Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Digital skolesekk?



Mange kunne tenkt seg en papirløs digital skolesekk, men hva hva skal den fylles med?
Skolens største utfordring er at visjonen er for vag. Vi trenger kunnskapsløft uten reformer og krangel om timeplanen.
DN skriver om Khan Academy som starten på en revolusjon i fjernundervisning.  BT´s Sjur Holsen beskriver den norske skoledebatten som irrelevant.

Jeg kan programmere, jobber med digitale medier, har 3 barn i skolen og en kort karriere som høgskolelektor i bagasjen. Jeg tror på det uforløste potensialet i å bruke teknologi til læring.

Wednesday, April 03, 2013

Teach the kids to code !

There is a Norwegian movement in shaping, inspired by the US code.org and Codeclub in UK. The initiative Kidsakoder (@kidsakoder) was taken a fe weeks ago and the first meetup was held yesterday.

Why should we teach the kids to program ? I think there are two main motivations for this. 


1. Kids (and the rest of us) should not only have skills to use the technology but understand how its made.  This principle applies to most other disciplines we learn. Computer programs are a fundamental part of our lives and society - they  should to some extent be understood by everyone.

Friday, March 22, 2013

Culture beats strategy

The most inspiring talk at the innovation conference Grow2013 was from René Carayol. He is a leading Business Guru and author of Corporate Voodoo. He has worked with Bill Clinton, Kofi Annan and Sir Richard Branson. In his TED talk, he tells the story of being mistaken for a "butler" at a Leadership conference in Barcelona. His point being that:
"Sometimes wrong assumptions are our greatest learning opportunities"

He told us the story of how someone took the time to believe in him, before he believed in himself. He was headhunted to the board of Pepsi.

His main messages is:

"The world is changing fast and we are never going back to the old times, we need to reconsider our assumptions" - times are volatile, uncertain and complex - its the times of the entrepreneurs.

Monday, January 14, 2013

The books I read in 2012

Many of the books I read this year, gave me new perspectives and changed the way I think. Following up on the "Books I read in 2011"

Raushetens tid, Kathrine Aspaas, read Dec 2012
An inspiring book by the finance journalist who put her personal transformation in becoming a more open and sharing person into a bigger context. We are moving into times where openness - fueled by social media, change the way we do business and live our lives. A very eye-opening analysis of the zeitgeist anno 2012.


Language intelligence: lessons on persuation from Jesus, Shakespeare, Joseph J Romm, read August 2012
A real handbook in rhetoric that is understandable for most of us with great examples from Lady Gaga, George Bush, Obama etc.
I stumbled upon a review of this book on realclimate.org. The author, a climate activist is blogging on  climateprogress.org. His motivation for writing this book was having larger impact in the climate debate.

Sunday, January 06, 2013

Kindle for Kids at Nyenga

I brought the 2 kindles and a wireless router to Nyenga. See my previous post on Planning for Africa. It was fun to introduce Kindle to kids and employees at Nyenga. The bad network connection (and lack of Amazon whispernet), made it slow and unstable to download new books. I did preload some books before I left. The Worldreader project have quite a few books titles for children at Amazon.

Monday, November 26, 2012

Planning for Africa

Our family have decided to spend Christmas in Africa. Our motivation is to see Africa of course, and escape from our well known routines focused on food and gifts. We want to  experience something different and hopefully get a flavor of both some luxury and real life for most people.


We have decided to spend one week in Uganda and one week in Zanzibar. In Uganda we are given the unique opportunity to stay some days at Nyenga Childrens Home. which was founded by a group of volunteers in 2009.  I met one of the founders, an old friend of mine, in June. When I mentioned our plans to go to Africa she replied "we have a house in Uganda - you must go and stay there".

So Uganda it is, and we learned later that Lonely Planet has ranked Uganda as travel destination #1 in 2012. Largely caused by its high level of security and of course beautiful nature, with similar wildlife as  Kenya and Tanzania, but less tourists.

Thursday, September 06, 2012

Phone on Fire, Kindle and a Kettle



It was with great excitement I unpacked my new BioLite camp stove today. It was ordered 5 minutes after reading about it in PopularScience+. 10 days later it was delivered on my door. For a camper this is good news - it´s a great camping stove (It boiled 1 litre of water in less than 10 minutes), and it has a USB outlet. As we all know - most modern phone batteries does not survive 2 days of tent life.

Tuesday, August 07, 2012

Summer - 28 days at sea

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Summer 2012 - sailing, a set on Flickr.
We headed for wonderful Læsø in Kattegat - the third summer in a row. For the first time - I also had to sail the boat back to Bergen. The first week I sailed the boat alone to Kristiansand together with my two youngest kids Emma(9) and Jonas (7). Down there my wife Lene and Emil (13) joined us.

4 weeks in a boat is an adventure and the days were packed with new happenings. Læsø was as beautiful as always and rewarded us with clear water and blue sky enough days - so we felt it was worth it.

Thursday, June 21, 2012

iPad 3 harnessed for sailing

My iPad 3 is now prepared for summer holiday at sea. After some research, the choice landed on Griffins Survivor case. Both because it is reasonable priced and it fits the iPad 3 (even if not stated explicitly on the package). An alternative - the Lifeproof case, not available for iPad 3 yet , looks pretty good, but is slightly more expensive.

After testing it outdoors, I already suspect one problem - sun reflections. With direct sunlight and a small angle, the plastic screen cover very quickly turns into a mirror.

The apps ? Navionics Marine HD of course. Its is a must and have integrated weather forecast which is a huge advantage. In addition Havneguiden (Harbour Guide) which is an excellent guide to all harbors in Scandinavia. Finally,  I can recommend the Windfinder app on iPhone - it provides real time weather data from several weather stations along the coast.

Sunday, June 03, 2012

Nassim Taleb: The Black Swan - the impact of the highly improbable

Nassem Taleb born in Lebanon (1960), focuses on problems of randomness and probability. He has been a wall street trader, hedge fund manager and professor at several Universities.


The book have been on my wish list for a while and it suddenly stared at me in a bookstore  - I decided to finally read it.

It is one of these rare books that is important not because of what you learn, but because of what you un-learn.
Humans are in love with the thought that there is a casual link between all historical events and that that most things are possible to predict given the right models.


Economists and social scientists are also in love with simple
models based on Gaussian curves where the mediocre is the centre and everything else is considered deviations from it. Very few real life phenomena actually fit this nice abstract mathematical model. If you are dealing with risk and the magnitude of one single event far from the norm is so big that it changes the whole game - you might be in trouble. 

We have a strong bias towards building models based on the knowledge and information we have, and to a far less extent consider the possible impact of knowledge we do not have. This lead us to create models that nicely accounts for every single grass in the field, but rules out the possibility of a tree.

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

I rest my case - Evernote and Shakespeare for personal creativity

I promised an update on my search for the optimal personal creativity app in my last blog post. In retrospect in became even clearer to me that it is more inspiring to be guided by Shakespeare and start every day by simply posing the question:

"Who do I want to be today ?" 

rather than what is my Todo list today ? Anyway, I did some googling and stumbled upon The four hour work week blog by Tim Ferriss. I was so curious that I downloaded his book on my Kindle. At first I was very sceptic (and I guess still am), but I must admit he has some very provoking and interesting thoughts on personal productivity and personal creativity.

He convinced me to give Evernote a new (and real try), and I must admit it has more or less all features I have been looking for.

  1. Capture web pages (both just URL and complete page) using web clipper
  2. Capture images
  3. Capture documents like PDFs
  4. A tagging systems - that allows you relate items along several dimensions and escape hierarchies
  5. Instant Cloud based synchronization between all devices
  6. Possibility to create lists
  7. Sharing - by allowing shared notebooks.


The only thing I miss (a bit) is OCR recognition. It may be available in the premium edition I´m not sure.
After less than a moth of usage, I have already stored tons of data and I use it everyday. So my quest for a personal creativity app has ended - I will stay with evernote, and most likely turn into a premium customer very soon. I will dump my brain into this trusted external storage - naive as I am

Sunday, May 13, 2012

ToDo or not ToDo - is that the real question ?


David Allen´s GTD promise of stress-free productivity suggest that lack of productivity is our main source of stress. Too much focus on productivity is stressful by itself.  Are we trapped into thinking about intellectual work using old models inherited from Adam Smith and manufacturing ?


I will rather go for plain creativity.


I´ve been a sucker for productivity and ToDo apps and tried many of them (Gtasks, Omnifocus, Evernote, OneNote, GoogleTasks including the yellow notes on my iPhone that is still a dear friend). I have read David Allens Getting Things Done, and it introduces some very useful ideas, but there is still something with this whole ToDo paradigm that gives me a creepy feeling.

Monday, May 07, 2012

The season of contrasts


In Bergen we do have four seasons, but we never know when we get them. In April and May we can get all in one week; snow, rain, warm and sunny. Sometimes I even have the feeling of getting several of them in the same day. On May 1st it was 17°C, first day of barbecue & shorts. Three days later it was snowing - and I was skiing. I just wanted to post some picture from last week.

Sunday, May 06, 2012

Retro cab experience

Yesterday we took a cab to the city centre to listen to Goldenboy. Just as I was about to leave the taxi and looked at the taximeter, my eyes stopped immediately at this phone that should have been on a technical museum. According to the proud taxi driver,  it is 14 years old and still working. This phone was released 1996 so that may well be true. I asked if a could take a picture - and of course I could.

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

SVG on mobile - The next big thing


I just submitted a talk to JavaZone before the deadline April 16.

Scalable Vector Graphics is a mature standard that have been around for a long time, but have lived in the shadow of Flash and suffered lack of browser support. Today SVG has gaining rapidly support in browsers and authoring tools. Its fully integrated with, and part of the larger html5 umbrella. SVG has a huge potential for creators of interactive graphic content. One of the great advantages is the inherent scalability, that makes the graphics crisp on any screen size without conversion.
The talk draws on findings from Ruben Havres master thesis “The use of SVG as a dynamic graphic on mobile devices” at Bergen University College that I initiated.

Other conferences interested in this talk ?

Monday, March 26, 2012

House on the moon and opera in the fjords

March 15th I attended the GROW innovation conference in Bergen for the second year. It was a day for inspiration and new perspectives.

Most refreshing I found the talk of the Swedish artist Mikael Genberg whose project is to build a little red house on the moon - Luna Resort. The project seems more likely to matrialize than I thought at first. In 2008 NASA gained interest in the project and invited him for a meeting. You can read about the project in his blog (swedish). Other interesting projects of his are the Woodpecker Hotel located in a tree in the central park of Stockholm, and a underwater hotel 3m below the surface of Lake Mälaren near Stockholm. He also has a underwater hotel project at Zanzibar in progress.

Thursday, March 01, 2012

Using Business Model Canvas on startupweekend winners

Yesterday we had our second meetup in the Business Model User Group Bergen. First we got a presentation from the two winners of Bergen startupweekend VeiBingo and BringMe. Then we split in 4 teams and spent one hour challenging their business model, working with post-it notes on a big A0 Business Model Canvas. It was fun, and I think both startups came back with some new ideas on how to generate revenue and create value. It is such a simple tool, that makes it possible for a fairly random group of people to produce valuable results in 1 hour.

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Inventing on Principle


Thanks to @bryanrieger and @jonarnes,  I was guided to the Bret Victors great talk at CUSEC 2012 :
"Inventing on Principle". The most inspiring talk Ive seen since my TEDx day in November. He really openens new perspectives on programming and creative processes using computers. It is really worth watching for anyone that consider themselves as creative, or aspire to be so. (Those of you that manage to stay through the programming examples, will be rewarded)



His guiding principle is:


"Creators need an immediate connection to what they create"

This connects to what I already know - immediate feedback is a good thing. It explains why dynamic programming languages like JavaScript, PHP, JSP, Grooy,  etc. are so popular, because they speed up this feedback cycle by removing the compile step. Bret Victor, however takes this principle so much further.  In his demo he doesn't even have to press refresh in a browser to see the results of the changes he makes. Simulation is much stronger than feedback, and I guess connection is even a deeper concept.

Sunday, February 12, 2012

Best selling author revealed as less intelligent and arrogant on prime-time scandinavian television


Author John Gray of bestselling "Men are from Mars and Women are from Venus",  made Friday night  an embarrassing appearance on a talk show jointly broadcast in Norway and Sweden on Friday evenings.

Anyone who tries to understand fellow humans in terms of only two categories is by definition less intelligent.

Tuesday, February 07, 2012

Testing my Kindle under extreme conditions

This weekend I spent one night in tent in -13°C, and used the opportunity to test my Kindle under these conditions.

Since I got my Kindle in November it has been a dear companion on travels.

Its best features are what it does not have :
  • Apps
  • Good browser (it only has one that sucks)
  • E-mail
  • Games

Sunday, January 29, 2012

Equanimity

Today we spent the day at our summer place at Milde. Sometimes it's a good feeling to visit the sea in the "wrong" season. It was just dead calm and quiet. I was glad I did not go skiing.

Saying no to something is saying yes to something else - today this was equanimity.

Sunday, January 01, 2012

The books I read in 2011


Pragmatic Thinking and Learning: Refactor Your Wetware, Andy Hunt read march
Probably one of the few books I can attribute a habit to; to write in the morning, either on this blog or my diary. It explains our brain and learning process in programming and computer terminology. For me in evoked a new appetite for learning, and made me aware that I really need to change some of my habits, and create some new ones to manage to stay focused. Also the first mention of "The black Swan" and the Dreyfus learning model.
"Se it, do it, teach it".

Amusing Ourselves to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business,  Neil Postman, March
An analysis of how TV changed our society in one generation. My review here : "Visual stimulation is a substitute for thought".

Friday, December 02, 2011

Book Review - Mindstorms : Children, Computers and Powerful Ideas


This book is a classic written more than 30 years ago by Seymour Papert. To me, its age makes the book even more mind-blowing, as the ideas still seems very powerful and relevant The first word of its title gave name to a LEGO product line of programmable robots, but is also a representative description of my state of mind while reading the book.


So what are these powerful ideas ?
Seymour Papert was a professor in psychology and mathematics that worked closely with Jean Piaget  in Switzerland and later moved to the states where he worked and continued his research at MIT. In short his project was to revolutionize teaching (of mathematics and physics in particular) by giving children access to personal computers with a programming language, TURTLE Logo that he developed over several years for this purpose.

He foresaw that it was just a matter of time before everyone would have access to powerful personal computers produced at very low cost.

Monday, November 28, 2011

Great quotes and notes from the TEDx in Brussels

This is my overflow from the last blog post on the TEDx 2011 in BrusselsI had so many great quotes, that I simply had to share them.


The clock rate of organisations are increasing

The driving force for aggregation is diversity

What makes us intelligent is the models we think with

The only way you can be more effective is by aggregation

Good models make useful ideas simple

In 2061 aggregate individuals will be the dominant species of the planet

Lets make them of love
The singularity is here


Wednesday, November 23, 2011

A day deep into the future

This morning I had plans to do regular work, but as I checked twitter I saw TEDx trending on top. I had to check it out - it was live streaming and I was hooked for the rest of the day. This was one of the most mind-blowing days I´ve had at work for a long time.

Very strange to experience the real power of having access to some of the greatest thinkers of today - right at my own desk in a regular office in Bergen. Although I like to watch TED videos regularly, It is different with an event that is broadcast real-time with a twitter stream as the collective stream of consciousness for all the people watching, listening, thinking and tweeting at the same time.

The theme of the TEDx event was - What does the world look like in 2061?
In my own mind I extracted the following mega trends inspired by the talks:
See also my post with great quotes and notes from the talks

Friday, October 28, 2011

Good To Great: Why Some Companies Make the Leap... and Others Don't

This book is far from a 10 bullets quick fix, it is based on 5 years of thorough research and analysis of companies that changed dramatically their performance. These companies were not initially great, some of them had several years of history with poor of mediocre performance.

Amongst the Fortune 500, a tenfold companies from different industries were carefully selected and compared to competitors. The deep analysis looks at leadership, people, vision and business model from several dimensions and formulates the underlying patterns and ideas with great insight.

Jim Collins introduces many good metaphors including the "flywheel effect" Common to all these companies were a lot of processes going on from the inside before the outside world saw the effect. Like a chicken growing invisibly inside and egg to finally crack out some day. The study captures what went on inside the egg, before it cracked.

The real question is not `how do we motivate people ?`If you have the right people, they will be self-motivated. The key is not to de-motivate them. One of the primary ways to de-motivate people is to ignore the brutal facts of reality

Enduring great companies don't exist merely to deliver returns to shareholders. Indeed in a truly great company profits and cash flow becomes like blood and water to a healthy body: They are absolutely essential for life, but they are not the very point in life

After reading this book you will be convinced that just settle for good is not good enough - it must be nothing less than Great.

Wednesday, June 01, 2011

ROOTS 2011 Notes - The 7 duties of GREAT software professionals Jurgen Appello

Roots - The 7 duties of GREAT software professionals Jurgen Appello

This is my notes from @jurgenappelo keynote at the #roots2011 in Bergen

Friday, May 20, 2011

Visual stimulation is a substitute for thought.

(Review of Neil Postmans: Amusing our selves to death)
Neil Postmans "amusing our selves to death" from 1984  is an analysis of how TV changed us.
Did TV really change fundamental aspects of our culture, and even shape the way we think ?  I started asking myself that question after reading the first Chapters, and naturally went on to asking myself the following question. If TV had this impact on our culture and thinking - what about internet ?

The book is written in a time close to the target year of George Orwells "1984". Orwell describes a society with all ingrediens of what we fear - totalitarism with full censorship and control of speech, information, and even the languare. Orwell's picture of 1984 is pretty far from what our democracies in the western world has become.  In Aldous Huxleys "Brave new world", however he describes a a society where this is irrelevant, because people have entered a state of mind where they don't care; passive and occupied with trivialities.

So Orwells concept is - "What we fear ruins us", and

Huxleys concept is "What we love ruins us".

Postman explores the possibility that we have entered a state that pretty much resemples Aldous Huxleys "Brave new world", and that TV plays an important role in it. Maybe internet is just an accelerating factor on top of TV ? or maybe not ?

An average American spends 4.5 hrs in front of TV every day. Some numbers show that this have not changed a lot for many years, but in the keynote at Vizrt days in Bergen last week it was referred to a US study that showed 35% increase in average total time used on internet,tv and mobile together - a 35% increase in only one year ! Another interesting fact is that 35hrs of video content is uploaded to YouTube every minute.

Why is TV such a revolutionary inventions that changes us ? The single most significant factor is the fact that it steals so much of our time. But the fact that TV is a media in itself and has become the key bearer of communications in out culture is also important. - We understand the world through TV.

Marshall McLuhans idea that "The medium is the message" fundamental part of the reasoning. Just the very format of the medium TV lends itself to have a bias towards certain types of content - A story must be told in pictures. The format of a book favour other kinds of content. Exploting abstract ideas or having a discussion on philosophy is probabely easier in a book format based on written language than on TV. Hence the idea that the media shapes the content- We might have a perception that TV gives us all types of content: News, Entertainement, educational programmes etc. "Amusing our selves to death" suggest that most of this has an element of entertainement. "If it doesnt look good - its not good TV. Even politicians need to be good looking, or at least have a good apperance on TV. This is probabelty of more importance than their capabilities to talk and write. They have other people writing their speeches anyway, so in one sense they are also actors - reading a script.

Another idea that is fundamental to Postmans analysis is that every tool or medium (or technology if you like) represents a methaphor that shapes the way we think and structure information. The best example of this is the clock. The clock itself is just a think we use to keep track of time, but in fact the closk introduced the very idea that time is something that can be sliced into small peaces, minutes , seconds and be measured. So the clock it self is more than just a thing it brings along methapor that shapes our conception of time.
So what methapors does TV represent ? - here are some suggestions or hints

Form matters more than content. A joke or witty comment can make one person the winner of a debate.
As a tv producer you would give prominence and precedence to any event that have visual documentation.

Context is superfluous - a picture constitute a context by itself. Things does not have to be connected or relevant. No matter how serious (war , earthquake), it will be interrupter by a commercial in a newscast.  Or the quick shift to something completely different - "And now this" - the sentence very often used by news presenters because things are not connected.This suggests that passive consumption of information is OK. All reports of cruelty and death is greatly exaggerated and in any case not to be taken seriously or responded to sanely.

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Mobilism 2011 Day 2 Notes

Mobilism Day 2

All slides found here

Steve Souders (@souders) - High Performance mobile

Monday, May 16, 2011

Mobilism in Amsterdam - a mobile web focused conference

An excellent conference with very good atmosphere

4 Mobiletech'ers was attending the very first mobilsm conference in Amsterdam May 12-13. Its audience is developers and semi-technical people, and there is no sales pitches what so ever. Some of the best brains in the industry were present and it was really an atmosphere of getting together and trying to solve the new challenges of the web in general.

Here are my notes from day 1