Sunday, November 6, 2011

Book List

《美国与中国》费正清
《白捡的钱》
《戈尔德贝格变奏曲》
《论自由》
《运筹与决策:介绍和评价》
《莎士比亚全集》
《语言,真理与逻辑》
《怀河》
《数学原理》伯特兰·罗素
《世界的逻辑结构》
《语言的逻辑结构》
《马尔科姆·艾克斯自传》
《美国的民主》
《精神现象学》黑格尔
《精神分析引论》
《追忆似水年化》
《到灯塔去》
《洛丽塔》
《伊利亚特》荷马
《李尔王》
《人可以被改变吗?》
《道德经》老子
《决策论与经济行为》
《不确定状况下的决策分析》
《谈判中的经理》
《战略与结构》
《看得见的手》
《方案:前方深浅莫测的水域》
《心系中国:50年的回忆》费正清
《浮士德博士》
《西格蒙德·佛罗伊德的生活与工作》
《佛及尼亚·伍尔夫书信集》
《押沙龙!押沙龙!》
《西线无战事》
《西方的没落》
《丧钟为谁而鸣》
《风格的要素》怀特
《人生的枷锁》
《梦的解析》
《七根智慧之柱》
《文化模式》
哈佛的书单:

《政治学》亚里士多德
《联邦党人》
《主管人员的职能》
《行政领导:社会学分析》
《约翰逊传》
《心理学著作全集》佛罗伊德
《管理与工人》
《西太平洋的亚尔古》
《安达曼岛民》
《爱尔兰农民》
《街头社会》
《人类团体》
《社会行为及其基本形式》
《洪堡的礼物》
《推销员之死》
《代价》
《桥头眺望》阿瑟·弥勒
《理想国》
《上帝之城》
《蒙田随笔》
《战争与和平》
《魔山》
《战争与和平:国际关系论》雷蒙·阿隆
《英语民族史》丘吉尔
《第二次世界大战》丘吉尔
《冲突战略》
《权利哲学》黑格尔
《资本论》马克思
《伟大的转变》
《进入黑暗的漫长旅程》
《社会契约论》
《安德罗玛克》
《戴高乐战争回忆录》




基本教材(必读):
席宣、金春明:《文化大革命简史》,中共党史出版社1996年
王年一:《大动乱的年代》,河南人民出版社1989年
罗德里克·麦克法夸尔:《文化大革命的起源》2卷本,河北人民出版社1989年
胡绳主编:《中国共产党的七十年》有关章节,中共党史出版社
郭德宏、韩钢等编:《中华人民共和国专题史稿》5卷本,四川人民出版社2004年
庞松:《简明中华人民共和国史》,广东教育出版社2001年6月
武俊平主编:《时尚五十年》,内蒙古人民出版社1999年
谢春涛主编:《共和国50年图史》,中共中央党校出版社2000年

主要参考书(选读):
逄先知、金冲及主编:《毛泽东传》(下)有关章节,中央文献出版社2003年
金冲及、黄峥主编:《刘少奇传》(下)有关章节,中央文献出版社1998年
金冲及主编:《周恩来传,1949—1976年》,中央文献出版社1997年
薄一波:《若干重大事件与决策的回顾》有关章节,中共中央党校出版社1991年
中共中央文献研究室:《关于建国以来党的若干历史问题的决议注释本》有关段落,人民出版社1983年
萧克、李锐、龚育之:《我亲历过的政治运动》,中央编译出版社1998年
黄峥:《刘少奇冤案始末》,中央文献出版社1998年9月
图门、祝东力:《刘少奇蒙难始末》,中共党史出版社1998年
张化、苏采青:《回首文革》上下册。中共党史出版社2000年
肖冬连等:《求索中国—文革前10年史》上下册,红旗出版社1999年
丛进:《曲折发展的岁月》,河南人民出版社1989年
庞松、陈述:《中华人民共和国简史》,上海人民出版社1999年9月
郑惠、林蕴晖等主编:《五十年国事纪要》(多卷本),湖南人民出版社1999年
牛大勇、沈志华:《冷战与中国周边关系》,世界知识出版社2004年8月
苏星:《新中国经济史》,中共中央党校出版社1999年
费正清、罗德里克·麦克法夸尔(马若德)主编:《剑桥中华人民共和国史》
朱正:《1957年的夏季:从百家争鸣到两家争鸣》,河南人民出版社1998年
戴煌:《九死一生:我的“右派”历程》,中央编译出版社1998年
谢春涛:《庐山风云:1959年庐山会议简史》,中国青年出版社1996年
李新:《回望流年》,北京图书馆出版社1998年
郑谦:《被“革命”的教育》,中国青年出版社1999年
周明主编:《历史在这里沉思》1-3卷,华夏出版社1986年;4-6卷,北岳文艺出版社1989年
徐友渔编:《1966:我们那一代的回忆》,中国文联出版公司1998年
马识途:《沧桑十年》,中共中央党校出版社1999年
杨绛:《从丙午到“流亡”》,中国青年出版社2000年
者永平主编:《那个年代中的我们》,远方出版社1998年
韦君宜:《思痛录》,北京十月文艺出版社1998年
何载:《冤假错案是这样平反的》,中共中央党校出版社1999年

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Six Hats Thinking


Six Thinking Hats

Looking at a decision from all points of view


Take different perspectives.
© iStockphoto/RoyalFive
'Six Thinking Hats' is an important and powerful technique. It is used to look at decisions from a number of important perspectives. This forces you to move outside your habitual thinking style, and helps you to get a more rounded view of a situation.
This tool was created by Edward de Bono in his book '6 Thinking Hats'.
Many successful people think from a very rational, positive viewpoint. This is part of the reason that they are successful. Often, though, they may fail to look at a problem from an emotional, intuitive, creative or negative viewpoint. This can mean that they underestimate resistance to plans, fail to make creative leaps and do not make essential contingency plans.
Similarly, pessimists may be excessively defensive, and more emotional people may fail to look at decisions calmly and rationally.
If you look at a problem with the 'Six Thinking Hats' technique, then you will solve it using all approaches. Your decisions and plans will mix ambition, skill in execution, public sensitivity, creativity and good contingency planning.

How to Use the Tool:

You can use Six Thinking Hats in meetings or on your own. In meetings it has the benefit of blocking the confrontations that happen when people with different thinking styles discuss the same problem.
Each 'Thinking Hat' is a different style of thinking. These are explained below:
  • White Hat:
    With this thinking hat you focus on the data available. Look at the information you have, and see what you can learn from it. Look for gaps in your knowledge, and either try to fill them or take account of them.
  • This is where you analyze past trends, and try to extrapolate from historical data.
  • Red Hat:
    'Wearing' the red hat, you look at problems using intuition, gut reaction, and emotion. Also try to think how other people will react emotionally. Try to understand the responses of people who do not fully know your reasoning.
  • Black Hat:
    Using black hat thinking, look at all the bad points of the decision. Look at it cautiously and defensively. Try to see why it might not work. This is important because it highlights the weak points in a plan. It allows you to eliminate them, alter them, or prepare contingency plans to counter them.
  • Black Hat thinking helps to make your plans 'tougher' and more resilient. It can also help you to spot fatal flaws and risks before you embark on a course of action. Black Hat thinking is one of the real benefits of this technique, as many successful people get so used to thinking positively that often they cannot see problems in advance. This leaves them under-prepared for difficulties.
  • Yellow Hat:
    The yellow hat helps you to think positively. It is the optimistic viewpoint that helps you to see all the benefits of the decision and the value in it. Yellow Hat thinking helps you to keep going when everything looks gloomy and difficult.
  • Green Hat:
    The Green Hat stands for creativity. This is where you can develop creative solutions to a problem. It is a freewheeling way of thinking, in which there is little criticism of ideas. A whole range of creativity tools can help you here.
  • Blue Hat:
    The Blue Hat stands for process control. This is the hat worn by people chairing meetings. When running into difficulties because ideas are running dry, they may direct activity into Green Hat thinking. When contingency plans are needed, they will ask for Black Hat thinking, etc.
A variant of this technique is to look at problems from the point of view of different professionals (e.g. doctors, architects, sales directors, etc.) or different customers.

Example:

The directors of a property company are looking at whether they should construct a new office building. The economy is doing well, and the amount of vacant office space is reducing sharply. As part of their decision they decide to use the 6 Thinking Hats technique during a planning meeting.
Looking at the problem with the White Hat, they analyze the data they have. They examine the trend in vacant office space, which shows a sharp reduction. They anticipate that by the time the office block would be completed, that there will be a severe shortage of office space. Current government projections show steady economic growth for at least the construction period.
With Red Hat thinking, some of the directors think the proposed building looks quite ugly. While it would be highly cost-effective, they worry that people would not like to work in it.
When they think with the Black Hat, they worry that government projections may be wrong. The economy may be about to enter a 'cyclical downturn', in which case the office building may be empty for a long time. If the building is not attractive, then companies will choose to work in another better-looking building at the same rent.
With the Yellow Hat, however, if the economy holds up and their projections are correct, the company stands to make a great deal of money. If they are lucky, maybe they could sell the building before the next downturn, or rent to tenants on long-term leases that will last through any recession.
With Green Hat thinking they consider whether they should change the design to make the building more pleasant. Perhaps they could build prestige offices that people would want to rent in any economic climate. Alternatively, maybe they should invest the money in the short term to buy up property at a low cost when a recession comes.
The Blue Hat has been used by the meeting's Chair to move between the different thinking styles. He or she may have needed to keep other members of the team from switching styles, or from criticizing other peoples' points.
It is well worth reading Edward de Bono's book 6 Thinking Hats for more information on this technique.

Key Points:

Six Thinking Hats is a good technique for looking at the effects of a decision from a number of different points of view.
It allows necessary emotion and skepticism to be brought into what would otherwise be purely rational decisions. It opens up the opportunity for creativity within Decision Making. The technique also helps, for example, persistently pessimistic people to be positive and creative.
Plans developed using the '6 Thinking Hats' technique will be sounder and more resilient than would otherwise be the case. It may also help you to avoid public relations mistakes, and spot good reasons not to follow a course of action before you have committed to it.

Friday, October 7, 2011

Recommended for people interested in start-ups


A Founder's Guide to Starting in 6 Weeks

By Adam Neary
I met another young man today who is en route to a world class MBA program to fill in the gaps in his knowledge prior to starting his life in a startup.
I gave him the same metaphor I have given droves of others. If you wanted to be a world-class cyclist and told me you were going to spend the next 2 years rock climbing in Nepal, I would advise that, sure, you would probably return in shape and with stronger lungs, but you would probably be a better cyclist if you spent the next 2 years cycling.
For some reason, many business guys have a Mr. Miyagi-style notion of doing something else full time for the sake of building skills prior to engaging in what you want to do directly. It worked in the Karate Kid, but it’s poor advice for entrepreneurs.
Today’s subject, who seemed quite smart, was at least interested in working at Profitably in an intern capacity for 6 weeks prior to school matriculation, but since he doesn’t write code and doesn’t sell, there wasn’t a lot we could put him on over given our stage in development (and so I told him, and I will be forwarding this post his way, so I am not trying to be rude).
Rather, I recommended he start his own company in 6 weeks instead. 
We talked through a concept he was batting around, which was actually quite sound, and I recommended setting specific milestones for no/no-go gate at the end of the 6 weeks. In that period of time, without writing a single line of code, he could:
1. Launch a splash site
2. Test out pen-and-paper mockups with real users from his target market
3. Confirm if they would use or pay for what he was considering launching
4. Get out in front of the other revenue streams and get letters of intent from key stakeholders in his ecosystem (his idea allowed for that, fortunately)
5. Use a modest test budget to see if people would click on ads around his key messages
I thought I saw the spark in his eye, so I hope he follows through on this, but I realized that I have emailed a set of resources to a couple dozen bright-eyed folks just like him, so I figured I would consolidate that list once and for all so that I can just send people here.
And here it is: The Ultimate 6 Week Startup Crash Course (including the resources you need to validate a business concept with ridiculously little time and money).
Please note: there are 3 steps, and they need to be followed IN PARALLEL, not in series. Start all 3 steps this afternoon. 
Step 1: Get educated 
Everyone’s got their favorite must-read list, but here’s mine:
- Steve Blank’s Four Steps to the Epiphany (never leaves my bedside)
- David Cohen’s and Brad Feld’s Do More Faster
- Dave McClure’s Startup Metrics for Pirates
The Powerset Talent Essays
- Dave Cancel’s Data Driven Startups
- The Hubspot crew’s Inbound Marketing
- The 37Signals crew’s Getting Real & Rework
- David Skok’s SaaS Metrics
- Tony’s Hsieh’s Delivering Happiness
- Jessica Livingston’s Founders at Work 
Just as importantly, you need to go read the key articles within and subscribe to the following blogs:
- ANYTHING that’s big in your specific space (most importantly)
- Fred Wilson of USV: avc.com
- Chris Dixon: cdixon.org
- Mark Suster: Both sides of the table
- Eric Ries: Startup lessons learned
- Paul Graham’s essays: paulgraham.com
- Nivi and Naval at venturehacks
- Jason Purtorti (designer from mint)
TechCrunch and VentureBeat (just to keep track of deals and launches)
Don’t just subscribe. Read through the “best of” lists and peruse archives as appropriate. You’ve got a lot to catch up on, so while we’re at it, follow these folks on twitter (and find out who they are talking to), get an iPad, and load up all this content onto the iPad.
The collective knowledge all these folks are sharing is crazy. Follow their links serendipitously and soak it all up like a sponge. Build your list to share with others (and let me know what I missed!).
Step 2: Learn to write code 
I have anecdotally heard business people objecting to the idea of learning to write code, as it’s supposedly a waste of their talent. Cute. If you’re going to start a software company, learn to write code. You’ll have a CTO who will write all the real code, but you need to know what models, views, and controllers are in the first place. You need to know the difference between a relational database, an OLAP cube, a document-oriented database, and a key-value store. More awesome than all that, you definitely need to know how open source software works and how source control works, technically, culturally, and from an etiquette standpoint.
The good news is that engineers are better than bankers, consultants, scientists, or any other adults when it comes to sharing and structuring knowledge in a distributed environment, all for free.
Visit http://guides.rubyonrails.org/ and over the next six weeks, go at least through all the “Digging Deeper” sections. Just follow the instructions.
If you blow through the guides (a clear sign you’re an entrepreneur in reality!), you’ll have plenty of time to build an actual, working prototype of your idea.   
And you should.
Step 3: Validate your idea
We all agree that an idea and $3 buys you a cup of coffee at Starbucks. You don’t want to be ridiculed as a Winklevoss, so make peace straight away that your idea means nothing, but execution means everything.
You don’t need startup capital, and you don’t need a coder. You need to find out if anyone cares about what you’re thinking about offering the world. Hopefully all the reading I recommended above will give you a much more informed idea about how to do that, but since you’re starting each step at the same time (right?) you haven’t read all those books yet. So here’s a first week worth of to-dos:
- Buy a domain and launch a splash site using Wordpress
You can find cheap hosting with 1-click non-technical install. Follow the instructions, and then search for a sexy theme that you dig out of the box (e.g. http://www.press75.com). Write some copy. Don’t know where to start? That feeling isn’t going away—it gets profoundly worse.
- Begin blogging. Don’t know where to start? That feeling isn’t going away—it gets profoundly worse.
- Begin collecting email addresses on a landing page from people who want to use your service
- Go to Google, Facebook, and LinkedIn, and create test budgets for ads that point to your landing page. See if people click on the ads and if they give you their email addresses. This is your first “conversion” data—enjoy the sweet delicious nectar of feedback! 
- Draw out full paper mockups of everything you have in your head, and put those drawings in front of people who will use your product. Ask if they would pay for the product. How often could they see themselves using it? Why WOULDN’T they use it? What would it have to do to get their attention? Don’t ask your friends. Ask your enemies. Presume they are being nice to you because they don’t want to hurt your feelings. Of course they want what you’re offering, but no, they don’t want to sign up for your mailing list or alpha?! Bullshit. They hate your idea. Go to a meetup related to your space and practice trying to convince a stranger to sign up for your email list with a couple mockups and a smile.
Note: If you feel like getting cute, use Balsamiq. Or don’t.
- If someone ELSE is going to pay you other than your users—and this is key—go talk to them. If you can’t get meetings with them in the next 6 weeks, what does that say? If you can, show them the mockups. Best case scenario, get letters of intent around pricing for whatever you’re planning to do. There’s nothing better when you need to explain to your mom and your girlfriend and your priest and your butcher that you’re not going to business school.
- Once you know (on a preliminary basis) what people will pay, do some honest market sizing. If you’ve got something people will pay for, how many of them are there? If you multiply those two numbers and you’re north of $1B, you’ve got a fundable startup. Find other ways to qualify that number and calibrate it. Use Census Bureau data. Find other MBAs who have access to Hoovers, Capital IQ, Forrester, and Gartner, etc. You might even find a future intern. ;-)
- Two weeks in, sign up for 4-week trials to a dozen some-odd tools that help you kick ass all over the place. Steve Blank has a pretty good list, but definitely include KissMetrics and KissInsights, Google Analytics (free) and Apps (not as free), Tout and/or Mailchimp, SurveyMonkey, Dropbox, and whatever else applies to your space. (But don’t waste time on project management, planning, budgeting software or anything related to “scale.” Please refer to “I’m Going to Scale My Foot Up Your Ass” for more details. You’re validating your idea, not building a business yet.)
- Learn by doing. I’m serious. Learn by doing. Then repeat.
Bottom line 
At the end of the 6 weeks, if you have read until your eyes crossed, learned to write code, and validated that there is in fact a business there…and you still want to go to business school, you’re not an entrepreneur. At least you found out quickly and can spend your two years gearing up for a role at Amex, Bain, or JP Morgan rather than tilting at windmills.
And this is ok, by the way. My wife is a Harvard MBA and a successful consultant, and she’s amazing. The guy who introduced us is a Harvard MBA and a banker, and he’s ok anyway (wink). Amex, Bain, and JP Morgan are awesome. They just aren’t for entrepreneurs.
It’s possible, though, at the end of the 6 weeks you’re going to feel the way most entrepreneurs feel, that there isn’t anywhere near enough time in the week to get done everything you need to get done, and you can’t imagine wasting another minute screwing around. You’ve got 25 meetings already set up for next week, 10 meetups to check out, a dozen revisions to mockups you need to test out, Google Reader with a 1000+ article backlog, and an enormous market full of customers who are dying for what you’re going to bring them, god damn it.
Once you’re hooked, it’s over.
And once you’re there, let’s meet for coffee again, and we can talk about who I can introduce you to so that you’re spending the following six weeks even better.

Monday, July 18, 2011

Things I learned from biking

Just biked about 25 miles for the first time in life. Three takeaways,
1. Biking is all about control. It's so easy to be out of control when you are going downhill. You need to be prepared first by switching the gears and then use the brake.
2. Focus and scenery cannot be satisfied at the same time. Sometimes, it's so easy to get too focused on following and surpassing the cyclist right in front of you. You get to the destination much faster, but you are missed out on almost everything on the road. Well, it is a trade off you have to make and this applies to almost everything in life.
3.  Marina and golden gate bridge have amazing views. I am so in love with this city!

Checklist of 100 things to do in SF (Comments in green)


1. Listen to your friends’ first gig atHotel Utah. (SoMa)
2. Walk under the waterfall at Yerba Buena Gardens. (SoMa)
3. Shop for urban menswear at Rolo. (SoMa)
4. Be a woman among men and go dancing at the Stud. (SoMa)
5. Feather your nest at 411 Vermont Street (ObsoleteBlackman CruzTherien & Co.). (SoMa).
6. Have some watermelon wheat beer at 21st Amendment. (SoMa)
7. Rush the sales at Jeremys. (SoMa)
8. Meet your match over a glass of wine at District. (SoMa)
9. Soak in the art and some Blue Bottle on the new SFMOMA rooftop. (SoMa)
10. Have a quiet moment in the Contemporary Jewish Museum plaza. (SoMa)
11.Pick up some Italian roast at Graffeo Coffee. (Northbeach)
12. Remind yourself that Tommaso’s old-school pizzas are still some of the best. (Northbeach)
13. Attend a reading at City Lights. (Northbeach)
14. Grab the perfect gift for your girlfriend at Eden & Eden. (Northbeach)
15. Light a candle in memory of someone special at Sts. Peter and Paul Church. (Northbeach)
16. Have pumpkin ravioli at L’Osteria. (Northbeach)
17. Catch a show at Bimbo’s. (Northbeach)
18. Take a seat at the counter for a meatball sandwich at Mario’s Bohemian Cigar Store. (Northbeach)
19. Climb the Filbert Street and Greenwich Street steps. (Northbeach)
20. Don’t miss the Coit Tower murals. (Northbeach)
21. Use the general password (“books”) to drop into the library at Bourbon & Branch. (Tenderloin)
22. Do dinner and view a show from the balcony at the Great American Music Hall. (Tenderloin)
23. See what’s on display at the Shooting Gallery. (Tenderloin)
24. Hang out in the smokers’ cage at Rye. (Tenderloin)
25. Grab a Vietnamese sandwich from Saigon Sandwiches. (Tenderloin)
26. Sing and clap on Sunday morning at Glide Memorial. (Tenderloin)
27. Get a lap dance at Mitchell Brothers O’Farrell Theatre. (Tenderloin)
28.Shop for cool kicks at Huf Shoes. (Tenderloin)
29. Then cross the street and have dinner at tiny Canteen. (Tenderloin)
30. Watch naan being pulled straight from the tandoor at Shalimar. (Tenderloin)
31. Do dinner at A16 and a movie at the Presidio Theatre. (Marina)
32. Load up a Let’s Be Frank grass-fed dog with devil sauce. (Marina)
33. Fly a kite at Crissy Field. (Marina) -Biked to Crissy Field on 07/17. Haven't flied a kite yet.
34. Be a lady who lunches at Balboa Café (but get the burger). (Marina)
35. Get hit on at the MatrixFillmore. (Marina)
36. Find a deal at My Rommate’s Closet. (Marina)
37. Make friends with someone that owns a sailboat. (Marina) -Hopefully this will happen soon
38. Conduct an ethereally quiet wee-hours grocery run to Marina Safeway. (Marina)
39. Have a beer on the back patio of the Tipsy Pig. (Marina)
40. Follow up a run through the Presidio with a hearty brunch at Rose’s Café.
41. Reserve a private karaoke room at Doremi Music Studio (and cross your fingers for “Sweet Caroline”). (Pac Heights)
42. Find a drop-dead, Aussie-designed dress at Elizabeth Charles. (Pac Heights)
43. Check out the southern view from the top of Alta Plaza Park. (Pac Heights)
44. Get a taste of the Mission at Pizzeria Delfina. (Pac Heights)
45. Grab a free poster after a show at the Fillmore. (Pac Heights)
46. Take your laptop to the Grove and pretend to work. (Pac Heights)
47. Get naked at Kabuki Springs & Spa. (Pac Heights)
48. Indulge in an almond croissant from the original Boulangerie Bay Bread. (Pac Heights)
49. Check out the adorable puppies and kitties up for adoption at Pets Unlimited. (Pac Heights)
50. See how many times you can jog the Lyon Street Steps. (Pac Heights) 
51. Choose from the 50 selections on tap at Toronado and pair it with a beer sausage from Rosamunde. (Haight) 
52.Time yourself at Kezar Stadium’s track. (Haight) 
53. Play fetch with the dog at Buena Vista Park. (Haight) 
54. Order an old-fashioned at the Alembic. (Haight) 
55. Get a T-shirt designed by local artist Sam Flores at Upper Playground. (Haight) 
56. Have barbecue and sake at Memphis Minnie’s. (Haight) 
57. Catch an indie flick at the Red Vic. (Haight) 
58. Take advantage of happy hour at Uva Enoteca. (Haight) 
59. Shop for quality vintage wear at Held Over. (Haight) 
60. Be a tourist and snap a pic of yourself at the convergence of Haight and Ashbury streets. (Haight) 
61. Find love over fixed gears and coffee at Ritual Roasters. (Mission) 
62. Drink rosé at Dolores Park. (Mission) 
63. Buy a heap of cheap avocados at Casa Lucas. (Mission) 
64. Shop for emerging artists on a minigallery hop at Creativity ExploredNeedles + Pens,Adobe BooksMichael Rosenthal and Jack Hanley. (Mission) 
65. Drink a cheap, 16-ounce margarita at the Latin American Club. (Mission)
66. Wake up to a bowl of bread pudding at Tartine Bakery. (Mission)
67. Ogle the midcentury chandeliers at Monument. (Mission)
68. Have a breakfast of huevos rancheros at Los Jarritos. (Mission)
69. Buy something beautiful at the Bell Jar. (Mission)
70. People-watch on a warm afternoon at the Revolution Café. (Mission)>
71. Check out a gay-fabulous flick at Castro Theatre. (Castro)
72. Wait in line for a Superman sandwich with dirty sauce at Ike’s Place. Follow with Tums. (Castro)
73. Sit at the piano and sing along with the boys at Martuni’s (yes, this is technically next door in the Mission, but only geographically). (Castro)
74. Spend Sunday trying to keep count of the all-you-can-drink-for-$6 mimosas at Lime. (Castro)
75. Shop for feather boas and tool belts at Cliff’s Variety. (Castro)
76. Strike a pose at Friday’s happy-hour dance party at Badlands. (Castro)
77. Catch a concert at Café Du Nord (or a little acoustic at the adjacent Swedish American Hall). (Castro)
78. Have a 3 a.m. post-clubbing breakfast at Bagdad Café. (Castro)
79. Pick up some social criticism at A Different Light Bookstore. (Castro)
80. Hook up over coffee at Café Flore. (Castro)
81. Watch the surfers at Kelly’s Cove. (Richmond)
82. Browse the art books at Park Life. (Richmond)
83. See a double feature at the 4 Star Theatre. (Richmond)
84. Be thankful for Green Apple Books, the ultimate independent bookstore. (Richmond)
85. Pick out a fish from the tank for dinner at New May Wah market. (Richmond)
86. Have a bowl of ramen and listen to the Shitones at Halu. (Richmond)
87. Jockey for position at Pizzetta 211. (Richmond)
88. Drop in on a seisiún (a kind of Irish open jam session) at the Plough & Stars. (Richmond)
89. Bike the length of Golden Gate Park on Sunday when JFK Drive is closed to cars. (Richmond) -Completed on 07/17
90. Check out the natural wonders at the California Academy of Sciences, or the latest exhibit at the de Young. (Richmond)
91. Rent an obscure European film from Le Video before video stores are extinct. (Sunset)
92. Order a Rotten Robby at The Pizza Place on Noriega. (Sunset)
93. Build a fire at Ocean Beach. (Sunset)
94. Read the Sunday Times and have blueberry pancakes at Park Chow. (Sunset)
95. Go with a big group for dumplings and beer at San Tung. (Sunset)
96. Buy a custom silk-screened T-shirt at Mollusk Surf Shop. (Sunset)
97. Snack on Nick’s fried fish tacos at Underdogs. (Sunset)
98.Get freshly roasted coffee at Henry’s House of Coffee. (Sunset)
99.Pick up some magic tricks at Misdirections. (Sunset)
100. Take a couple of kids to the SF Zoo. (Sunset)
101. Bike to marine headlines and play seesaw on the beach