read two books on creativity

Posted on May 25, 2020

Below is a long blog post about 2018 and the first months of 2019. In this past year, I have read two books on creativity that were very helpful to me: The War of Art by Steven Pressfield and Creative Confidence by Tom Kelley and David Kelly (both affiliate links). I also listened to the Tim Ferriss podcast episode with Austin Kleon where he talked about his book Show Your Work! . It was really inspiring for me to hear him talk about making mistakes as part of being an artist/creator and what it means when you let go of perfectionism in your work and allow yourself to be vulnerable. That’s something I can struggle with at times—I want my artwork to look great right out of the gate but sometimes taking time to make something imperfect can actually lead to better results later down the line or help you figure things out earlier than if everything had been perfect from the start. In other words, don’t be afraid of making bad drawings because those are often some of our best learning opportunities; instead use them as fuel so we know how NOT do certain things next time around which ultimately leads us closer towards creating good stuff :) The main reason why most people fail to achieve their goals isn’t due to lacking talent, skill, discipline - no matter how hard they try there will always come up obstacles along life paths even though everyone has different abilities & strengths depending upon circumstances surrounding one’s existence here within earthly realm however success never comes without challenges either way just keep moving forward while trusting God who knows exactly what He wants us all become despite anything else happening outside ourselves since everything happens through Him alone regardless whether positive OR negative outcome occurs otherwise wouldn’t exist altogether anymore…so stop worrying now then focus solely upon doing whatever needs done until completed fully satisfied contentedly afterwards:) This last week I finally finished writing “A New Chapter.” When I started working on it back in October, I wasn’t sure if I would ever finish it. But after fourteen draft revisions over five days, I did. And it feels good knowing that I made myself write every single day for more than three weeks straight just like Nike says, “Just Do It.” Even though I got stuck many times during these final edits, I kept going anyway because finishing matters to me more than getting hung up on minor details does not mean much unless I complete what I set out to accomplish originally beforehand instead? Now onto planning another project called “Beyond The Horizon” which will probably take longer than six hours total combined into multiple sessions across several weeks rather than one solid chunk overnight session only once overall hopefully someday soon soonish eventually somewhere whenever possible perhaps unlikely highly likely almost certainly doubtful somewhat probable maybe possibly quite frankly definitely defiantly totally undoubtably unquestioningly absolutely surely confidently beyond any Below is a long blog post about 511. I don’t know if it will be useful to you, but I thought it might help someone else who has been looking at the same data and was wondering what on earth they were supposed to do with it… You can also find all of this information in more easily digestible form here: https://www.transportdirect.info/content-hub/blog/?category=travel-planning&tag=511-project (or by following that link through your Twitter or Facebook feed). It contains links directly back to these pages so you should always see the latest version when clicking those links! There are some important things for me to say before going into detail – hopefully these points won’t come across as patronising but please bear them in mind… We have spent a lot of time trying to make sure our analysis was solid, using only official statistics wherever possible. We have tried hard not to use assumptions where we could base something on actual figures instead. However there may still be cases where we have made an assumption which hasn’t quite worked out right. If this happens then it would be great if you let us know because we want to get everything perfect for launch day next week. The most common type of mistake we could make is counting bus passengers incorrectly, either overstating how many people use each service or understating their numbers (because of delays etc.) So if anything seems wrongly described based on local knowledge please tell us immediately via email info@511.org.uk, phone call 07946238358 or tweet @511_london The London Datastore website allows users to download datasets from Transport for London such as bus stops and routes, tube stations and other locations covered by the Underground network, and other public transport related data like live travel updates. As well as getting access to up to date data Transport for London provides various APIs, allowing developers to integrate TfL services into new websites or apps without having to replicate the work done elsewhere. One example of this is our own journey planner app which uses data provided by the open source Journey Planner API project. Whenever changes occur within any dataset provided by TfL, including the location of individual road junctions and bus stop coordinates, the data published online reflects these changes almost instantly. This means that whilst the open source JPAP project is now able to include bus and rail timetable data alongside walking times and distance measurements between two destinations, its underlying infrastructure makes it easy for anyone to check whether these updated features continue to function correctly after making any changes themselves. By combining existing geographic datasets supplied separately by Ordnance Survey Great Britain Ltd., along with street level imagery captured during automated driving tests conducted last year around major urban centres throughout England & Wales, Google Maps Street View technology Below is a long blog post about 10 years of running the PB Wiki, how we do it and why. In September I will be celebrating ten years since first creating the Perl Best Practices wiki (aka “the pbwiki”). It’s been quite an amazing ride, but in order to understand where this project came from and what keeps me motivated after all these years you need some context around that history… so here goes! I started using Perl back in high school for my own projects, although at that point I was more interested in programming than getting into the details of software licensing or community standards - which is where Open Source comes in! My very first exposure to any sort of community-developed software source code was probably when I discovered Linux distributions like Red Hat on a CD somewhere. But even before then there were things like The Perl FAQ (TPF) and perlhacks written by Larry Wall himself. These books were always sitting next to me as someone who enjoyed working with computers; they taught me everything I knew about doing things correctly. For example: There are two main ways to use regular expressions: Pattern matching and substitution. When used together, both techniques help to make your programs easier to read and maintain–and reduce their bugs.–Perl Cookbook Chapter #47 by Damian Conway & Tim Bunce, 2003 Edition pp685-9 [perlfaq] The second time I remember being really inspired by something openly developed online was seeing the release of PHP4 over the summer of 2000. At that moment there wasn’t much discussion happening outside of mailing lists about what changes would happen between versions — except maybe some speculation based off previews released months prior — yet somehow those guys managed to create something truly special out of thin air every few weeks without missing a beat! This got my attention because unlike other languages at least everyone involved could see exactly what changed compared side by side each iteration making sure nothing important slipped through cracks during development cycles leading up until final release date(s). It seemed like everybody else had figured out how easy it was possible thanks largely due its rapid progression rate coupled alongside robust documentation efforts led mostly via comments sections directly attached onto certain files found within GitHub repository itself :) After reading many posts throughout various sites including StackOverflow asking questions such “Why isn’t anyone answering”?, “Are there any good tutorials available?” etc., finally decided enough was enough – created personal account shortly afterwards under name ‘peterfellman.’ And voila!! We now have ourselves another contributor :) Overview of the First Ten Years A lot has happened in just three short years! From our humble beginnings as an amateurish effort at organizing user contributions towards best practices documentation for Perl developers to becoming one of largest repositories dedicated solely toward improving upon existing solutions provided across multiple platforms (such Below is a long blog post about 2013 and the future of Hacking with Swift. I wrote it for my personal site, but figured that since we’re such an open source community here at Apple, sharing this publicly on DF was probably okay to do as well! As many developers know by now (and many who don’t) - I work full time on all things “Hacking with Swift”. This means making sure everyone can get involved in learning iOS development using our tools including: Xcode Playgrounds, the online Learn app, books, videos, documentation etc.. When you start out developing your first apps or projects, there are so many decisions to make along the way – what language should they be written in? What frameworks will help me build cool features faster? How am I going to distribute them once I finish? So when someone says “hey I want to learn how to write iPhone/iPad Apps” they actually mean “I want to figure out how to solve these problems.” We have built up tremendous momentum over the last year thanks to our strong partnerships within Apple like Human Interface Guidelines teams & engineers, Education team members and some awesome open source contributors. To keep building upon that success, let’s take a look back at where we started and discuss where we are headed next. In early June, 2013 the App Store featured its very first section dedicated to iBooks textbooks called “Education” which allowed users around the world access to millions of high-quality education titles from leading publishers like Pearson, McGraw Hill, Cengage Learning, Wiley and more right inside their mobile devices. At the same time, Apple launched a new developer program called “Universal Application Distribution Agreement” allowing any educational institution with students enrolled in classes to download and use their own customized version of Xcode without having to sign a regular distribution agreement. The UADA program has been hugely popular amongst universities because it gives professors and teaching assistants control over what software they would prefer their student labs run on. In fact, hundreds of thousands of educators signed up for UADA immediately after release. It also gave us an opportunity to meet with many university faculty members and administrations which eventually led to us partnering with several schools across North America including Harvard University, Carnegie Mellon, Georgia Tech, Yale, Vanderbilt University, Brown University, Columbia University, Queens College, Rice University, University of Alabama at Birmingham and others. These institutions were excited about Swift being used as part of core curriculums taught to computer science majors and offered programming courses to other departments as electives. They provided us feedback directly into our design process for Xcode Playgrounds while helping us recruit more schools interested in getting involved too. As part of those conversations, we learned Below is a long blog post about 10 things I learned from the recent trip to Thailand. In this series of posts, we will discuss the following topics: “Things that didn’t work out as planned”, “What surprised me? (Food)” and “What surprised me? (Culture)”. This week’s topic was inspired by one conversation during my stay in Bangkok with an American friend who visited South East Asia many times before but never made it to Thailand so far. 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