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Simplicity Rules

Adam DuVander on keeping it simple

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How I Learned to Write a Book

October 1, 2009 by Adam DuVander

Nine months ago I stared at a blank page in Open Office. I was excited and overwhelmed to be starting my first book. I had a publisher and had cleared my schedule, but I was beginning to realize that was the easy part.

What follows are the lessons I’ve learned so far getting to the first complete draft.

Write Every Day

The most common writer’s maxim turns out to be true. Writing every day makes it a habit. Once writing became part of my routine, I ensured that I could take advantage of a powerful force: the large accomplishments that come from the compound effects of daily progress.

I was also greatly helped by continuing other writing. My productivity spiked once I had daily posts to log with Programmable Web. The outcome was contrary to my initial thinking, but daily accountability helped cement my routine. Plus, blogging works the writer’s sprinter muscles. I was able to write more, faster.

Don’t Quit Your Day Job

My original schedule had me finished with the book by May. Like most estimates, it was overly optimistic. But I had yet to learn an important lesson about my brain. It wouldn’t let me write for more than three hours per day, maximum.

Truthfully, some of my most productive writing days were over within 90 minutes. Writing a book is both a marathon and a sprint. It requires a series of short bursts of energy over a long period of time. The best part is that when my writing was done for the day, there was time for other projects. And whatever part of my brain controlled writing wasn’t used in programming or event organizing.

I wish I’d realized writing did not require a full day sooner, because I could have been easier on myself. If I write another book, I’ll do it alongside other projects. You do not need to clear your schedule or quit your job to write a book. To start, you don’t even need a publisher (remember, that’s not the hard part). Just write it.

Make Time For What’s Important

You can accomplish any large task if you consistently make small amounts of time for it. In The War of Art, Steven Pressfield described the things that keep you from forward progress:

“The secret that real writers know that wannabe writers don’t, and the secret is this: It’s not the writing part that’s hard. What’s hard is sitting down to write. What keeps us from sitting down is Resistance.”

I read Pressfield’s book, on my friend Kareem’s recommendation, in the middle of my writing process. Because many examples involve Pressfield’s life as a writer, it resonated on that level. It also reminded me of side projects that gather dust un-launched. We all have them. I believe writing a book is an excellent practice and can give you the encouragement to execute any idea.

My friend Tom recently begged readers to stop talking and start doing. “Just decide what you want to do and work your ass off doing it,” he says. It’s easy advice to give, but it’s even easier to ignore.

It turns out that writing a book–or finishing whatever project you have–isn’t hard to do. Just follow this simple list: 1. Start working on it. 2. Keep working until it’s done. If it really is important to you, the continued effort will be well worth it.

Blog Software Is No Longer About Blogging

September 21, 2009 by Adam DuVander

Blogging became popular because tools made it easy for anyone to write on the web. Type your genius into a box, hit a button and the whole world can see it. Look out, I’m doing it now.

Now we have many choices when it comes to expressing ourselves online. Yet, the strange thing is, it’s getting harder. The tools are trying to do more and, in the process, forgetting the one feature that made them useful.

Adam Mathes has a fun overview of blogging text boxes, where he shows the current interfaces of popular blogging software:

The primary purpose of blogging software is to blog. This entails the writing and publishing of short form content. Everything else is, basically, noise. Even if you don’t subscribe to a viewpoint that harsh, posting something should be the primary action of the software and treated as such. This appears to be a radical notion, given their interfaces.

The only blogging service that includes a full posting box on its main logged-in screen is Twitter. WordPress (which I use for this site) is a close second. It contains a “Quick Press” option, though it is only a tiny version of the full editor.

Times have changed significantly in the ten years (!) since Blogger was launched. I mentioned earlier that there are many new ways to create content. Similarly, there are tons of ways to digest it. The blogging ecosystem has moved on from statically-generated HTML files. In addition to sharing thoughts, bloggers care about comments, trackbacks, pings, feeds and traffic analytics. It’s a more complicated landscape with more complicated tools.

That’s no excuse, of course. Mathes is right that blogging should still be central to the software. Times will always be changing and nice-to-have features will always come along. You have to keep your eye on the original focus, stop feature creep and find a way to make your site fit into today without forgetting the entire reason you built it.

What To Do When That Email Address Already Exists

July 21, 2009 by Adam DuVander

It’s not often that an account signup process on a website makes me happy. This happened today and I would love to share it with you.

I was covering MapQuest’s new directions API for ProgrammableWeb. Like most API providers, MapQuest requires developers to register. I thought I might have signed up, but the first username/password combo didn’t take. So, I decided to create a new account.

When I did, I was prompted with the following message:

“That email address has already signed up for an account. Would you like to have your password reset and your welcome letter resent?”

MapQuest tells me I have an accountIt’s a tiny change from the usual that makes a big difference. Most sites would simply present me with an error about an email address already being in their system. Maybe I’d be given a link to the forgot password screen. More likely I’d have to hit my browser’s back button, then find the form myself.

MapQuest has shown its developers understand the flow of interaction in that situation. It was just a login screen, but they put in that little bit of extra effort needed to make it work.

Login screens have been a common topic at Simplicity Rules:

  • Adobe’s Hybrid Login/Signup Screen
  • Band-Aids Only Hide Boo-Boos

How Not to Select a Future Date

July 3, 2009 by Adam DuVander

I just returned from a cruise to Alaska. We made a quick swing through Victoria in Canada, which required the cruise line to collect my passport information. Like many people who find themselves with rare travel to another country, I just recently renewed my passport. That ended up being a pain using the site’s calendar-based date selection.

Taxing date selector from Princess Cruises website

Using their widget, I painfully scrolled through the months. I clicked on the year and scrolled forward, three years at a time, to 2019, when my new passport will expire. It’s a Tuesday, if you were wondering.

Providing a calendar to make a date selection is useful when it’s sometime in the near future. In that case, it’s easy to scroll to a few short months away. In this situation, it’s useless.

I’d rather see month, day and year dropdown boxes. Or, even a text box that looks for the formats used by most passports (I had it in front of me to type in its info, of course). Anything other than scrolling through ten years into the future.

WifiPDX Goes Geo

June 20, 2009 by Adam DuVander

It’s been awhile since I added any functionality to the WifiPDX site. With the release of the third generation iPhone OS, I decided to add some geolocation capabilities to finding Portland WiFi.

Geolocated results on WifiPDX

Now when you search for hotspots, you’re automatically taken to your list of nearby locations if you have one of the following:

  • Firefox 3+ with Geode add-on
  • Google Gears
  • Firefox 3.5
  • iPhone OS 3.0

I explained iPhone geolocation in a post on my book blog.

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Simplicity Series

  • Designing the Obvious
  • Paradox of Choice
  • Laws of Simplicity

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