#155: Headroom
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Hello and welcome to Developing Perspective, developing perspective as a podcast discussing
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news of note and iOS development, Apple and the like. I'm your host, David Smith. I'm
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an independent iOS developer based in Herndon, Virginia. This is show number 155. Today is
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Monday, January 6th, 2014. Happy New Year. Developing Perspective is never longer than
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15 minutes, so let's get started.
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All right. So as you probably noticed, it's been a couple of weeks since my last episode,
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And I'll get into the reason for that in a moment before I have a couple of little bits
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and pieces that I want to just bring up at the beginning of the show.
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The first is in the couple of weeks that I was gone, Apple posted the videos from their
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Tech Talk series.
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The Tech Talk series, if you're not familiar with it, is basically where the Apple developer
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evangelists take the contents of WWDC, boil it, boil it, boil it, boil it way down into
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a couple of things, it's a one day series, a stream for apps and a thing for games. And
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they try and take it on the road. They're all over the world. They're in New York, Beijing,
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Austin. There's some in Europe, I think it's Berlin and London, if I remember right, but
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I'm not entirely sure. It changes every year. But basically, the goal of the tech talks
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is to take their message that they're trying to put out WWDC and have it hit on a broader
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audience, people who couldn't make it to W2D, people who didn't get tickets, et cetera.
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And the interesting thing about the tech talks is because rather than having five days to
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kind of cram in all the information they're trying to do, I found that they often kind
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of create these really nice, more concise, focused talks.
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And some of the things aren't quite as relevant as they were necessarily back in June.
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You know, things talking about new things in iOS 7, at this point you probably should
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be pretty comfortable with, understand fairly well,
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should be integrated into your apps at six months on.
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But there's one talk in particular.
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And it's one of these things I think that--
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the talk's behind NDA, but I'll just leave you its title,
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and you can go and look at it.
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And we can't tell you too much about it, unnecessarily.
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But there's a talk called App Store Distribution
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and Marketing for Apps.
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And it's, I think, one of the best talks
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I've ever heard about what it is to build an app and to build a business off that app.
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And the reason, part of the reason I can say that is that it's coming from the head of
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the, I think it's the head of the App Store team or someone like that at Apple who has
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access to all the data, all the information, who has been talking to probably thousands
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of developers, who has a lot of information, who has a lot of background, who knows everything
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about the App Store that you really could possibly know. And he talks about all the
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the different kind of aspects of it from the business side and the marketing side and the
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way the App Store works.
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And a lot of it's very interesting in that it's not--a lot of the information we gather
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is coming from very--it's all inferred information.
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There's not a lot of things that are necessarily directly coming out of Apple.
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And I thought it was really interesting to have listened to somebody really dive down
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So I highly recommend watching the video.
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I think it's about an hour and a half.
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Highly recommend it.
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I'm going to move on now into the--I guess the main guts of my--of what I'm going to
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talk about this week. And what it really comes down to is over the last two weeks, I basically
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took completely off from work. And perhaps even more over, I took off essentially from
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the internet as well. I checked in email periodically, I checked my app engines on Twitter, I checked
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that my servers were all nice and happy periodically. But by and large, I didn't use the internet
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in the way that I had grown accustomed to, in the way that I built these habits and routines
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around the internet, around Twitter and email and Instagram and RSS, honestly, and FeedWrangler
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and all these kinds of places where I would use and check the internet on a very regular
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And part of why I did this is I wouldn't necessarily say that I was burned out.
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I think it's a term that can often be kind of misapplied and perhaps has different connotations
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and things to it.
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But I was tired, and I was unmotivated, which is I can just apply those two to two adjectives
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very directly onto how I felt.
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And I was sitting down, I was noticing sort of towards the end of December, I was sitting
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down and I was trying to do a day's work.
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And I'd get to the end of the day and I was like, "What did I accomplish?
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Did I do anything of value?
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Did I do anything that I'm proud of?"
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And more often than not, I was like, "No, I didn't."
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And so at some point I was like, "You know what?
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I'm just going to take some time off."
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The holidays works out great in terms of between Christmas and New Year's.
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Generally people are, iTunes Connect is shut down, people are generally taking breaks so
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there's not quite as much inbox work coming in.
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And so I just decided to do that.
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And beyond just taking time off work and stopping the development, what I also did is I was
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like, "Okay, why do I feel so kind of overwhelmed so much of the time?
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Why is there this sort of heavy cognitive load that I'm kind of experiencing?"
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I wasn't sure, but I think I proved out.
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I think a lot of it was coming from the way that I was interacting with the internet and
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social media and the degree to which I was letting all the different inputs come into
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my life in that way.
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And so at the beginning of the couple of weeks, I sat down and I deleted a whole bunch of
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clients off my iPhone.
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All my Twitter clients, RSS, a lot of things there that were kind of things that I would
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check regularly, that I kind of had these Twitch responses for. If I had a moment free,
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I would immediately pick up my phone and look at it. And I deleted all of those, not the
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accounts, but just the apps, and the same thing in a variety of other places, so that
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really I couldn't easily fall back into those habits. And the result is kind of interesting.
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And the strange part is it took, honestly, a couple of days for me to adapt to that reality,
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how, which was a little bit worrying if I'm honest, that for three days after I deleted
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Tweetbot off my phone, I would routinely reach into my pocket, pick up my phone, unlock my
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phone, and roughly tab where it would have been to go and look at it. But it obviously
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wasn't there. And the fact that it had become that much of a habit and a core part of kind
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of just the subconscious wiring of my brain is a little worrying. Anytime something like
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that is ingrained in you. You have to make sure that it's something that you really want to be,
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that it's a choice you're consciously making to give that much time and attention in your life.
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And I think I've learned as a result of kind of going through this that, for me anyway, I think
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a lot of the ways that I was using social media and things like that really aren't constructive,
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really aren't great uses of my time. And really, most of it, I think it came down to two reasons.
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I kind of took a step back and thought about it.
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I think the best word for it in programming or in servers
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and things like that, you'll often hear a term, something
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called headroom, which is the unused space or capacity
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or performance on a server, for example,
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that you can use if needed.
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But often you don't.
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So most of my servers, I try and run them
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so that they have huge amounts of headrooms.
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If there's spikes in traffic, if there's
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things that really need to get done, they have the capacity to do that. And I think
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what I was finding is that I had so many of these tiny little inputs coming into my brain
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on a daily basis that I was processing and thinking about and keeping track of that it
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was just filling up all of the headroom for my capacity to really think and to really
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work in a way that wasn't constructive, that it was impacting my abilities to focus and
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be productive at work, to be a good father and husband at home, and a variety of other
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ways because it's funny how, you know, it's a good example or metaphor for this might
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be how if you pick up a lightweight, maybe if you're sitting in your house or whatever,
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you pick up a book and you can hold it in your hand and it doesn't feel heavy necessarily,
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right? If you just pick up a normal paperback and hold it, you're not going to think, "Oh,
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is heavy. But if you hold that paperback in your hand for a couple of hours, it's going
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to start to feel heavy. And it's not that the books become heavier. It's not that it's
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gained mass in that time. But you've grown tired of holding it. And I think there's a
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similar kind of thing going on that, at least for me, when I was allowing such a huge volume
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of information to be coming into me every day, was that all the little bits individually
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weren't that heavy, weren't problematic. And that's why they were enjoyable. And they're
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interesting and the things that I was doing because they were enjoyable. But the net effect
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of that is that I was carrying all of these tiny things around all day and thinking about
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them and sort of putting this energy and focus onto things that weren't necessarily constructed.
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And so I've learned from that a little bit. And I'll get into some of my conclusions in
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a minute. But the other thing that I also found that I thought was interesting is that
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I found how much of my time and energy was going into what I would call asymmetric relationships
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where these things were these people or companies or whatever it is, people who I feel like
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I have a connection to. I listen to them on a podcast, which actually I should probably
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mention. I also stopped listening to podcasts for two weeks, which for me is kind of crazy
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because usually I listen to probably between 10 and 20 hours of podcasts a week. So that
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was a big change. There's a lot of people who I think I feel like I have a relationship
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with because I read them on Twitter, I read their blog, I listen to them in a podcast.
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And yet they don't know who I am.
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And I would be at the same time I was kind of investing into that as though it was an
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actual relationship, as though it were reciprocal, in the sense that I was, you know, caring
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about their problems and challenges and thinking about, you know, what they're going through
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and so on and putting emotional energy into that in a way that, you know, I think you
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can, I myself am a very introverted person.
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And so I can really only give that emotional energy
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in relationships to a couple of people.
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And it probably didn't make sense for those people
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to be people on the internet who I don't know.
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So those are the two kind of things, both that cognitive
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load and headroom problem, and then
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the asymmetry of those relationships that I was having.
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So here are some of the results.
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They're not really New Year's resolutions.
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I don't really go into that.
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But they're things that I'm doing
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as a result of this experience that I thought
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would be interesting and potentially constructive
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in light of the new year, in light of a lot of things just picking back up again.
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Things I'm going to try and do is invest in fewer but more personal relationships this year,
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or going forward, in terms of following a lot less people on Twitter,
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following less blogs, listening to less podcasts, trying to have less of those
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asymmetric relationships in my life, and focus more intently on people who I do have relationships with,
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relationships with, whether they're people, you know, personally, and I know in real life,
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or people I know online who I have relationships with, where I'm sitting on IM everyday and
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talking to them. And those types of relationships are actual relationships, rather than kind
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of contrived ones. Another thing I'm going to kind of be trying to be focused on is trying
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to avoid controversy as much as possible in the sense that so often in these sort of the
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classic news cycle, the community I live and work in has these, it's a never-ending cycle
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of something is controversial and it needs to be controversial and it needs to be discussed
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because many of the people who, in order for there to be news, there has to be news. And
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a lot of times there isn't actual news, you know, news, new events that have happened
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or things that have been announced. And so we create these things that we turn into controversies
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and we talk about them. And I'm going to try as much as I can, I think, to just take a
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step back from those and just ignore them. And while in some ways the role that I have
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and the position that I've built from things like this podcast allows me a voice in those
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I think I'm going to try as much as I can to just step back from it because it's just
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it's wasted energy. It's not making my products better. It's not making my relationships better.
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It's just burning. I'm just spinning my tires not going anywhere. So I'll really only involve
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myself in those if I have something that very constructively contributes or if they affect me
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directly and personally. I'm going to try and slow down a little bit of my own development. I think
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I'm going to focus a bit on really focus on quality, really focus on taking a step back
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on my products and saying, what can I do to make them better and not make anything new until I've
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I really feel like I've nailed things down, I think, in my products, which is a really
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hard thing for me to do because I love building new things. But I think I just need to take
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a step back. I was looking at my portfolio a bit and being like, you know, all of these
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things have a lot of these areas that I should invest in and make better before I continue
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to kind of spread myself thinner and thinner. And I also think one thing I'm going to try
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and do is try to be a little less cynical. An example of this is I think I'm going to
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try and start reading more of my App Store reviews. The products, these are people who
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of using my products and rather loving them or hating them.
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And so often, I've been doing this for long enough
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that I kind of have a cynicism about that.
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Reading apps for reviews, for example, isn't productive.
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Or doing some of the help desk that I do
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isn't really productive.
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It's just a cynicism that you kind of build up
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with over time because so often those are negative.
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But to try and fight that a little bit and be like,
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you know what, I need to try and find
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the useful, interesting, and productive part of that
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and apply it to my product.
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And that applies across a variety of things.
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But try and be a little less jaded,
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a little less of a curmudgeon about some
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of those types of things.
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These are some of the things that having the opportunity
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to take a step back--
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these are the things that I came back,
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as I'm stepping forward, back into work.
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These are the things that I want to do.
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And I thought that'd be interesting to share.
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I know that's a bit more touchy feely than a lot of what
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I talk about here.
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But anyway, that's what I've been doing.
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I haven't really been doing work,
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so I can't have much to talk about on the technical side.
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But these are the things that I've been thinking
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about personally.
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And that's what I'm going to be doing going forward.
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And hopefully, that improves my products.
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That improves the work that I do.
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It makes me more proud of what I'm doing.
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It enhances the relationships I have, both at home
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and on the internet.
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And maybe it makes this show better, too.
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All right, that's it for today's show.
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As always, if you have questions, comments, concerns,
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or complaints, I'm @_davidsmith on Twitter.
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Email me, david@developingperspective.com.
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Otherwise, have a great week.
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I hope you're really enjoying your new year
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and have some fun things in store.
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and otherwise I'll see you next week.