misc: July 2006 Archives

Wish List

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I want a new digital camera. I'm not all that great at taking pictures to begin with, so I'm thinking I need all the help I can get. Anyway, I came to this today as I was getting pictures from my mom's party in Indiana for her to a CD...I'm not happy with most of them I took that day. I know a lot of it is me, I can get good pictures if I take some time to make them good...but then again, I think our digital camera has been dropped one too many times too. Most of my pictures come out blurry on the left side of the image. I'd like one with higher mega pixels and I'd also like one with an optical zoom.

Oh well, there's a lot of things I want that we can't really afford to get so I'll just add this one to the list :)

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Simplifiers and Complexifiers

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Lifehacker pointed to a blog post on two different types of people, simplifiers ad complexifiers, and asks whether "you make things more complicated." I found a few of the comments on Lifehacker's post pretty interesting though. First, to quote the original article:

"Complexifiers are adverse to reduction. Their instincts are to turn simple assignments into quagmires, and to reject simple ideas until they're buried (or asphyxiated) in layers of abstraction....They take pride in consuming more bandwidth, time, and patience than needed, and expect rewards for it.

Simplifiers strive on concision...They find ways to communicate complex ideas in simple terms without losing the idea's essence or power."

Here are a few of the comments I found interesting:

AKthe47 says:

It's often the case that 'complexifiers' make things more complicated in the hopes of analyzing a problem into its base components so that a similar problem can be resolved much more quickly.


arul_v says:

This categorizing into "complexifiers" and "simplifiers" is a perfect example of how trying to trivially simplify inherently complex things can lead to wrong results.



tnoetz01 says:

Anyone who tries to lump the entire globe into two categories is usually wrong. Simple enough for you?


I can only speak for myself, but I would put myself into the complexifier category and I don't think that one of these categories is better than the other. I also agree with the comments above. First of all, whenever I start a project that I know is going to take me a long time to learn or implement, I always think about the future benefits of the initial implementation. It may take me a long time to execute now but the next time I do it I will have beat the learning curve and made it simpler not just for myself, but for anybody else who wants to benefit from my work.

I also agree that it is too much to classify people into two categories. I may consider myself a complexifier but I also see benefit in collaboration with people who are not like me. I prefer to work with people who have opposite strengths than I do because their strengths and my strengths make up a better whole outcome. Therefore you need complexifiers and simplifiers working together in order to attack a project at all angles.

Speaking as if there are only two types of people in the world (which we know that there isn't), the original author of this post negates the contributions of the complexifier, however the complexifier is better at different things than a simplifier. I believe that both can take a problem and simplify it to its most basic parts, but a complexifier is able to wrap their heads around truly complex problems, especially problems that do not have one straight answer. Speaking as somebody whose mind is constantly racing with different thoughts, calculations, and scenarios, it's necessary for complexifiers to go through ever aspect of those thoughts and not completely settle on the "simplest" answer, but rather the "best" answer. I would even reason to guess that complexifiers are more adapt to thinking outside the box than simplifiers. Complexifiers like to brainstorm their ideas, sometimes verbally, and I believe that a lot of great ideas can come out of those thoughts...even some of the most abstract ones.

There's room for all sorts of people in a workplace, the key is to understand where you fit in, and if you're a manager, to understand how others fit into your organization.

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Yippee! Google is opening up an operation in Ann Arbor that will bring 1,000 jobs to the state.

You bet I already took a look at the job offerings this morning! Nothing I'm too interested in though. There's some advertising, it looks like some engineering jobs, and maybe some print scanning (which makes sense). I've always said that I would love to work at Google, but I honestly never want to live anywhere but the mid-west...lucky for me my husband agrees.

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Ann Arbor Fairy Doors

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