Archive for October 2009


Nightly Sketch Nr. 5

31. October 2009 - 13:37 Uhr

Animals and cannibals.

Nightly Sketch Nr. 5

Nightly Sketch Nr. 5

Want to know what this is about? See “Nightly Sketches”.

Kommentieren » | drawing

Nightly Sketch Nr. 4

30. October 2009 - 10:58 Uhr

Knock, knock.

Nightly Sketch Nr. 4

Nightly Sketch Nr. 4

Want to know what this is about? See “Nightly Sketches”.

4 Kommentare » | drawing

Nightly Sketch Nr. 3

29. October 2009 - 16:15 Uhr

Down-to-earth skyline.

Nightly Sketch Nr. 3

Nightly Sketch Nr. 3

Want to know what this is about? See “Nightly Sketches”.

Kommentieren » | drawing

Nightly Sketch Nr. 2

28. October 2009 - 10:07 Uhr

Some fast food wizardry: the magical mystery burger.

Nightly Sketch #2

Nightly Sketch #2

Want to know what this is about? See “Nightly Sketches”.

2 Kommentare » | drawing

Nightly Sketches

27. October 2009 - 11:14 Uhr

This is the start of a little social media experiment: I’ll be posting sketches on a day-by-day basis and tagging them with “nightlysketch”, which will be automatically hashtagged for twitter (#nightlysketch). I will usually be working in the late evening (CET) and publish the sketch during the next day. Each sketch will be a scan of a page in DIN A4 format.

The drawings will depict anything that comes to my mind. It would be nice to see a kind of drawn conversation unfold. Given enough time, this could eventually evolve into something like an “open sketchbook”, with people quoting each others ideas and developing them further.

Join the #nightlysketch-party!

Nightly Sketch Nr.1

Nightly Sketch Nr.1

… and if it doesn’t work out like this, I’ll be at least successfully annoying my followers ;-)

UPDATE September 04, 2010

1 Kommentar » | drawing

Beethoven In The Mood For The Fifth

24. October 2009 - 19:49 Uhr

Ballpens have their advantages. The gains in speed and the pencil-like modulation of the grey tones within a single stroke are very welcome. Yet from time to time one misses the depth of a real black ink feather drawing.

Beethoven in the mood for the fifth symphony

Beethoven in the mood for the fifth symphony

Kommentieren » | drawing, satire and caricature

The Troubles Without Television

20. October 2009 - 11:20 Uhr
Reality TV

Reality TV

2 Kommentare » | drawing, satire and caricature

Ceratioidei

18. October 2009 - 23:04 Uhr

Ceratioidei

Kommentieren » | drawing, satire and caricature

Random Thoughts On The Value Of Skills

16. October 2009 - 21:05 Uhr

While preparing the lectures for the current term, I came to think of the economic value of different skills.

The first question to answer would be “how to measure the value of a skill?”. Possible criteria could be:

  • economic relevance (does it help to sell my service or product?)
  • lifetime of relevance (will it be outdated tomorrow or will it still feed me when I am 64?)
  • age of the user (can I reach a usefull level of aptitude within the time I’ve left to live and if so: will the time left after acquiring this level be worth the effort?)

Though the majority of the economic relevant skills are certainly subject to specialication, there are obviously some skills of general relevance. Among these are, in my opinion:

  1. Arithmetics
  2. Foreign Languages
  3. Computerskills
  4. Presentation
  5. Negotiation

I’ll regard point 1 as agreed upon, since anyone not able to calculate properly will have a really bad time living in any society that has already invented money.

Point 2 is a bit less self-evident than it appears at first glance. A network effect seems to apply to languages, though with an economic twist. The more people speaking a certain language the more useful it is … right? Does anybody here speak ancient Greek? ;-)

Seriously: this would render Latin and ancient Greek useless, but for some professions (or anyone pursuing a humanistic approach to education) these languages are still highly relevant. And a language spoken by a lot of (living) people doesn’t need to be automatically valuable to everybody, since this depends on the languages spoken by his or her business contacts.

As far as I am concerned the next point is ambivalent. A profession, which has really nothing to do with computers, is rather seldom nowadays. Yet, the problem with a lot of computer-related skills is: they are becoming useless breathtakingly fast.

As long as one stays in userland (read: is dependend on ready made applications) the changes within a new version of an application will almost always wield a bunch of rather unpleasant surprises: menuitems aren’t where they were in the earlier version, hotkeys have changed (especially nasty if no external, transferable config file exists), interoperability with other programs or operating systems (!) are not yet sufficiently testet and the resulting incompatibilities lead to crashes … I assume we all know the tragedy.

On the other hand, if you invested some time in the 70ies learning the C programming language, you are still able to use this knowledge to your advance. While the language itself has developed throughout the years, the concepts and syntax have been adopted by a lot of newer languages . And if you invested the time to learn object oriented programming (okay, C++) and mayhaps delved into design patterns, you’ll very likely have found these to be even more useful – since these principles are applicable to a whole class of languages (anything OOP).

This leads to the following assumption: if a skill is of a very abstract nature, it’s likely that it will keep on being useful for a long time.

Still, the points left on the list are more concrete in nature. Presentational skill, i. e. being able to copy information from one brain to several others (plus a lot of watzlawickian interaction), is rather concrete or even artistic (btw.: have you seen Steve Jobs presenting the iPhone? Amazing!) and anyone who tried to negotiate with a really tough business-man will tell you that abstract thinking has very little to do with the way of the world.

What do you think on the matter?

1 Kommentar » | random thoughts

Glen Biblis

3. October 2009 - 09:12 Uhr

In the heart of Germany, where the savage forces of nature once freely roamed, man has managed to tame the wild spirits.
You can still taste the very energy of nature in a glas of Glen Biblis, though it has been transformed into a higher state of being.

This unforgettable whisky comes in two different flavours: Biblis A has been ripened over the last 34 years and shows a powerful, yet slightly leaky nature. Biblis B is younger, but just as strong.

Try this unique flavour – and be assured: you’ll never be the same again …

From the hearth of Germany comes a powerful whisky

Glen Biblis - A powerful whisky.

Kommentieren » | satire and caricature