.



MR. Biz: how are they going to make a business case for Vista?
MJF: that’s a good question…. I’m not really sure
MR. Biz: no matter how much tweaking MS does, it’s still not going to solve the resource requirements issue
MR. Biz: vista will NEVER run on a $1000 PC


Really?


One of our family members just priced a new laptop with a decent processor, >100GB HDD, memory configuration and graphics system that is touted as “Windows Vista Capable” for under $800. (OK, the price included a special $200 “coupon” promoted on the company’s web site.) When I looked today on a couple of major build to order OEM sites, I found “Windows Vista Capable” desktops starting at around $499: that took all of a few minutes to find as they systems are pre-configured.


At home, I have a system I built for, I’m guessing, under $400 that will run Vista.


IMHO, where’s the moderating comment from Mary Jo that calls this out? (All comments on the blog are my own.)


See also…


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Link: Ro Parra at Dell talks about the customer experience

Ro Parra is senior vice president for Dell’s Home and Small Business Group. Today on the Direct2dell blog, he wrote about Dell’s Response to Wall Street Journal Article:



“Some of you may have seen yesterday’s story that appeared in the Wall Street Journal (subscription required). Our view is that it only tells part of the Dell story. What’s missing is the progress we’re making against four key areas for consumer and small-business customers: post-sales customer experience, sales customer experience, pricing simplification, and improving how we reach customers through marketing.


“The online community is important to us. More than half of our consumer customers buy from us through the Internet. You’ll be hearing more from me and other members of the Dell blog team about changes we’re making for the better across the business.”


It will be interesting to see what they have to say. (Disclaimer: We have Dell computers at home, among others, and have written here and here about some of my (generally positive) experiences with Dell’s customer support (all, so far, via chat and email).


Click here to see the customer experience posts from Dell’s blog.


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