This week I’ve been thinking about our collective tendency to create things that are more complex than they need to be – something I know I’m guilty of fairly often!
I think there’s a lesson to be learned from the world of engineering, and in particular the idea – coined by Dan Ward – of the simplicity cycle. I think it’s just as applicable to strategy and creative endeavours as engineering, as I explain in this week’s article.
This week’s article
Simplifying strategy
Less is really more. When designing systems – from planes to marketing plans – we reach a point where additional complexity can only make things worse. Why is that? We do we find it so difficult to simplify things, and in doing so improve them? And how do we fix that?
Click here to read the article »
This week’s one interesting link
YouTubers are upscaling the past to 4K. Historians want them to stop
Like many people, I’ve been captivated by the recent glut of upscaled and enhanced historical films, like the 1911 footage of New York City or the incredible stabilised film taken from Wuppertal’s Schwebebahn in 1902.
Such footage is incredible, but uncanny; I thought it was simply the glitches and artefacts of the upscaling process, but there’s actually an ethical unease here too, as Thomas Nicholson explores.
“Digital upscalers and the millions who’ve watched their work on YouTube say they’re making the past relatable for viewers in 2020, but for some historians of art and image-making, modernising century-old archives brings a host of problems. Even adding colour to black and white photographs is hotly contested.”
Nicholson quotes the film historian Luke McKernan, who says:
“Colourisation does not bring us closer to the past; it increases the gap between now and then. It does not enable immediacy; it creates difference. It makes the past record all the more distant for rejecting what is honest about it.”