no shit

Hartley, John
2004
From Republic of Letters to Television Republic? Citizen Readers in the Era of Broadcast Television

386
“Very little progressive optimism was applied to television in a systematic way in formal academic, intellectual, and critical writing. This was in large part a symptom of twentieth-century intellectual politics, with television as merely the latest in a long line of miscreant media stretching back through movies, radio, and music to the gutter press, yellow press, and penny dreadfuls of previous centuries. Cultural elites were habituated to “assailing” media that in their view failed to “uplift” the masses.”

413
“Television became old when the desires and fears it used to evoke as the latest, most popular, all-singing, all-dancing attraction were transferred to newer media such as the Internet.”

category: PhD sources
tags:

Bolker, Joan
1998
Writing Your Dissertation in Fifteen Minutes a Day: A Guide to Starting, Revising, and Finishing Your Doctoral Thesis

Write 6 days a week.
Start with 10 minutes of freewriting (write anything) a day.
Move on to 10 minutes of not-quite-so-free writing (write about something that interests you about your thesis) a day.
Write first!
Three options:

  1. sit there method (write for fixed amount of time, say 2 hours
  2. inspiration method (write until you come up with 1 or 2 decent ideas
  3. probably best: many pages method (write fixed number of pages a day)

Start “many pages method” with 3-6 pages a day.
Write fast.
Write messy (not from beginning to end; no spell check; no thesaurus; don’t think about words/phrases/exactness).
Notice the point when it stops flowing.
Stop.
“Parking on the downhill slope” (bullets about what to write about next).
Don’t write too much, you won’t be able to write the next day.
Zero draft: collection of all the messy writing.
First draft: something that makes sense; has a beginning, middle, end.
Set up deadlines so they involve rewards, not punishments: give yourself enough time; watch a movie/concert afterwards.
One way to deal with interruptions from the inside: write them down; perhaps according to topics; and add to the topics; then perhaps deal with it.
Learn to meditate in order to focus?

Shirky, Clay
2010
The Collapse of Complex Business Models (18.04.2010)

Societies and business models get more and more complex until (because of the law of diminishing returns) any added complexity causes pure costs (and no benefits). Such complex models can’t become less complex even if they wanted to. They have to collapse.
Examples: Romans, Mayans, ATT, and now TV executives.