As last year falls away and a new year rolls in, I’d like to share with you a glance back at 2014. This will be my last post on this blog, as it moves over to WoodyHayday.com. Landmarks, Happenings of Note 2014 Writing this list, I can hardly believe that all this happened in the past […]
Fresh Ideas
Hi there! This is my old blog, I don't hang around here much.
You can now find me trying to mix things up here:
Visit WoodyHayday.com Subscribe To My Email List
Woodys posts on Tim Ferriss
2014 Review
Posted in Business, Life, Looking Back, Projects, Publishing, Software, Travel, WoodyLabs, Wordpress Also tagged 2014, Akala, Aldous Huxley, Allotment, Antoine Saint-Exupery, Bill Hicks, Charlie Chaplin, Chomsky, Earth's Halo, Epic Plugins, Ernest Hemingway, EverClients, Floatation Tank, Frank Herbert, Graham Hancock, Ibrahim Maalouf, Joe Rogan, John Jantsch, John Steinbeck, Joint Ventures, Launch, London Book Fair, Marcus Aurelius, Meditation, Meet-ups, Monty Don, Orwell, Robert Greene, Ryan Holiday, SBS, Stephen King, Sugar, Thoreau, UK Catan Championship, USA, VegFest, WDS2014, WordPress Plugins, Yosemite
2013 Annual Review
2013 was a turbulent year for me, but a great one. Tons of experiments, growth and realisations. Building upon the habit started last year with my 2012 review I’ll share some highlights of my close-of-year self analysis below. My review of 2013 turned into a mammoth document again, I’d been saving up thoughts and lists and […]
Posted in Business, Javascript, Life, Looking Back, Music, Projects, Publishing, Software, Technology, Travel, Web Technology, Wordpress, Writing Also tagged 2013, Akala, Alexis Ohanian, Andrew Carnegie, annual review, Charles Munger, Chris Guillebeau, Chris Sacca, Dave Asprey, Graham Hancock, Henry Ford, Joe Rogan, Josh Waitzkin, Keynes, Lee Kuan Yew, Lorenzo Hagerty, Low Key, Maxwell Maltz, Nikola Tesla, Seth Godin, Stefan Molyneux, Steven Pressfield, Thomas Paine, Toggl
The New Blog
A Quote..
"Where is the justice of political power if it executes the murderer and jails the plunderer, and then itself marches upon neighboring lands, killing thousands and pillaging the very hills"
Khalil Gibran
Blogroll
Archives
Old Random Projects