Tag: sleep

  • Sleep on it

    Having spent his whole professional career performing and recording symphonic music, my father, Nigel Broadbent, is a font of knowledge about composers’ creative methods. For engineers (and other humans), there’s a lot we can learn from these strategies for ‘music design’.

    This week, I am running a workshop on how we can harness sleep and the subconscious in the design process.

    Sleep is a powerful part of the creative process, and many composers know—or have known—this.

    Nigel says he composes his best music early in the morning, before he has spoken a word to anyone.

    Benjamin Britten had a strict cycle of composing that integrated time at his desk, exercise, play, and sleep.

    Apparently, he would take a walk in the afternoon, and ideas would come to mind. In the evening, he would socialise and improvise tunes at the piano for his friends based on the afternoon’s ideas. He would then sleep and, after waking in the morning, turn the sleep-processed material into output.

    Sleep does wonderful things. Think about how you could make the most of the power of sleep. In fact, don’t—sleep on it instead.

  • New developments in ‘i’

    Engineers have announced today some astounding new breakthroughs in their latest version of i.

    • Empathy – the ability to see the world from the perspective of another. To have a genuine, shared sense of pain. This ability is developed through twenty-year long training process called ‘childhood and adolescence’.
    • Embodied cognition – a way to develop understanding that emerges through the unique physical characteristics of each ‘i’ and how it moves through and experiences the world.
    • Music – audio signals organised into patterns and created by individual or groups of ‘i’s to communicate information that can’t be captured in a .txt file.
    • Culture – a collective intelligence that emerges when several i operating systems do things together.
    • Gut-feeling – a parallel processor providing checks and balances against the logic board.
    • Sleep – a remarkable sub-routine that both repairs the operating system and identifies new patterns.
    • Love – a higher order circuit that guides priorisation, builds system resilience and provides additional energy when resources are low.

    This technology is completely free and open-source.

  • Bristol to Glasgow via the Caledonian Sleeper

    While it is possible to go direct from Bristol to Edinburgh, and from Bristol to Glasgow with one change, it is a long route and involves spending a long time on Cross Country trains (which I prefer to avoid). So when the need arose this week for me to work in Glasgow for the day, I experimented with a different route: via London and the Caledonian Sleeper

    Going from Bristol to London and then up to Scotland is taking two sides of the triangle. But if I can sleep for a decent chunk of the journey then it is very appealing. 

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