Your challenge is accepted, Wall Street Journal
It's rather cheeky to title an article "Workplace Distractions: Here's Why You Won't Finish This Article," as the Wall Street Journal does with its recent piece on the
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Skip to contentIt's rather cheeky to title an article "Workplace Distractions: Here's Why You Won't Finish This Article," as the Wall Street Journal does with its recent piece on the
Derek Bruff, director of Vanderbilt University's Center for Teaching and an attendee at the Seattle POD conference, has posted his "sketch notes" (an informal version of a graphic
About once a month I'll come across an article of book that makes me think, I really wish I'd met that person when I was in Cambridge. This
The Wall Street Journal reports that researchers "who study work habits say a new generation reared on mobile devices is increasingly accustomed to using them while propped against
Saw this in a parking lot in Mountain View this afternoon. via flickr I don't believe it for a minute, but I was still amused to see it.Posted
"We practitioners and quants aren't too fazed by remarks on the part of academics – it would be like prostitutes listening to technical commentary by nuns." (From his
I thought it would be interesting to create a photo set that mixes images I use in my contemplative computing talks, with photos from Cambridge and my year
When I was at Cambridge (almost two years ago!), I stumbled on the work of cognitive archaeologists Lambros Malafouris and Colin Renfrew. Renfew is a professor at Cambridge
I'm just getting around to Carl Wilkinson's recent Telegraph essay on writers "Shutting out a world of digital distraction." It's about how Zadie Smith, Nick Hornby and others
In the opening paragraph of Mystics and Zen Masters, he contrasts "the monk or the Zen man" to "people dedicated to lives that are, shall we say, aggressively