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So, kids are mostly raised & I've just gone back to work…
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Archive for the ‘problem-solving’

Solving problems or just playing around?

February 28, 2009 By: almostgotit Category: Uncategorized, decorating, playing, problem-solving, time management 11 Comments →

Before NASA engineers could use duct tape and a sock to improvise an emergency air filter for the crew of Apollo 13, they had to have a goal in mind.

But they also had first to know the basic properties of both duct tape and socks.  E.G:

Today’s Problem: tiny bathroom, two messy cats, lack of child’s interest in litter box clean-up. Cat litter all over the floor.  GROSS.

Solution using what we have on hand: one unused bathtub and one rubber door mat.  

Final verdict: Not at all elegant, but it works.

Yesterday I suggested that playing around with stuff won’t solve any specific problems, but that’s not what babies or toddlers are concerned about when they bang and suck on things, carry them around, or drop them off the edge of their high chairs. They aren’t solving any specific problems, but they are conducting valid scientific research all the same.

Sometimes problem-solving is the way to go, and sometimes playing is.

I’ve been playing. In the past few weeks, I’ve rearranged nearly every room in our house. I’ve been cleaning and getting rid of as many things as I can, and everything else I’ve either turned around, turned over, or turned into something else.

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Yesterday’s problem: tiny bedroom without enough wall space

Solution: turn bed diagonally and fill corner with thrift-store screen that has been taking up space elsewhere.  And can you find the cat in this picture?

I’ve been thinking of it as an intensive audit, a re-nesting, a way of getting traction.  It’s very weird, and I don’t know where I’m going with any of this, but it seems important so I’ve decided to stick with it for the time being.

Interesting and possibly pointless things to do with excess firewood and old Christmas lights…

 

 

How to (almost) perfectly solve any problem

February 27, 2009 By: almostgotit Category: Apollo 13, NASA, Uncategorized, duct tape, problem-solving 6 Comments →

 
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In Apollo 13, the crew navigated successfully through so many disasters that flight 1549’s recent landing in the Hudson River looks tame in comparison.

The movie version of Apollo 13 is gorgeous. Mission Control’s Gene Kranz demonstrates dazzling leadership when nothing goes as planned. At one point he effectively silences his crew’s many objections: I don’t care what anything was designed to do. I care about what it can do. So let’s get to work. Let’s lay it out, okay?”

Mission Control has to come up with a new plan, using only what the Apollo 13 crew has available. Some of the world’s best engineers must figure out, for instance, how the crew can improvise a much-needed carbon dioxide filter. They come up with something that will work using duct tape, the flight plan cover, and a sock.

The best college course I ever took was an art class with a former NASA designer. We spent an entire semester doing impossible things, like building catapults with fail-proof perfect aim, and suspending gallon milk jugs (full!) between two tables using nothing more than a pack of toothpicks and some glue.

The class changed my life.

What amazed me most was that each time I would come up with what I firmly believed was the ONLY solution to the problem he’d give us, I’d go to class the next day to find that several other solutions had been found, as well. Some of our solutions were more or less elegant than the others, but it didn’t matter so long as they WORKED.

Our professor taught us always to start with our goal in mind, never with how we were going to get there.

Sometimes it’s fun to play with stuff and ideas, to see what you’ll come up with.  But to solve a problem, you must approach it from the other direction. 

Don’t think of what’s possible.

Don’t even think too much about what you have to work with. NASA’s engineers never would have built a CO2 filter had they started by asking what can we possibly make out of duct tape, a flight plan cover, and a sock?

Start, instead, with where you want to end up. Then figure out what you need to get there.