I spent the morning converting my blog from Wordpress to Drupal. I figured that since I build all my sites using Drupal and I'm building a memetracker module for Drupal as part of Google Summer of Code, I should switch my personal website/blog to Drupal. Wordpress is a great blogging platform but I'm glad now to be on Drupal.
blogging
Never update your resume again (just your blog)
I've written before how your blog can replace your resume but I enjoyed reading another blogger's experience. I haven't had the chance yet to send my blog url instead of a resume but I have been contacted about a job once directly because of what I've written here and elsewhere.
I hated updating my resume. It is such a brilliantly inefficient medium to communicate your value proposition.
Now when situations of resumes arise, I send the url for the blog. The longer it exists the more valuable it becomes as a alternative resume.
On blogs you can’t fake it (atleast not for a very long time) and it so perfectly reflects your intelligence, your character, your values, your smarts (or lack there of) and so on and so forth. You can “fake” the piece of paper, you can’t fake a blog.
Of course the flip side is also true. If you have a great blog you might not have to go look for a job. They’ll come find you. I am sure all the bloggers in our space get at least two job offers a week. :)
And here is perhaps the nicest benefit of having your own blog (and making sure your potential new employer has it and has sent it to the interview committee): They won’t ask you silly questions.
They have a good idea of who you actually are and smart interviewers just get to the point. And that is a good thing.
Assorted Links
I think I'm going to start doing "link posts" more often. I run into content I think I should write about here but then never have time to write a full-blown post. Onto the links.
Clay Shirky says Internet reduces needs for "experts" by lowering transaction costs
"Experts the world over have been shocked to discover that they were consulted not as a direct result of their expertise, but often as a secondary effect — the apparatus of credentialing made finding experts easier than finding amateurs, even when the amateurs knew the same things as the experts."
Web 2.0 Is the Future of Education
Lists 10 cultural trends which is pushing education towards a web2.0 model
Thought experiment how universities would work without actual courses. An interesting ideas. I've often wandered if courses are the best method for learning. I know I learn far more outside of class then inside the classroom.
Vygotsky's Social Development Theory -- more here
Every function in the child's cultural development appears twice: first, on the social level, and later, on the individual level; first, between people (interpsychological) and then inside the child (intrapsychological). This applies equally to voluntary attention, to logical memory, and to the formation of concepts. All the higher functions originate as actual relationships between individuals.
How to become great? Research suggests:
- Focus on technique as opposed to outcome.
- Set specific goals.
- Get good, prompt feedback, and use it.
Thoughts, quotes, questions about how web2.0 is challenging traditional methods of education
Bandura Social Learning Theory
Learning would be exceedingly laborious, not to mention hazardous, if people had to rely solely on the effects of their own actions to inform them what to do. Fortunately, most human behavior is learned observationally through modeling: from observing others one forms an idea of how new behaviors are performed, and on later occasions this coded information serves as a guide for action.
Six principles for making new things
I love it when someone writes what I'm thinking about writing. Saves me time.
Paul Graham posted a new essay today entitled "Six Principles for Making New Things."
Here's the juicy bit:
I like to find (a) simple solutions (b) to overlooked problems (c) that actually need to be solved, and (d) deliver them as informally as possible, (e) starting with a very crude version 1, then (f) iterating rapidly.
To add a few thoughts.
When I think of overlooked problems I think of a bell curve. Most people/companies/countries are average: thinking average thoughts and doing things in an average way. Their average thoughts/actions lead to average results. If you want exceptional results, you have to act and think in ways that are exceptional. Average=dead, the edge is where the action is at.
Why I blog -- Part 2
A year ago in just my second blog post, I explained why I write a blog. My answer then (and now) is I keep a blog as an intellectual journal of sorts. Blogging is my way of pulling together into a coherent form all the stray thoughts rolling around in my mind. Writing helps me sift the good thoughts from all the bad and fit them all together in a logical pattern.
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