Raymond Camden's Blog Rss

Baby steps towards impossible

6

Posted in Misc | Posted on 09-10-2010 | 2,388 views

Ok, so I don't often get philosophical here - I'm not that kind of guy - but I heard something pretty important a few days ago at the last Google keynote that I wanted to share with my readers. It had a huge impact on me when I heard it and I hope I can do a good job of conveying what I felt then.

The speaker (and I apologize for not remembering his name), was talking about how when they initially dreamed up the idea of Google Instant, the engineers all said it was impossible. Now - as a developer - I know I've run into a few really impossible requests from clients in the past. I'm sure I'm not alone in this. But really got me was what happened next.

Even though the engineers were certain it was not possible, they chewed on it. Then one of them figured out a way to get about 5% of the way to what Google Instant needed. Sure the final goal was still impossible, but here was a way to do a small part of it.

And this is where things got interesting. Another engineer found another 5% improvement. And then another one. And so on. Eventually they made it to the "Impossible" goal.

I know the idea of breaking down a huge goal into smaller, more easily reachable tasks is certainly not new - but I loved hearing how despite the assurance that it wasn't going to be possible - they went for it anyway.

It's something I'm going to keep in mind and I hope you will as well.

Comments

[Add Comment] [Subscribe to Comments]

Divide and Concur!
Thanks Ray...shared this one on Facebook. For me it just reinforces the fact that one should NEVER GIVE UP.
Can that work with NASA engineers too? i.e. We've only got $10b to get men on Mars by 2020... :-)

I've switched off Google instant because it's annoying. I don't want results from their suggestions. I want results for what I have already decided I'm searching for. Sometimes autosuggest is useful, but don't search on every suggestion! Why are Google allowing their servers to be hammered for this? (10x increase in search requests?) Do people really find it useful?
Thank you, Ray. I'm working on something that seems impossible and a long shot, and sometimes I feel like giving up. But if I don't try, I'll never know if it could happen or not.
Ray, loving the philosophy. This reminds me of something I heard once (and can in no way confirm that its true) is that the guy who made Dyson vacuum clearners spends the first 15 minutes of every day doing something he knows he will fail at. In this way, he can really get his mind to operate outside of the standard loss-averse fashion that I think we are somewhat hardwired to slip into.

Every now and then, I think it's crucial to do something impossible - you're always surprised at what you can actually make happen!
@Ben,

I too spend the first 15 minutes of everyday working at something that I know I'll fail at. Getting out of bed at a reasonable time.

[Add Comment] [Subscribe to Comments]