Tag Archives: science

Paul Allen talks with Boing Boing about commercial spaceflight and mapping the human brain

One of my favorite interviews to come out of the IDEA MAN book tour is this one from Boing Boing.  Rob Beschizza spoke with Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen about several fascinating topics, including private space travel and his ongoing work with the Allen Brain Atlas.   Here’s a brief excerpt, and I encourage you to check out the whole thing.

Rob: Is there any advice you could give to people who want to take the same path? How do you focus on new ideas without losing sight of execution?

Paul: To come up with ideas, you have to prepare. You get there by following tech news, a lot of websites, blogs such as BB, and many other things. Stuffing your brain with information. Hopefully, you get an idea for something after you’ve done that for a while: that’s what happened to me. Then you have to put together a team of people, and I was lucky to have Bill Gates, and other people, as my partners through the years to execute those ideas. And you’ve got to test your idea against what’s already out there, to make sure it’s not duplicative, that it really is a green-field idea. All those factors have to work together. And if you’re lucky you come up with something that has the potential to change the world. And that’s incredibly rewarding. But it’s not just the idea. It’s all the effort and the work that come after you have the idea.

Share this Post:

Current, Penguin’s new popular science imprint

At long last, I can share the news. The team behind Portfolio is launching a brand-new popular science imprint: Current.

See the whole press release below, and please do share with anyone who might be interested. If you like what Portfolio does with business books, you’re going to love what Current does with science.

In publishing, we often say that customers don’t pay any attention to imprints—maybe that’s true, maybe not. But authors, agents, and booksellers do. Portfolio’s sterling reputation makes my life as an editor much easier. The next challenge is to build Current to the point that it’s as synonymous with excellent publishing in its category as Portfolio is in business.

Naturally, Current will eventually have its own Web presence. In the meantime, we’ll share any Current-related news here on the Portfolio blog.

(Photo courtesy of Goddard Photo and Video blog.)

Continue Reading →

Share this Post: