A primer on the ongoing transformation of education, for my cousin-in-law who runs a seminary startup. Use video to "flip the classroom" so teachers are more "guide on the side" than "sage on the stage." Shift the goal from passive content acquisition to constructive skill mastery: Khan Academy Vision - YouTube Personalize education for different learning styles and goals: Mass... Continue Reading →
Can Startup Thinking Solve the Innovator’s Dilemma?
When I discussed theories about how and whether Apple has solved the Innovator's Dilemma, I neglected to mention my favorite theory: Institutionalizing Startup Thinking (IST) Apple has solved the Innovator's Dilemma by institutionalizing startup thinking. This is characterized brilliantly by an Andreessen Horowitz post on Why We Prefer Founding CEOs: The technology business is fundamentally the innovation... Continue Reading →
Has Apple Solved the Innovator’s Dilemma?
Last October, along with many other tributes to the late Apple co-founder, James Allworth claimed that Steve Jobs Solved the Innovator's Dilemma. His explanation is that Apple avoids the traditional pitfalls that stifle innovation because: Apple hasn't optimized its organization to maximize profit. Instead, it has made the creation of value for customers its priority. This... Continue Reading →
How to Professionalize Teaching
Everyone knows that great teachers are the key to a great education. But how do we get more of them? One popular request is to treat teachers as professionals, a "certified expert who is afforded prestige and autonomy in return for performing at a high level" rather than "interchangeable cogs in an educational factory line out... Continue Reading →
The Innovator’s Restaurant: Architecting for Creativity
Andrew Dunn from Insight Labs recently posted a call for metaphors about Iterating imagination: Creativity. Structure. The two are normally thought to be at odds. But for a large organization to produce imaginative results again and again, it must have a structure that anticipates reinvention. He listed four models they came up with: Church and State: these... Continue Reading →
#InsanelySimple 140 Characters at a Time
I just finished reading the eagerly-anticipated Insanely Simple by Ken Segall. For my money, this is the best way to get a feel for how Apple "Thinks Different" than virtually every other business in America. From May 10th to 17th I used Twitter to catalogue my journey through the book, and I've collected all those... Continue Reading →
$AAPL and the Limits of Growth
It has become a cliché after every blowout earnings call to say that Apple can't keep growing forever. While technically true (I doubt Apple would survive the heat death of the universe), that assertion by itself is useless. The real question is how long could Apple keep growing at its current rate. Somewhat surprisingly, I haven't seen... Continue Reading →
The Makers Triversity: A Father’s Education Dream
The following is a work of fiction, perhaps even of fantasy. I am no educator, and know nothing of the economics or mechanics of running such a school. Yet I dream that my son's future will look more like this than what passes for education today. [May 16, 2017 Update: Maker's Triversity missed the 2014... Continue Reading →
RIBS: Marrying the REST and MVC Design Patterns
[Diagram updated on 10/27. Thanks to @frozencanuck for his feedback.] The RIBS diagram is my third attempt to extend the wildly-succesful Model–View–Controller design pattern to encompass first the The DCI Architecture and now the REST architectural style. This time, I started by reverse-engineered the design principles behind the Ki Statechart Framework, particularly their use of statecharts as coordinating controllers.... Continue Reading →
SIDA: Moving Object-Oriented Design beyond Model-View-Controller
[Update: this post has been obsoleted by RIBS: Marrying the REST and MVC Design Patterns « iHack, therefore iBlog] SIDA stands for "State • Interface • Data • Algorithm", and is a refinement of my earlier "DIDA" model (where the "D" stood for Design). DIDA in turn was an expansion of the well-known Model–View–Controller design pattern based on... Continue Reading →

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