Synesthesia

Notes on stuff

Tagged Posts: Books

The Road to Reality

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02-03-2006
The Road to Reality: A Complete Guide to the Laws of the Universe

Who could resist a book subtitled “A Complete Guide to the Laws of The Universe”?

If you didn’t know that the author was Roger Penrose, you could be forgiven for assuming that The Road to Reality was one of the very many quasi-scientific, faith-based, wild-eyed polemics that appear each year under increasingly garish covers, but instead this tome sets out to be a comprehensive account of the physical universe and the essentials of its underlying mathematical theory.

Daunting? Absolutely. Weighing in at 1.4kg and 1100 pages the physical presence of this book sets a certain level of expectation. Beyond that, there’s no doubt about it, this book contains mathematics, lots of it. That in itself will put a lot of people off, as the author notes in the preface:

The reader will find that in this book I have not shied away from presenting mathematical formulae, despite dire warnings of the severe reduction in readership this will entail. I have thought seriously about this question, and have come to the conclusion that what I have to say cannot reasonably be conveyed without a certain amount of mathematical notation and the exploration of genuine mathematical concepts.

Yes, mathematics. Tricky one that. At school it was one of my favourite subjects, but somehow by the end of an engineering degree it was a subject that had carried on inexorably past the limits of my interest and ability. In engineering terms the sheer fun of making early micro-processors jump through hoops was more appealing, and away from the lecture-room and lab my technical nous was finding more practical applications in the challenge of applying sound and light to actors and musicians (with a healthy grounding in the social skills of working in teams and dealing with non-technical people thrown in for good measure!).

So why have I just invested full list price in such a book? Interest, yes, but also a sense of challenge, a feeling that maybe I could get to grips again with the mathematical, maybe, indeed, that I should re-capture the knowledge that I took so long to acquire a quarter of a century ago. I think there’s another root too - last year I attended a business strategy course that was heaviliy influenced by game theory. One of the other delegates was a professor of engineering from one of the best engineering faculties in the UK who, over coffee, waxed lyrical about the underlying mathematics (which the course had avoided) and how the same approach was used all the time in the design of complex control systems. Even though I didn’t know it then, at that moment, I think I was re-infected with some of that curiousity, and the first expression has been the serendipitous contact with this book in a 10 minute bookshop-browse snatched at the end of a mundane shopping trip.

Will I stick with it? Good question. I’ve just finished Chapter 2 which has skated lightly over the surface of Euclidean and hyperbolic geometries, and already I feel I am reading things of which I have no conscious memory (maths at my school was the so-called “New Mathematics”, so I’m not sure we ever touched anything so prosaic as geometry…). This is a book for digesting in small bites, and I know my track-record of grasshopper-brained bricolage is not necessarily the most obvious approach to this feast, but we shall see…

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Blink

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28-02-2006
Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking

Just got around to reading Blink. It’s a quick read - as usual with Gladwell the book’s central theme, the human ability to make almost instant decisions based on the unconscious mind and previously-acquired experience, is presented lucidly and with plenty of examples.
He structures the book in three broad areas:

  • Evidence of human ability to make accurate decisions very quickly - faster than conscious thought
  • The strengths and weaknesses this gives us
  • Ways to develop skill and improve the accuracy of your instant impressions

Although Gladwell includes notes on sources, my frustration with books like this is that they only present one side of the argument, in favour of the core theory, and don’t really explore what else may be going on. However as an entertainment with a basis in science it’s a fun way to spend a couple of hours, and a good source of anecdotes to recycle in a “did you know” sort of way.

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Bookshelf

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05-10-2005

Borrowing an idea from Matt, my current “nearest-to-hand” bookshelf is:

Bookshelf 05-10-2005

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Update on Strategy Reading

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31-08-2005

Over the summer I’ve been spending more time reading than writing, but even then the reading has been going more slowly than I expected! Just finished [bliki]Thinking Strategically[/bliki] and started to wrap my thoughts around [bliki]Strategy Maps[/bliki].

Unlike the previous books in my strategy reading which have focused on the [bliki]Game Theory[/bliki] approach to strategy, this book is more aligned to the core competence / resource-based view of the firm.

Strategy Maps are a visual way of drawing out the cause-and-effect relationships between the strategic success factors of a company, the internal goals that lead to them, the internal strengths that contribute to those goals and the necessary tangible and intangible infrastructure needed to develop those strengths. The authors bring in their earlier work on the [bliki]Balanced Scorecard[/bliki] by suggesting the map is stratified along the balanced scorecard axes of Financial, Customer, Internal and People/Knowledge factors.

My short-term goal is to look for a way to combine this approach with some elements of [bliki]Enterprise Architecture[/bliki] to create a pragmatic model for building strategic systems development plans.

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Proactive Risk Management

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28-06-2005

New on the bookshelf

Proactive Risk Management: Controlling Uncertainty in Product Development

Proactive Risk Management, Controlling Uncertainty in Product Development
by Preston G. Smith and Guy M. Merritt

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Developing Deliverable Strategies - Post Course Reading

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04-06-2005

In the strategy course we touched on (in varying levels of detail) the three main views of company strategy - since the course finished I’ve been adding reading on all three to my “incoming” bookshelf:

The market-focused, competitive advantage approach of Michael Porter:

Competitive Advantage

The resource-based view of the firm, typified by Hamel and Prahalad:

Competing for the Future

The game theory approach described by Dixit and Nalebuff:

Thinking Strategically: Competitive Edge in Business, Politics and Everyday Life

and then popularised by by Brandenburger and Nalebuff:

Co-opetition

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Getting to grips with “Freedom Evolves”

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14-11-2004

I’ve started reading [bliki]Freedom Evolves[/bliki] again - I’ve had the book on my shelf for a few months but had found it difficult to stick with before. I’ve noticed that one of the ways that I stop myself from finishing “stretching” books (even though I want to learn the contents) is by failing to take notes - I’m going to try to address that by using the Oddments space.

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Study notes - “Lean Software Development” Chapter 3

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19-10-2003

Continuing to work through Lean Software Development by Mary & Tom Poppendieck.

*Chapter 3 - Decide As Late As Possible*

* Concurrent development - the importance of both knowledge and collaboration.
* Cost escalation curves for changes - the old “exponential” model for increasing cost of late change really only applies to critical constraints (e.g. major technical architecture decisions)
* Use “breadth first” approach for the major constraints - for other aspects defer decision as long as possible through iterative development
* Importance of keeping options open until “last responsible moment”
* Share information early - don’t wait for it to be “complete”
* Direct worker-to-worker collaboration
* Learn how to deal with change
* Breadth-first decision making works best when business domain is evolving
* Simple rules allow robust and flexible response to real-world variation

Mindmap

Mindmap: JPEG [110kb], MindManager

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Study notes - “Lean Software Development” Chapter 2

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07-10-2003

Continuing to work through Lean Software Development by Mary & Tom Poppendieck.

Chapter 2 - Amplify Learning

The problems solved by software do not have “right” answers, rather it is a case of seeking to reduce uncertainty as the project progresses - uncertainty about customer requirements, uncertainty about technology. Software development is therefore a process of learning and like all learning inherently cyclical.

The tools introduced in this chapter are primarily about adopting maximising opportunities for learning, enhancing communication between the people who understand different parts of the problem domain and allowing solutions to emerge that meet the needs of all stakeholders.

An iteration should be considered a demonstration of a possible solution; it should not be considered an only solution [...] As iterations progress and more choices are made, the design space should be gradually narrowed

Tool 3 - Feedback
Tool 4 - Iterations
Tool 5 - Synchronisation
Tool 6 - Set-based Development

Reading this chapter I was struck by the importance of trust between all stakeholders - I’m looking forward to see how that might be dealt with when they discuss teams, committment, motivation and contracting issues…

Mindmap

Mindmap: JPEG [155kb], MindManager

Updated 2003-10-13
Re-reading the chapter, and as the result of a couple of real-life project conversations that have happened since the original entry, I’ve realised the importance of the concept of variable scope. In the book the Poppendiecks cite ROI, It’s your job [PDF 716kb] by Jim Johnson of The Standish Group. In that document Johnson refers to a study of over 35,000 application development projects which found that in a typical system 45 percent of features are never used and 19 percent are rarely used

The Poppendiecks note (p32):

Since customers often don’t know exactly what they want at the beginning of a project, they tend to ask for everything they think they might need, especially if they think they will only get one shot at it. This is one of the best ways we know to increase the scope of a project well beyond what is necessary to accomplish the project’s overall mission. [...] If you let customers ask only for their highest priority features, deliver them quickly, then ask for the next highest priority, you are more likely to get short lists of what is important. [...] This approach to project management may seem to lead to unpredictable results, but quite the opposite is true. Once a track record of delivering working software is established it is easy to project how much work will be done in each iteration [...] by tracking the team velocity you can forecast from past work how much work will probably be done in the future.

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Study notes - “Lean Software Development” Chapter 1

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06-10-2003

Started to work through Lean Software Development by Mary & Tom Poppendieck.

Chapter 1 - Eliminate Waste

waste = non-value added activity

value = customer perception

Tool 1 = seeing waste

* Partially Done Work
* Extra Processes
* Extra Features
* Task Switching
* Waiting
* Motion
* Defects

Tool 2 - Value Chain mapping

* Map process flow
* Value-added
* Non-value-added
* Prioritise improvements
* Repeat

Mindmap

Mindmap: JPEG [93kb], MindManager

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Unleashing the Ideavirus

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22-04-2002

Unleashing the Ideavirus by Seth Godin. Just finished reading the online edition - review to follow.

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The Journey of The Hero

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12-04-2002

The Journey of the Hero by Fridemann Wieland. This book is about applying Joseph Campbell’s mythological idea of “The Hero’s Journey” to personal development, using the Grail myth as the guiding metaphor. Review to follow. This book is currently out of print, I picked up a copy for £1 in a remainders bookshop.

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Measuring the Software Process

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12-04-2002

Measuring the Software Process by Florac & Carleton
This is about applying statistical process control to software development, and I’m reading it for work. Review to follow

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The Fifth Discipline Fieldbook

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12-04-2002

The Fifth Discipline Fieldbook by Peter Senge et. al.

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the sea, the sea

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12-04-2002

the sea, the sea is the first Iris Murdoch novel I have read - seeing the film “Iris” encouraged me to try some of her writing. Review to follow.

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Hazlitt on Old Books

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08-04-2002

As something of a counterpoint to the very essence of blogging, the Guardian reprints an essay from 1821 by William Hazlitt “Essay On Reading Old Books”

I hate to read new books. There are twenty or thirty volumes that I have read over and over again, and these are the only ones that I have any desire ever to read at all.



In reading a book which is an old favourite with me (say the first novel I ever read) I not only have the pleasure of imagination and of a critical relish of the work, but the pleasures of memory added to it. It recalls the same feelings and associations which I had in first reading it, and which I can never have again in any other way. Standard productions of this kind are links in the chain of our conscious being.
They bind together the different scattered divisions of our personal identity. They are landmarks and guides in our journey through life. They are pegs and loops on which we can hang up, or from which we can take down, at pleasure, the wardrobe of a moral imagination, the relics of our best affections, the tokens and records of our happiest hours. They are “for thoughts and for remembrance!” They give us the best riches - those of Fancy; and transport us, not over half the globe but (which is better) over half our lives, at a word’s notice!

Whatever you may think of the approach, Hazlitt captures the power of words to trigger the feelings aroused when you first read them.

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How The Mind Works

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22-09-2001

Just reading How The Mind Works by Steven Pinker. After the intro he dives into explaining the computational theory of mind, and now (in the chapter I am currently reading) revisits the theory of evolution and explains how this impinges on the growth of the human mind.

It sometimes takes me a few weeks to read a dense book like this, usually in 20 minute snatches on the tube, so watch this space, there will be more updates to come!

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