Be innovative. Nurture a thought catalyst.

[Crossposted at SpreadingScience]

curbby fizhbowl

Are you a thought catalyst? (And what to do about it.)
[Via Creativity Central]

A few years ago, Kevin Murnane, Adjunct Professor and lecturer at Northwestern University and a good and thoughtful friend — sent me article with the provocative title of Thought Catalysts: Prima Donnas or Prime Movers.

Written by Cathy Higgins and Dave Kreischer in their excellent “The Straight Talk Coach” Series, it deftly explores the personality of the Thought Catalyst — an individual who can add creative fuel to an organization while burning everyone else out.

So here’s your personality test:

Are you a creative thinker who advocates unique solutions to every problem?

Do you thrive on competitive brainstorming?

Are you frequently frustrated by others’ resistance to your ideas?

Do you excel at clarifying strategic options?

Is being distinctive one of your most prized attributes?

Have you found it difficult t fit the mold at most places you have worked?

If you answered yes to at least four of the above questions, you are probably a thought catalyst.  I got an A+.

[More]

The article is available online. In many ways the thought catalyst fits what I call a disruptor. They love bringing in new ideas to a community, often disrupting the ability of the majority to get work done.

And the way most companies are organized, the role of the disruptor is frustrating to both sides. No one listens to the thought catalyst.

A 21st century organization, on the other hand, knows how to harness disruptors so that their catalytic thoughts can propel the organization forward.

Because that is where real innovation often comes from – properly using those with catalytic ideas and perspectives.

Most organizations simply toss the thought leaders to the curb because of their disruptions.

Developers love Apple’s Post-PC world

PCby *pascal*

WWDC survey finds 47% of iOS developers support Android, 7% write for Mac
[Via AppleInsider]

A new survey of attendees at Apple’s annual Worldwide Developers Conference found that nearly half of iOS developers attending the conference support Android, while just 7 percent write applications for the Mac.

[More]

It is not a large survey so I would only look at the trend not the absolute numbers. In the 2008 WWDC, 100% developed for the iPhone and 50% developed for the make. Those numbers are now 93% and 7%.

Apple, at least is in a post-PC state, with most of its third party developers devoted to software that will not run on a PC.

And they are very happy about it. Even though almost half also develop for Android amd a third for Blackberry, all of them feel that iOS is the easiest to develop for. And the only place to make any money.

Compare this with the angst suffered by Windows developers, who do not really see any straight and easy path to a post-PC world.

Not good for MS if the developers are not happy

Feature: Why Microsoft has made developers horrified about coding for Windows 8
[Via Ars Technica]

When Microsoft gave the first public demonstration of Windows 8 a week ago, the reaction from most circles was positive. The new Windows 8 user interface looks clean, attractive, and thoughtful, and in a first for a Microsoft desktop operating system, it’s finger friendly. But one aspect of the demonstration has the legions of Windows developers deeply concerned, and with good reason: they were told that all their experience, all their knowledge, and every program they have written in the past would be useless on Windows 8.

Key to the new Windows 8 look and feel, and instrumental to Microsoft’s bid to make Windows a viable tablet operating system, are new-style full-screen “immersive” applications. Windows 8 will include new APIs for developing these applications, and here is where the problem lies. Having new APIs isn’t itself a concern—there’s simply never been anything like this on Windows before, so obviously the existing Windows APIs won’t do the job—but what has many troubled is the way that Microsoft has said these APIs will be used. Three minutes and forty five seconds into this video, Microsoft Vice President Julie Larson-Green, in charge of the Windows Experience, briefly describes a new immersive application—a weather application—and says, specifically, that the application uses “our new developer platform, which is, uhh, it’s based on HTML5 and JavaScript.”

[More]

Developers do not like to be told that they have to discard tried and true tools if they want to stay current. Especially if the new tools are closer to axes then they are to chain saws.

MS seems to be changing its development direction in fits and starts, mainly because it seems to reacting to the market rather than anticipating it. For example, Silverlight was going to be how it was going to beat Flash and deliver web apps.

But Apple’s push for HTML5 as the way to go and the continuing presence of Flash shows that Silverlight is not a juggernaut.

The gray area developers find themselves in is not one that they really enjoy.  And, if they have to learn a whole new way of doing things,  it may cause some to be much more enticed by the Mac OS X/iOS ecosystem.

It will be interesting

 

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