Sunday, August 8, 2010

Double 8's Brainstorming Session


From Wikipedia

Brainstorming is a group creativity technique designed to generate a large number of ideas for the solution of a problem. In 1953 the method was popularized by Alex Faickney Osborn in a book called Applied Imagination. Osborn proposed that groups could double their creative output with brainstorming.[1]

Although brainstorming has become a popular group technique, when applied in a traditional group setting, researchers have not found evidence of its effectiveness for enhancing either quantity or quality of ideas generated. Because of such problems as distraction, social loafing, evaluation apprehension, and production blocking, conventional brainstorming groups are little more effective than other types of groups, and they are actually less effective than individuals working independently.[2][3][4] In the Encyclopedia of Creativity, Tudor Rickards, in his entry on brainstorming, summarizes its controversies and indicates the dangers of conflating productivity in group work with quantity of ideas.[5]

Although traditional brainstorming does not increase the productivity of groups (as measured by the number of ideas generated), it may still provide benefits, such as boosting morale, enhancing work enjoyment, and improving team work. Thus, numerous attempts have been made to improve brainstorming or use more effective variations of the basic technique.

Professor Olivier Toubia of Columbia University has conducted extensive research in the field of idea generation and has concluded that incentives are extremely valuable within the brainstorming context.[6]

From these attempts to improve brainstorming, electronic brainstorming stands out. Mainly through anonymization and parallelization of input, electronic brainstorming enforces the ground rules of effective brainstorming and thereby eliminates most of the deleterious or inhibitive effects of group work.[7] The positive effects of electronic brainstorming become more pronounced with group size.[8]

Sunday, January 10, 2010

What's new?

Hey all you Cosmonican's out there or whatever it is we are calling ourselves now.

What's new in the world of writing?

Anyone still in the process of writing now that we've entered the year "twenty twelve"?


As for me I've taken two weeks off, gotten a fresh kindle from Amazon and enter the upcoming week with renewed optimism and energy for finishing my nano. I'm over 60k words and I'm only 31 years old in the book.

How about you--- and I do mean Y-O-U. Whatzuuuuuup?

Friday, October 16, 2009

NaNoWriMo 2009

It's getting to be NaNo time. Who's in for this year?

Monday, August 10, 2009

Your World of Text

I wonder if this could be a useful brainstorming tool...

On the site "Your World of Text", you get an infinitely large, text-based, multi-user whiteboard to do whatever you want with.

Just add anything to the end of the URL, and it creates a new whiteboard with that name. Give the URL to others and they can edit it, too.

Try this one:

http://www.yourworldoftext.com/cosmonicans

Sunday, June 28, 2009

Query Letter

Mike and I were talking at dinner tonight about the dreaded Query Letter. I wanted to share the post I made based on my notes from that session. Here it is!

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Kindle - A great tool for writers

I'm starting to find a number of reasons why I love the Kindle, and none of them have to do with being a reader of books.
They all have to do with being a writer (aspiring):

  • Preview this book: The Kindle store lets you download the first two or three chapters of almost any book, for FREE. Every time someone now asks me, "Have you read so-n-so?", if I haven't, I just go grab samples of their work. It's a great way to have a library of different writers at your fingertips. Study them!
  • Annotations and Notes: I can add my own commentary and notes to anything I read on it. This is very useful for finding interesting passages later, without having to write on the physical copy.
  • Reading my own stuff: I can convert a DOC or PDF easily, and put it on the Kindle. A nice way to proofread without having to sit at the computer, or print out reams of paper. The annotation feature above makes it easy to flag things I need to fix, without getting bogged down in fixing them as I find them.
  • Pacing: The Kindle has an interesting dilemma; how to show where you are in a book. It can't show a page number, because you can change the font size to your liking. So instead it shows a percentage. I realized last night that this makes for an easy way to place the "beats" in a story. On the current book I'm reading, the Kindle says I'm 15% in, and I still haven't gotten to the problem our hero is facing. I knew it had felt kinda slow. I'm going to start watching for certain "beats" like a hawk, and seeing where they fall in books that work, and books that dont. Granted, it can be done by comparing page #'s in normal books, but this is quicker and can become intuitive.
From a pure reading standpoint, I still prefer a good old hard-copy. But as a tool for learning about writing, I am finding the Kindle very helpful.

Sunday, June 7, 2009

"Heathers" Logline

I thought it might be good practice to write loglines for movies we see, and books we read.

Yesterday I watched "Heathers", so here is my take on it:

Veronica, drawn into a series of murders by the suave and manipulative J.D., must realize her school is worth saving in time to stop him from blowing it up.