Posts Tagged "sxsw"

We’re headed to the SXSW Interactive Awards tonight, where our iPad app Journey to the Exoplanets is a finalist in the Education category! Fingers crossed…

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Tim O’Reilly’s Advice: Read Rilke

During his SXSW Interactive talk, Andrew Mcafee asked Tim O’Reilly for his advice to young innovators. O’Reilly quoted the last stanza of Rainer Maria Rilke’s poem, reprinted below.

“The Man Watching” by Rainer Maria Rilke

I can tell by the way the trees beat, after
so many dull days, on my worried windowpanes
that a storm is coming,
and I hear the far-off fields say things
I can’t bear without a friend,
I can’t love without a sister

The storm, the shifter of shapes, drives on
across the woods and across time,
and the world looks as if it had no age:
the landscape like a line in the psalm book,
is seriousness and weight and eternity.

What we choose to fight is so tiny!
What fights us is so great!
If only we would let ourselves be dominated
as things do by some immense storm,
we would become strong too, and not need names.

When we win it’s with small things,
and the triumph itself makes us small.
What is extraordinary and eternal
does not want to be bent by us.
I mean the Angel who appeared
to the wrestlers of the Old Testament:
when the wrestler’s sinews
grew long like metal strings,
he felt them under his fingers
like chords of deep music.

Whoever was beaten by this Angel
(who often simply declined the fight)
went away proud and strengthened
and great from that harsh hand,
that kneaded him as if to change his shape.
Winning does not tempt that man.
This is how he grows: by being defeated, decisively,
by constantly greater beings.

(Robert Bly translation)

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Spotted at SXSW Interactive: a vending machine retrofitted onto a bicycle cart, dispensing free letterpress books by the technology and art collective Bohemian. This is the kind of innovation I can get behind.

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I feel compelled to point out the Austin Convention Center, currently hosting South by Southwest Interactive, is right next to the O. Henry Museum. Geographic kismet?

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About

Farrar, Straus and Giroux

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Publishing award-winning fiction, nonfiction and poetry since 1946. We post interesting literary ephemera here and at Work in Progress.

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