Great review and summary of some of the key points in my book by @andrewceverett It’s Not Complicated: The Art and Science of Complexity in Business https://t.co/hXU5KWRLi4 via @wordpressdotcom
I always look forward to an email from @andrewceverett of The Key Point. Another great review and lots to think about as the US starts a new presidency term.
The Autobiography of Calvin Coolidge https://t.co/nmUk8BTjzl
Contrary to the BMO analysis, CREA takes a positive outlook for 2025...the fact of the matter is, homes sell one at a time, and trends are lagging data, but not necessarily predictive of future outcomes. https://t.co/jmzTfoAnky
Seems like someone is getting a Jesus complex ... Biden will commute the sentences of about 1,500 people in the largest single-day act of clemency by a modern-day president https://t.co/9XKT8RkWjN via @WSJ
What matters to bureaucrats is not whether what they are doing makes sense but whether it fits the routine. It is both bothersome and dangerous to go beyond the routine because that means taking personal responsibility for the consequences. One of the main hallmarks of bureaucrats is avoidance of personal responsibility.
The one thing that all bureaucrats have in common is the notion that the bureaucracy is never wrong. If anything has gone wrong, it had to be someone else's fault, preferably the fault of whoever complains about the bureaucracy. Any evidence that would prove them wrong is likely to be kept under wraps.
Anyone old enough (or weird enough) to remember BMO's "Blowing in the Wind" commercial? U.K. luxury carmaker Jaguar has launched a rebrand campaign that caused online backlash
https://t.co/NANkyUGgpX via @WSJ
In the words of that famous philosopher Charlie Brown "Good grief!" College freshmen aren’t the only ones learning this fall. Their parents are getting a crash course in letting go. https://t.co/v1bxNDojf9 via @WSJ
Anyone know a sales rep at Palisade? Need info on getting an @Risk software license and their crappy website contact info link is broken and all of my former contacts have left the company ...
Not sure their purpose in posting this, but there would be massive retirements as most people over 50 would then be financially better off retired than working ...
Who knew that fractals reduce stress!? Gotta get out my copy of The Fractal Geometry of Nature as I prep for first day of class tomorrow... Another great review.
Forest Bathing: The Japanese Art and Science of Shinrin-Yoku https://t.co/UpOkVRkY6y
What's that old saying ... something, like "There's lies, damn lies, and then there's governmental agency statistics .... " U.N. Casts Little Light on Heat by @BjornLomborg https://t.co/pepH8vepsf via @WSJopinion
Being a university prof IS my retirement gig. For the most part I love it. Most students are great, but the not-so-great tend to stand out more as the years pass (and the addiction to their phones increases)
Or they intend to, but realize the impracticality of watching all of the videos for the first time the night before the exam. I have often thought that for many students, the process of taking the time and effort to provide extra support materials actually backfires ...
@rnason_dal Yes… this is driven, in part, by young students not using university as a means to get educated but rather as a passport to a career I think.
The only “fix” I can think of is if one builds their own audience.
But credentialism (not education) is the real+hard problem to solve.