车库门打开状态下工作。
Work with the garage door up

原始链接: https://notes.andymatuschak.org/Work_with_the_garage_door_up

作者提倡一种创造性沟通方式——“敞开车库门工作”,即优先考虑*过程*而非精美的结果。这意味着公开分享未完成的作品、挣扎,甚至失败的尝试,与社交媒体上通常只关注最终产品形成对比。 受到罗宾·斯隆对实体店“存在感”的观察启发(例如玻璃吹制工作室、开放式木工坊),作者认为这种透明度能够培养更深层次的参与和更偶然的联系。分享“修剪朝鲜蓟”和色彩选择的过程,比仅仅宣布作品完成更能吸引受众。 这种“公开”的方式,通过数字园艺、直播或仅仅是持续分享,也能对抗社交媒体的可视性偏差,并出人意料地提升 perceived competence(感知能力),从而开启新的机会。最终,其目的在于重建物理世界中自然存在的*存在感*和*工作*的 reassuring signal(令人安心的信号)。

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原文

One of my favorite ways that creative people communicate is by “working with their garage door up,” to riff on a passage from Robin Sloan (below). This is the opposite of the Twitter account which mostly posts announcements of finished work: it’s Screenshot Saturday; it’s giving a lecture about the problems you’re pondering in the shower; it’s thinking out loud about the ways in which your project doesn’t work at all. It’s so much of Twitch. I want to see the process. I want to see you trim the artichoke. I want to see you choose the color palette. Anti-marketing, after Michael Nielsen.

I love this kind of communication personally, but I suspect it also creates more invested, interesting followings over the long term. That effect’s probably related to Working on niche, personally-meaningful projects brings weirder, more serendipitous inbounds.

It’s also a way to avoid the problems described in Pitching out corrupts within. You’re not pitching. You’re just showing your work, day over day.

Maggie Appleton argues:

If you ever needed another reason to learn in public by digital gardening or podcasting or streaming or whathaveyou, add on that people will assume you're more competent than you are. This will get you invites to very cool exclusive events filled with high-achieving, interesting people, even though you have no right to be there. A+ side benefit.
This matches my experience.


The inspiration from Robin’s original newsletter:
☄️ Week 43, popular, wide-ranging, functional (link broken as of 2024-12-17)

I wish starting physical businesses was easier; I wish the path wasn’t so steep, especially in places like the Bay Area; because I think it’s one of the absolute best things a person can do. Among many other things, a physical business enlivens public space, by making the simple, eloquent statement: I am here, working.

There’s a scientific glassblowing studio north of us; I walk past it on the sidewalk often. By simply existing, and having a nice sign that faces the street, they are doing a small public service every day. We are here, working.

In the same light industrial complex as the Murray Street Media Lab, there’s a woodworking shop, and the man who runs it always keeps his door propped open. Simple as that. What a delight, every damn day, to ride my bike past that door and peek inside and see all his tools, the boards stacked up for whatever commission he’s undertaking. I am here, working.

Part of the problem of social media is that there is no equivalent to the scientific glassblowers’ sign, or the woodworker’s open door, or Dafna and Jesse’s sandwich boards. On the internet, if you stop speaking: you disappear. And, by corollary: on the internet, you only notice the people who are speaking nonstop.

If you could put on magic internet goggles that enabled you to see through this gnarly selection bias and view the composition of reality fairly, correctly—well, just come walk around Emeryville and West Berkeley. It would look like that! All the tumult of Twitter would shrink into a single weird cafe—just a speck, in an enormous city made up entirely of people quietly working.

Interesting to note that in a way, Robin’s looking for Peripheral vision in this aspiration.

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