You’ve got this…

This day, this hour, this minute, this moment. This is what you’ve got.

The tools, the ability, the skill, the time, the opportunity. Everything you face right now, this moment, you face with these. You may take away from this place more than you came with, but what you brought to it is all you have.

There is nothing you can do to change this fact. Everything that can be done right here, right now, can only be done right here, right now. You might be able to do more later and there are things you might have been able to do before. But neither of these desires matter now, in this moment, and only keep one from facing the truth.

So, here it is. The time is now. Give it your all.

You’ve got this.

Items Of Interest #7

More meanderings and things ventured from the last several days….

I really appreciated waking up this morning to Randy Murray’s wonderful take on the higher calling of art. It helped speak directly to something I’ve been trying to put some though into lately. I especially liked this:

Earning a living is a necessity for most of us, but only that, a necessity. Art is not a promise of fame or fortune. Art is a way to express oneself.

Or, as I like to put it: Surviving can keep you from living.

Tikker is a decidedly new take on a watch. Not only does it tell you the time but it also counts down the life you have left, from years to seconds, and helps keep you aware of making each moment count. The product page was a bit unclear as to how it figures out how much time we have left (and, obviously, it can’t know for sure). So, I did some digging and here is what I found:

The wearer simply fills out a questionnaire, deducts his/her current age from the results, and TIKKER is ready to start the countdown.

My guess it is some calculation of age, weight, diet, vices, etc. It is an interesting idea for sure.

Lots of really great stuff coming out of the recent XOXO Fest a few weeks back. I’m really kicking myself for not making the effort to go and plan to rectify that next year. My only consolation is some of the great thoughts, ideas, and takeaways people are sharing that did attend. Glenn Fleishman’s take, In a Time of Hugs and Kisses, was a nicely compelling and informative spin on what it was like to attend. Pinboard.in founder Maciej Ceglowski posted the notes and slides of his talk, Thoreau 2.0. Which as a huge Thoreau fan both exposed some of the seeming contradictions between the author’s views and his lifestyle and how the way he actually lived might be better for us. And Frank Chimero’s The Inferno Of Independence just may be the best piece on the state of the internet today that I have read all year.

Lots of my friends are updating a releasing lots of cool stuff lately. My friend Brett Kelly recently released the latest version of his excellent Evernote Essentials which is currently half price but wont be for much longer. My friend Brad Dowdy and his partner have officially launched the Kickstarter for their new pen/pencil/notebook case venture, Nock Co.. My friend Nick Wynja recently released his Pinboard based Read-It-Later service, Paperback… It’s nice to be in such creative company.

Of course, I released the audiobook version of my Apple Consulting Guide and launched The Unrecorded Podcast last week so I have been busy trying to keep up in the shipping department too.

That covers it for now. Have a great week.

The Unrecorded Podcast

Today I launched a new project with some friends — The Unrecorded Podcast. This is the story of what it is and how it came to be.

The first most recent time CJ Chilvers, Dave Caolo, and myself got together for a late night chat, it was not recorded. These chats we had done before as an ad hoc support group. Fellow writers of like mind bouncing crazy ideas and half-cooked schemes off each other in the hopes they might turn into something (or, at the very least, ensure an audience of two to watch the failure).

Toward the end of the call, I half-joked that we should have recorded the conversation. We three get along quite well and are of similar stripes and interests. I had often thought about doing a podcast with these gentlemen. Then again, it was sort of nice to simply be able to talk freely among friends without anyone else listening in. Not everything has to be shared. So, the idea to record it was scrapped.

In a follow up email, CJ had titled our talk The Unrecorded Podcast. This, of course, set my mind to spinning. I wondered how far one might take such an idea. Would such a thing be a live show? Would it actually be recorded and simply have an ironic name? I wasn’t sure. But, I was sure it was an idea that would not leave me alone until we figured it out.

So, for our next conversation we decided to try recording it. Just to see what happened. To see if there was a “there” there. Turned out there was. Too much so in fact. Dave, CJ, and I could chat for hours (and often do) across a iety of topics (and deep knowledge of a LOT of 1980s hairbands). To say we digress into ratholes far and deep is an understatement. And. to limit that would take away the very reason we enjoyed it. To release it as a podcast would mean audio files that measured in gigabytes and an unreasonable assumption of people’s available time.

But then, we started to brainstorm the idea even further. What if we really didn’t record it but treated it like a podcast in every other way? What if it had a schedule, and guests, and show notes? And, what if people got these show notes as a newsletter — a brief description and list of links that, without context, seemed random and mysterious yet strangely interesting? And what if, like any other podcast we had guests on occasionally to add to the conversation? And, what if we picked one the the subscribers to the email list at random to come join us from time to time? Would people get the beauty and the irony or would it break their brains?

The fact is that some of the world’s most famous art is art because of such mysteries: Why is Mona smiling? What happened to Venus’ arm? Why is that tower leaning? What the heck was Dali smoking? In the same way, this would be a podcast that is really a newsletter. A performance that nobody sees performed. A dispatch born of things unknown. We give the answers, you guess the questions. The best art, it seems, is inherently brain-breaking and is worth doing for no better reason than that.

So, this is how The Unrecorded Podcast came to be. You can sign up to enjoy the show notes in your email inbox as new episodes are not recorded. We already are lining up some great guests to come on and chat with us. We’re sure you’ll be happy to not hear them, yet still get lots of important things to take away from what they have to say. Things that could help.

Become an unlistener today. You won’t regret it.