Saturday, February 28, 2015

This Week's Top Downloads

This Week's Top Downloads

Every week, we share a number of downloads for all platforms to help you get things done. Here were the top downloads from this week.

Memory Map Shows You What's Taking up Space in Android

This Week's Top Downloads

Android: No matter how much space you have on your phone or tablet, you'll eventually fill it up. If you're running low on space, Memory Map will show you what's using up the all that storage.

Google Calendar for Android Adds a 7-Day View, Pinch to Zoom, and More

This Week's Top Downloads

Ask and ye shall receive, Google says. Based on feedback from users, Google Calendar now has several improvements, including a new 7-day week view, Google Drive files integration, and more.

XiveTV Streams Tons of Documentaries for Free to Your TV or Smartphone

Reality TV and dramas get tiresome. Sometimes you want a little something smarter to watch, and that's where XiveTV comes in. The service offers thousands of hours of documentary programming on topics from history and culture to space science and medicine. And yes, nature docs and wildlife adventures are in there too.

Interval Clock Guides You Through Your Interval Training Routine

This Week's Top Downloads

Android/iOS: We've talked about the benefits of interval training on a stationary bike before, and while there are a ton of apps to help, Interval Clock is a customizable training app that will get you started quickly, help you find an effective workout, and still leave you free to switch things up as you choose.

Better Window Manager for OS X Saves Window States However You Want

This Week's Top Downloads

Mac: We've seen a lot of apps that mimic Windows' snapping feature where open windows are automatically opened in different positions, but Better Window Manager manages to combine a lot of features into a small package. It allows you to save window states, manage shortcuts, and more.

Forge Is a Sketch App for iPad Focused On Brainstorming Ideas

iPad: The iPad's a great tool for sketching out ideas on the go, and Forge is an app that makes that process a little easier by working less like a drawing app and more like a brainstorming tool.

Thermos Controls Your Nest From OS X's Notification Center

This Week's Top Downloads

Mac: If you have a smart thermostat like the Nest, you can control it from your smartphone with an app or your voice. If you're on a Mac desktop, you've got another option: the notification center with an app called Thermos.

YouTube Kids Provides Kid-Friendly Content and Easy Parental Controls

If you have kids and they love to watch YouTube on your phone or tablet, Google's new app YouTube Kids makes it easy for them to watch parent-controlled, kids-only content.

SMSmart Simulates Useful Apps Using SMS When You Have No Data

Mobile data is nearly ubiquitous, but there are still times when you find yourself outside the coverage area. SMSmart can do basic searches, get directions, search Wikipedia, and more all using SMS.

AutoWear Brings Tasker's Customized Voice Commands to Android Wear

Android: With Tasker, you can create a custom Google Now command for just about anything. Android Wear allows you to trigger regular Google Now commands from your wrist, and now Auto Wear allows you to do the same with those custom voice commands.

AOMEI OneKey Recovery Creates a Custom Windows Recovery Partition

AOMEI OneKey Recovery Creates a Custom Windows Recovery Partition

Windows: Most Windows computers these days have a recovery partition built in, but it contains all the crapware that came with your computer. If you'd like to create your own recovery partition, AOMEI adds that backup function to any PC.

Programs like Steady-State protect a PC by letting you undo any recent changes, but this is different. It creates an image of your hard drive on another partition (you'll need the space) or external hard drive. When your system gets hosed, you can return it to the last image from the Windows boot menu. Unlike Windows System Restore, this will overwrite any existing stuff you have on the drive. For nasty viruses that you can't get rid of, this is another tool in your arsenal.

AOMEI OneKey Recovery | AOMEI via Into Windows

Create Better Ice Breakers By Knowing Your Audience and Objectives

When you are put in a group of strangers, ice breaker activities are a great way to start working together. Instead of just picking an activity at random, look at the goals of the group and design activities that focus on those.

Mind Tools reviews the basics of why you should use ice breakers:

If you are bringing together like-minded people, the "ice" may simply reflect the fact that people have not yet met.

If you are bringing together people of different grades and levels in your organization for an open discussion, the "ice" may come from the difference in status between participants.

If you are bringing together people of different backgrounds, cultures and outlooks for work within your community, then the "ice" may come from people's perceptions of each other

Once you figure out what the ice is, then you need to pick an activity that matches your needs. They suggest considering the comfort level of the participants and how these activities will create a common purpose. Look for shared experiences that focus on what makes participants similar instead of pointing out the differences. Check out the link for the best ice breakers for each situation.

Ice Breakers Easing Group Contribution | Mind Tools

Perform Calculations, Converstions Right the Chromebook App Launcher

Perform Calculations, Converstions Right the Chromebook App Launcher

Chromebook's browser-based operating system may be focused on the web, but its built-in app launcher has a few tricks up its sleeve—like performing calculations and conversions without ever opening up a web page.

We've covered how Google already does this from the search bar, and OS X's Spotlight has the same shortcuts. However, you may not have realized that your Chromebook does the same thing: just type in a calculation or conversion, and it'll give you an answer right above the suggested searches. Check out the link for other short Chromebook tips.

15 Time-Saving Chromebook Tips | OMG! Chrome!

Ask a Hospital for Financial Aid If You Can’t Pay the Bill

Ask a Hospital for Financial Aid If You Can't Pay the Bill

Hospital bills, even with insurance, can devastate your budget. While you might be able to negotiate your bill, also check into your hospital's financial aid program to reduce your payments.

Each facility has different rules and guidelines to qualify. Those rules are indexed by the federal poverty level. Some places will also factor in other expenses like your prescriptions or other medical bills. They'll also make you fill out some paperwork, but if you can't pay your bills, these programs lower your medical debt.

The business office won't always volunteer this information. Search for a "financial aid," "financial assistance" or "charity care" and the name of the hospital to find more info.

How to Get Financial Aid for Hospital Bills | One Smart Dollar

Photo by Chris Yarzab.

Try a Computer “Desktop Zero” To Stay Focused on Your Work

Try a Computer

Let's face it: some of us have messy desktops. If you can't focus, try a "Desktop Zero" approach to stay productive.

We covered how separate logins can keep you productive, but all those icons and windows distract our focus. James Zhang at Wistia gives two simple rules for Desktop Zero:

  1. "Remove everything from your Desktop and Dock.
  2. Only open applications that you'll use in the next 15 minutes."

Desktop Zero is like Inbox Zero: it keeps away the clutter. If you use a PC, a program like Fences can help you clear your desktop with a double-click (and then get those icons back later). Mac users can use this automator script. You don't have to keep your computer like this—just use it as a productivity booster when you need it.

Desktop Zero | Wistia

Photo by Jean-Baptiste LABRUNE.

Subscribe and Save Online Doesn't Always Save You Money

Subscribe and Save Online Doesn't Always Save You Money

Places like Amazon and Target both have subscription shopping programs—you tell them what you need and how often, and they ship it to you at a discount. They may not always be cheaper compared to local stores or warehouse clubs, though.

Rather Be Shopping compared prices from different online subscription programs and local stores. Things like diapers depend on brand: Luvs is cheaper with Subscribe and Save but not Pampers. Dog food and toilet paper are cheaper online with the bonus of having those large items delivered to your door.

Like most pricing tips, like what's cheaper at Costco or Amazon, your mileage may vary. That's why you need a pricebook—so you know the price of the stuff you buy. Check out the link for one person's shopping adventures with different household staples.

Subscribe and Save: What Items Provide the Most Value? | Rather Be Shopping

Photo by 401(K) 2012.

Top Ten Tips and Tricks for Terrific Tea

Top Ten Tips and Tricks for Terrific Tea

Tea is only second to water when it comes to beverage popularity—so popular that it's consumed as much as coffee, soft drinks, and alcohol combined. There's always time for better tea, though, so here are ten tips and tricks to take your tea to the next level.

10. Don't Make Tea in the Microwave

Top Ten Tips and Tricks for Terrific Tea

One of the elements of a perfect cup of tea is brewing it at the right temperature. Microwaves, as convenient as they are, simply don't give us control over the temperature of the water, so it's best to use a kettle.

9. Get the Temperature and Time Down for Steeping Tea

Top Ten Tips and Tricks for Terrific Tea

Speaking of temperature, this graphic provides recommended temperatures and brew times (as well as caffeine content), while this one (above) shows temperatures and steeping times in a much more immediate way. By the way, Steep.it is a web-based timer that also shows you brewing time—and tells you when to take the leaves out.

8. Control the Caffeine in Tea

Top Ten Tips and Tricks for Terrific Tea

Steeping time also matters when it comes to how much caffeine ends up in your cup. For more caffeine alertness, steep for a shorter amount of time. For less caffeine, you can do a brief steep, pour out the brew, and then re-steep to cut as much as 80% of the caffeine.

7. Buy the Best Tea-Brewing Gear

Top Ten Tips and Tricks for Terrific Tea

You don't need a special tea kettle to make great tea, but they sure come in handy, with options to set the temperature, automatically turn on or off, and sometimes even remove the tea bag. The mugs, brewing baskets, and other accessories you use can also make a big difference in your enjoyment of your tea, so check out our crowd-sourced collection of recommendations. (I'm a big fan of the IngenuiTEA myself.)

6. Buy Better Tea Leaves

Top Ten Tips and Tricks for Terrific Tea

Besides temperature and steeping time—and water quality—the other most critical element when it comes to a perfect cup of tea is, of course, the quality of the tea itself. Here are some recommendations.

5. Avoid Watery Iced Tea

Top Ten Tips and Tricks for Terrific Tea

One of the nicest things about tea is you can enjoy it all year round, warming up in winter with a hot cup of tea or chilling out in the summer with iced tea. When it comes to iced tea, make sure you use double the amount of tea normally used so the ice cubes don't dilute your drink or use iced tea you've frozen in ice cube trays to avoid this problem. You can also cold-brew your iced tea for a stronger, smoother cup (and brewing tea in the fridge avoids the risk of bacteria like sun tea has).

4. Find the Tea Alternatives to Coffee

Top Ten Tips and Tricks for Terrific Tea

I know this sounds like blasphemy to coffee lovers, but you can love both coffee and tea. Both have benefits. If you're currently a coffee-only person, though, give tea a chance with these recommendations for coffee-like teas. (They're not as strong as coffee, but they are uniquely flavorful.)

3. Ditch the Tea Bag

Top Ten Tips and Tricks for Terrific Tea

Tea bags are undoubtedly more convenient than loose tea, but what you trade in convenience you probably are giving up in taste and quality. Tea Muse explains it like this:

There is, of course, a huge taste difference. Teabags generally contain bits of tea leaves (typically fannings and dust), not whole leaves, and these leaf fragments brew up a nice cup of blah tea. As any tea expert will tell you, one of the essential requirements of brewing tea is giving the leaves enough room to expand so that their flavor is properly extracted. Because space is limited in a traditional teabag, the size of the tea leaf is smaller to compensate. Thus, the quality of the flavor is decreased. Thus, loose tea reigns supreme.

On the other hand, for those times you are in a tea rush, tea bags from quality tea merchants that are pyramid-shaped instead of flat are a good compromise, since they allow the leaves to expand. You can also go with a coffee filter in a pinch in lieu of a tea bag.

2. Learn Everything You Need to Know About Tea in About 10 Minutes

Top Ten Tips and Tricks for Terrific Tea

If you're new to tea or just need a refresher, this is the hacker's guide to tea.

1. Drink to Your Health

Top Ten Tips and Tricks for Terrific Tea

This tip won't make your tea better, but it helps to understand how tea makes you better (so you drink more of it!). There are so many ways tea is incredibly healthy for you—even healthier than water—and you can boost tea's health benefits with lemon.

Bonus: The Many Other Things You Can Do With Tea Besides Drink It

Use used tea bags or fresh tea to hack your body and your home. For example, feed plants with used tea bags, clean windows with tea, sooth sunburns and stop bleeding with tea bags, clean hardware floors and hide scratches with tea, freshen up small spaces with a tea bag, and maybe even get rid of warts with tea.

Photos by Tina Mailhot-Roberge, Jessie Terwilliger, naama, JoshuaDavisPhotography, ~ Mers, Photosani (Shutterstock), Sean MacEntee, KuniakilGARASHI.

Avoid Wasting Stale Potato Chips by Using Them as Breading

Avoid Wasting Stale Potato Chips by Using Them as Breading

If you're not interested in trying to resuscitate the crispiness of your now-stale potato chips, you might as well do something else with them. Breaking them up into tiny pieces can make them a tasty breading.

Whether you're working with a recipe that calls for baking or frying, a good breading can go a long way. Karen Ahn at WonderHowTo recommends putting any stale chips you have to good use as a crispy coating in your recipe. Just crush them all up and use them whenever your recipe calls for some breading. The salty potato flavor will enhance your dish and you avoid wasting what seem like useless leftovers.

5 Delicious Ways to Reinvent Your Stale Potato Chips | WonderHowTo

Photo by Marta Maria Darby.

Friday, February 27, 2015

Decide What Style of Beer You Want to Drink with This Flow Chart

There's so many types of beer out there that it can be tough to decide what you want to imbibe. This handy flow chart is here to help you with that.

This flow chart from Mike Newman at Cool Material starts off with one of the most important questions when it comes to beer choice: are you looking to get drunk and don't care about taste? From there, the chart asks plenty of helpful qualifying questions to help you decide between ten different major styles of beer. You'll easily find out if you're in the mood for an IPA, a Porter, or a light and crisp Pilsner. You spend all week stressing about stuff, don't stress about your beer.

Flowchart: What Style of Beer Should You Drink? | Cool Material

Decide What Style of Beer You Want to Drink with This Flow Chart

Make Decluttering Easier by Ditching Items You’ve Kept Out of Guilt

Make Decluttering Easier by Ditching Items You've Kept Out of Guilt

When you're trying to minimize the amount of clutter you have around the house, there are a lot of things that can hold you back. Don't let guilt be one of them.

You probably have a gift or item of clothing that you don't care for, but you keep around because you'd feel guilty getting rid of it. Emily Co at PopSugar suggests it's time to be brutal and find a new home for those things. The truth is it's just stuff taking up space like the rest of the clutter you want to get rid of. You don't have to throw it away, but keeping it around to sit there isn't doing anything for anyone. Don't feel guilty, take control and clear it out.

12 Golden Rules of Decluttering | PopSugar

Photo by Scott Rubin.

Identify Your Strengths and Weaknesses with the Superpower Exercise

Identify Your Strengths and Weaknesses with the Superpower Exercise

Sometimes we're more than willing to work on our weaknesses, but the problem is we haven't taken the time to identify them properly. This exercise has you identify your traits and place them into three distinct categories.

Whether you have trouble identifying the things you're good at or the things you need to work on, you'll have an easier time figuring it out this way. Val Wright at Inc. suggests you use these three categories to help you as you go:

  • Superpower: It comes naturally.
  • Energy Zapper: I can do it, but it takes effort and deliberate attention.
  • Danger Zone: Others do this much better.

Everyone has a Superpower, and now is the time to take credit for yours. You might have several of them, but be honest with yourself. Superpowers are things you can do without expending a lot of energy or anxiety. Once you've identified your Energy Zappers, practice those things so they might become Superpowers one day. After you've identified your Danger Zones, plan out some time to give them attention so they don't end up hurting you. They don't need to become Superpowers, but you don't want those things holding you back. Don't get down on yourself either, just be aware of them. With your strengths and weaknesses identified you know what to focus on.

This Million-Dollar Advice Will Make You an Outstanding Leader | Inc.

Photo by Julian Fong.

Deadspin Oh My God Oh My God I Think Russell Westbrook Could Beat Up My Dad | io9 Leonard Nimoy Show

Deadspin Oh My God Oh My God I Think Russell Westbrook Could Beat Up My Dad | io9 Leonard Nimoy Showed Us What It Truly Means To Be Human | Jezebel Scott Walker Wants Colleges to Stop Reporting Sexual Assaults | Kotaku The Problem with a Nazi Superman | Kinja Popular Posts

Demystifying the Muse: Five Creativity Myths You Should Stop Believing

Demystifying the Muse: Five Creativity Myths You Should Stop Believing

With creativity becoming a commodity that so many people trade on, it's more important than ever to have ideas constantly flowing. But are these creative careers only available to the gifted few? Not at all. Most ideas about creativity being an elusive muse just aren't accurate.

This post originally appeared on the Crew blog.

There's a letter from an 1815 issue of General Music Journal where Mozart describes his creative process as instantaneous: no struggle or writer's block. The muse simply showed up and he was ready.

The problem? The letter is a fraud.

Much like many other myths about creativity, the mystical method described in the letter only serves to accentuate what we already mistakenly feel about creativity: that it is some sort of magical ability that certain people have and others don't.

We've built up an image of what creativity is that is completely wrong. If you don't believe me, here are a few of the biggest myths about creativity that most of us still believe:

1. Creativity Is Something You're Born With

Demystifying the Muse: Five Creativity Myths You Should Stop Believing

How often have you heard someone say that creativity is "something you're born with?" Either you've got it or you don't. But is there really any truth to these age old adages?

While most modern psychology textbooks often suggest there are some cognitive aspects associated with creativity that may be passed hereditarily, few would go so far as to suggest that there is some sort of creative caste you can be born into. But still the myth persists.

This might be in part due to famous artistic families like the Waugh family, who produced three of the greatest writers of the 20th century (Arthur, then Alec and Evelyn) or the Brontës. Nowadays, we've come to expect the children of celebrities and creatives to inherit their parents' talents.

But studies will show you that creativity, while influenced by your family, is a skill we all inherently have, and one that can be fostered, grown, and taught.

Jack Kerouac believed that "genius gives birth, talent delivers," while Nobel Prize-nominated author Edward De Bono said, "Creative thinking is a skill, it's not just a matter of individual talent. It's not just a matter of sitting down by the river listening to Baroque music and hoping you get inspired."

"But I'm a right-brain thinker! I'm creative!" you yell. Not according to modern neuroscientists who now wholeheartedly deny the existence of any sole section of the brain that controls creativity. Instead, the modern approach, while still not fully mapped out, shows how creativity activates all different parts of our brain and consists of many interacting cognitive processes (both conscious and unconscious) as well as our emotions.

From preparation to incubation to illumination to verification of an idea, we might access the Dorsal Attention / Visuospatial Network (for dealing with physical objects), the Executive Attention Network (for focusing on a single task), or even the Imagination Network (for more abstract thoughts).

The process of creativity is a marriage of parts of our brain that we all have, not "the result of some magic brain region that some people have and others don't."

Creativity comes in small steps. It's not something that happen instantaneously. Saying it's something you're born with negates all of the hard work, effort, and time that goes into creating anything of value.

Afraid of putting in a little hard work? James Dyson famously created 5,000 prototypes of his vacuum over five years before finalizing the technology, while Walt Disney was fired from his job at the Kansas City Star in 1919 because, his editor said, he "lacked imagination and had no good ideas".

2. You Can't Control When Inspiration Will Strike

Demystifying the Muse: Five Creativity Myths You Should Stop Believing

One of the biggest myths around creativity is how it's something you can't control—it's the 'a-ha' moment or shouting Eureka when it all comes together. The muse comes when she's ready and you have no control over when or how this happens.

For me, some of my best ideas come when I'm in the shower (which is why everyone should have one of these), surrounded by dark tiles and white porcelain, away from anything that could influence my thoughts. But research now shows that these moments of sudden inspiration and insight are really just the culmination of previous hard work bubbling up into our mind.

Harvard researcher and psychologist Shelly H. Carson says these moments are the result of an "incubation period" where our mind is distracted from the problem at hand and free to wander and make connections we normally wouldn't (a phenomenon called divergent thinking, which is one of the building blocks of creativity).

So that Eureka moment isn't so special after all. What it is, is just the culmination of hard work and previous thoughts. It's the result of showing up and doing the work, not sitting around and waiting for inspiration.

There's a great story about a Hungarian psychology professor who wrote to 275 creative people asking to interview them for a book he was writing. Of the 275, a third of them replied "no" due to a lack of time (another third said nothing, which could also imply that they didn't have time).

Creativity comes from working; from showing up.

Looney Toons animator Chuck Jones asserted that you have to draw 100,000 bad drawings before you have a good drawing, while legendary photorealist Chuck Close is famous for saying "Inspiration is for amateurs—the rest of us just show up and get to work."

Time and time again, famous creatives mention putting in the work as being the key to creative success. In fact, in a study done by Stanford psychologist Carol Dweck, 143 creativity researchers agreed that the #1 trait underpinning creative success is resilience and perseverance. As Kevin Ashton wrote in How to Fly a Horse:

"Time is the raw material of creation. Wipe away the magic and myth of creating and all that remains is work: the work of becoming expert through study and practice, the work of finding solutions to problems and problems with those solutions, the work of trial and error, the work of thinking and perfecting, the work of creating."

3. You Can't Learn to Be Creative

Demystifying the Muse: Five Creativity Myths You Should Stop Believing

Saying you can't teach someone to be creative is just another facet of the 'born creative' myth and a favorite saying of art school dropouts worldwide. All this does is add to the mysticism of creativity, making it some ethereal quality that can't be tamed by the average man or woman.

But creativity is being taught all over the world, there's even the International Center for Studies in Creativity at the Buffalo State College in New York, started by BBDO founder Alex Osborn (who invented the idea of brainstorming). And studies of creativity in those who have honed their craft versus novices show the power of training your creative muscles.

A recent study showed how the brains of accomplished and veteran writers (with at least a decade of experience) act in a more streamlined, emotionally literate, unfiltered, and ultimately, more creative way, when compared to novices.

The study involved two groups, veterans and novices, reading the beginning of a story, brainstorming how it could continue, and then spending two minutes writing, all while lying in a scanner.

In the frontal cortex, where our brain deals with motivation, planning, reward, and attention (among other things), the experts' brains showed greater activity, especially in areas crucial to language and goal selection including across the inferior frontal gyri (IFG)—an area mainly associated with emotional language processing, such as interpreting expressive gestures.

Demystifying the Muse: Five Creativity Myths You Should Stop Believing

The experts were not only able to understand language but could spend more time focusing on the emotional undercurrent of the text and more abstract ideas—the building block of creativity. As Alex Fredera of the British Psychological Society put it, "ideas bubble within them, already on the road from concept to expression, readily communicable, almost rising into their throats."

4. Creativity Happens in Isolation (the Myth of the Lone Creator)

Demystifying the Muse: Five Creativity Myths You Should Stop Believing

I have this mental image of my mythical creative—my creative spirit animal. He sits at a small, wooden table, a single lamp illuminating a pen and pad covered in his signature scrawl, a tall glass of whiskey sweating in his left hand.

It's no surprise that he's alone. The mental image of the lone creative toiling into the long hours of the night has becoming almost archetypal. We have a tendency to rewrite history and attribute a creation solely to one person, when really it was the hard work and collaborative efforts of a creative team.

At Pixar, when their artists create new characters they all sit around a table, drawing ideas and putting them in the middle. Everyone riffs off of each others ideas, effectively using other people's creativity and imagination to springboard their own ideas.

David Burkus, the author of The Myths of Creativity: The Truth About How Innovative Companies and People Generate Great Ideas advocates for a "Creative Anonymous" support group, pointing to the famous writing group the "Inklings," which featured British writers like J.R.R. Tolkien, C.S. Lewis, Charles Williams, and others who would meet informally at pubs or each others' homes to discuss influences, show off drafts, and generally just draw strength off of each other.

In fact, one story goes so far as to say that C.S. Lewis actually had to argue with Tolkien that the manuscript he'd been reading at meetings was strong enough for publication (a little thing called The Lord of the Rings. You might have heard of it).

5. Creativity Comes to Those with the Time and Means

Demystifying the Muse: Five Creativity Myths You Should Stop Believing

In the Middle Ages, creation was possible but was reserved for those with divine inspiration (everyone else was either fighting dragons and raiding villages or slogging it out on a farm trying to survive if movies have taught me anything). In the Renaissance, however, humans were finally thought capable of creating beautiful masterpieces. But (and this is a big one) they had to be great men —think  the Leonardos, Michelangelos, and Botticellis of the world.

In the 19th and 20th century creativity became something that separated those born into wealth and status with those "self-made" pioneers celebrated in Victorian novels.

Throughout history, creativity and creation has been a line drawn in the sand—something that separates classes and types. But what line of thinking has persisted through all of these examples? That creativity is reserved for those with the time and means to do so.

However, modern research has shown that creative thinking is actually more likely to happen when there are restraints set in place.

A study out of the University of Amsterdam's Department of Social Psychology showed that when people are faced with constraints it forces them to step back, look at the big picture, and make connections between things they normally wouldn't—an ability called "global processing," which is a hallmark of creativity.

Even people like architect Frank Gehry and inventor Max Shepherd have both listed constraints as being the number one factor influencing creative thinking.

Not convinced? Here's one more example: Dr. Seuss's Green Eggs and Ham (which has sold more than 200 million copies to date) uses only 50 different words, which was part of a bet he made with Random House founder Bennett Cerf.

It's easy to hide your work away because you think you're not good enough. It's even easier to put off creating because "you're not a creative person," or "you're just not feeling inspired." But the truth of it is that, like anything in life, creativity is something that needs to be fostered and strengthened through practice.

Andy Warhol put it best when he asked: "Why do people think artists are special? It's just another job."

Whether you're a writer, a sculptor, a designer, or a banjo-player, showing up, staying open-minded, asking for help, and not being obsessed with the tools at your disposal will ultimately make you a better creator.

Demystifying the muse: 5 creativity myths you need to stop believing | Crew


Jory MacKay is the editor of the Crew blog. Crew is a creative marketplace connecting mobile & web projects with vetted, handpicked developers and designers.

Images by 578foot (Shutterstock), Ajgul (Shutterstock), i believe in adv, Wikipedia, Phil Roeder (Flickr), Nick Pelletier (Flickr), Visit Mississippi (Flickr), and Miles Berry (Flickr).

TypeSnippets Is a Visual Text Expansion Keyboard for iOS

TypeSnippets Is a Visual Text Expansion Keyboard for iOS

iOS: We all know text expansion is great, but sometimes it's hard to remember the abbreviations you make. TypeSnippets solves this by making it a more visual experience.

Once you create your snippets, you can just pull up the keyboard and click on options like, "phone number," "website," "Twitter," or whatever else. It's all about keeping a quick log of the snippets you use most of mobile and for those purposes it works really well. Of course, you can always set up your own shortcuts, but TypeSnippets makes them easier to pull up. TypeSnippets is similar to the previously mentioned KuaiBoard, but sports a design that's a little easier to navigate through quickly.

TypeSnippets (Free) | iTunes App Store

Change Someone's Attitude By Pitching Into Their "OK Zone"

Change Someone's Attitude By Pitching Into Their "OK Zone"

It's incredibly hard to shift someone's perspective to your point of view, but it's certainly not impossible. Harvard Business Review suggests finding someone's "OK Zone," and working from there.

We're all pretty deeply entrenched in our own ideas and it's hard to see other points of view. Because of that, when someone's pitching us a new idea, we tend to reject it unless it's at least close to what we already believe. Harvard Business Review calls this the "OK Zone," where an idea is close enough to our own that we'll entertain it. Here's how they explain it:

If Brian's presentation started with a big slide proclaiming "All of you are biased"—that is way outside of this engineer's OK zone. It's in her latitude of rejection—or the "reject zone." This is the crucial point: When attitudes are too far from our OK zone, we not only don't buy them—we actively retrench against them. We marshal all of our resources to oppose the person making the argument. If Brian started his presentation by proclaiming that everyone is biased, the engineer would likely respond by becoming even more committed to denying any bias in herself. If we want to change someone's attitude, first we need to understand where that person's OK zone is. We do this by asking questions to identify where they are on the attitude continuum right now.

So, to get someone to come over to your way of thinking, you need to find that zone, then provide information in incremental little bits before they're convinced. It's an interesting approach, and you can find a bunch of different examples for how this would work over at Harvard Business Review.

You Don't Have to Be the Boss to change How Your Company Works | Harvard Business Review

Photo by Ben Ostrowsky.