Mark Zuckerberg’s Notebooks

Here’s another story found via a reader tip. (Thanks Nicholas!) In a new book called Facebook: The Inside Story, author Steven Levy talks about Mark Zuckerberg’s notebooks, and it turns out that Levy even has some pages from one of the early notebooks. Zuckerberg has supposedly destroyed the rest.

THE YEAR I first met Zuckerberg, he was living in a one-­bedroom apartment a short walk from the Facebook offices, which were spread among a few buildings in downtown Palo Alto. Always with him was one of his notebooks. Those who visited his apartment, with its mattress on the floor and barely used kitchen, might spot a stack of completed journals. But most of his time was spent in the crowded, chaotic Facebook offices, where he could be seen, head down, scrawling in his crabbed, compact script. He sketched out product ideas, diagrammed coding approaches, and slipped in bits of his philosophy. Page after page were filled with straight lines of text, bullet-pointed feature lists, flow charts.

Zuckerberg was no longer doing much coding; he was focused mostly on the big picture. The notebooks allowed him to work out his vision in detail. When Facebook engineers and designers rolled in to the office, they would sometimes find a few photocopied pages from the notebooks at their workstations. The pages might contain a design for a front end or a list of signals for a ranking algorithm. He was still finding his way as a communicator, and the pages often opened up a conversation between the recipients and their boss. They also imbued Zucker­berg’s thoughts with a kind of inevitability. The printed page can’t be deleted or altered, or forwarded in infinitely duplicable digital form. Whiteboards appeared in abundance in every Facebook office, and employees couldn’t survive without excellent dry-eraser skills. But a Zuck notebook carried the sanctity of a papal decree.

The notebooks have now mostly disappeared, destroyed by Zuckerberg himself. He says he did it for privacy reasons. This is in keeping with sentiments he expressed to me about the pain of having many of his early IMs and emails exposed in the aftermath of legal proceedings. “Would you want every joke that you made to someone being printed and taken out of context later?” he asks, adding that the exposure of his juvenile jottings is a factor in his current push to build encryption and ephemerality into Facebook’s products. But I discovered that those early writings aren’t totally lost. Snippets, presumably those he copied and shared, present a revealing window into his thinking at the time. I got ahold of a 17-page chunk from what might be the most significant of his journals in terms of Facebook’s evolution. He named it “Book of Change.”

Dated May 28, 2006, the first page has his address and phone number, with a promise to pay a $1,000 reward for return of the book if lost. He even scrawled an epigram, a message to himself: “Be the change you want to see in this world.” Mahatma Gandhi.

The writing reveals an author with focus and discipline. He dated nearly every page. Some of the entries seem to have been created in a single burst of energy. They cover three or four pages of detailed road maps with neat sketches of sample screens. Nothing is crossed out. This is the work of someone in a maximum state of flow.

Read more at WIRED: Inside Mark Zuckerberg’s Lost Notebook

Pen & Ink Sketchbook: Then & Now Review

This look at the Pen & Ink Sketchbook is the 2nd post in my “Then and Now” series, examining various notebook brands that have been around for a while to see how they’ve changed. (See my “then and now” post about the Rhodia Webnotebook). I am always griping about how Moleskine’s notebooks have declined in quality, but the changing costs of manufacturing and materials are affecting all brands, so it seems fair to see how different companies are able (or not) to uphold their standards.

When I first started looking at alternatives to Moleskine notebooks, Pen & Ink from Art Alternatives was one of my favorite brands. They offered a variety of page formats, and even offered a sketchbook with heavyweight paper in both portrait and landscape styles. I didn’t love Pen & Ink squared notebooks because the lines were too dark, but the heavyweight sketchbook was the best (and maybe the only) alternative to the Moleskine sketchbook for users who wanted a pocket size hardcover with heavier, smooth paper. And the prices were great. (See Four Notebooks Reviewed Part 1, Part 2 and Part 3.)

Pen & Ink Sketchbook
Art Alternatives Pen & Ink Heavyweight Sketchbook, 2008

Back then, I wasn’t thrilled that the cover edges on the Pen & Ink notebook had more overhang than Moleskine, but nowadays pretty much every notebook seems to have at least that much overhang. But otherwise I liked the soft feel of the cover and found it well-made, with the paper performing similarly to Moleskine’s sketch paper. I used one Pen & Ink sketchbook as a daily carry journal in 2014, and have another spare that I had used for pen tests in the 2008 review.

A couple of years ago, I found myself wishing I had more of those Pen & Ink sketchbooks. They are still available, but they have changed.

Art Alternatives Pen & Ink Heavy Weight Sketchbooks

You can see at first glance that the packaging looks very different. Most importantly, the elastic closure now wraps diagonally around the corner, which I don’t like. The cover material is pretty much the same. They’ve added “Art Alternatives” and “blank” to the branding stamped on the back cover, where the old version just had “Pen & Ink” and called it “sketch.” Overhang is pretty much the same, maybe just slightly more… but the corners aren’t tucked in as tidily on the newer version. Although the page count is still 96, and paper weight is still 145 GSM, the notebook seems a bit thinner, and not as evenly squared off (perhaps that diagonal elastic pulls it off-kilter).

Pen & Ink sketchbook corners
back cover
spines

The paper is still a creamy ivory, but very slightly brighter white in the newer notebook. (The endpapers are even whiter, while in the old version, they are the same shade as the pages.) It is still quite good on bleed-through, with only the wettest markers soaking through to the back of the page. Show-through is actually a little better in the newer Pen & Ink notebook. The newer version is also better in terms of fountain pen feathering, though neither is really perfect. In both cases, I would still say these are great for drawing with gel pens, Microns, and pencils, when you want nice straight lines undisrupted by toothier paper. Despite the design changes, Pen & Ink sketchbooks have not declined drastically since 2008 in terms of manufacturing quality, and the paper has actually improved.

In 2008, the list price was $9.99 for the Pen & Ink Sketchbook. The suggested retail is now $10.75, though JetPens has them for $8.00, Amazon’s price is $6.34, and Blick’s is $5.84. For the features you get, I think these are great prices, but the diagonal elastic makes it a no-go for me. (On many of the websites where they are sold you will still see the old product image, but what you’ll get, at least in my experience, will be the new version.)

As for other options that have all or at least some of the features of the Pen & Ink sketchbook:

Moleskine’s pocket sketchbook prices have always been much higher, from $10-15 in 2008, and most recently listing at $17.95, but that’s a moot point now that they are discontinued (Moleskine confirmed to me that they have no plans to keep making them in the 9 x 14cm size, so if you still like them, snap them up while you can).

Stillman and Birn’s Epsilon series offers high-quality smooth paper in a pocket size, but without the hard cover, elastic closure, or back pocket. Their list price is $11.99, though they are discounted to $9.59 at Jerry’s Artarama.

The best all-around alternative nowadays is probably the Leda Art Supply pocket sketchbook reviewed here, which has a grey “flexi” cover, elastic closure and back pocket (but no ribbon marker). The paper is smooth, not quite as heavy as Pen & Ink’s but performs better with fountain pens. Amazon sells these in a 3-pack for $26.97 ($8.99 each), a 2-pack for $17.89 ($8.95 each) or $10.34 for one (marked down from $12.24 list). Other sizes and combo bundles are also available.

Leuchtturm’s sketchbook (reviewed here) is also a great option if you don’t mind the size being slightly taller, but list prices are closer to Moleskine’s and discounting doesn’t seem as prevalent.

And if you don’t mind toothier paper, HandBook Artist Journals and Hahnemuhle Travel Journals are worth a try. (Both of these will be featured in future “then and now” posts!)

Neil Gaiman on Notebooks and Fountain Pens

During an interview with Tim Ferriss, Neil Gaiman talks about his love for Leuchtturm notebooks and the Pilot Falcon fountain pen, among other writing tools:

Tim Ferriss: You mentioned distraction earlier and your dangerously adorable son, which I certainly agree with. I had read somewhere, actually, before I get to that, this might seem like a very, very mundane question, but what type of notebooks do you prefer? Are they large legal pads or are they leather bound? What type of notebooks?

Neil Gaiman: When they came out, I really liked — I’ve used a whole bunch of different ones. I bought big drawing ones, which actually turned out to be a bit too big, though I liked how much I could see on the page. Those are the ones I wrote Stardust and American Gods in, big size, but they weren’t terribly portable. I went over to the Moleskines, and I loved them when they first came out, and then they dropped their paper quality. Dropping paper quality doesn’t matter, unless you’re writing in fountain pen, because all of a sudden it’s bleeding through, and all of a sudden you’re writing on one page, leaving a page blank because it’s bled through and then writing on the next page.

Joe Hill, about six or seven years ago, Joe Hill, the wonderful horror fantasy writer, suggested the Leuchtturm to me. My usual notebook right now is a Leuchtturm, because I really like the way you can paginate stuff in them and the thickness of the paper, and they’re just like Moleskines, but the Porsche of Moleskines. They’re just better.

I also have been writing, I wrote The Graveyard Book and I’m writing the current novel in these beautiful books that I bought in a stationery shop in Venice, built into a bridge. Somewhere in Venice there’s a little stationery shop on a bridge, and they have these beautiful leather-bound blank books that just look like hardback books, but they’re blank pages. I wrote The Graveyard Book in one of those. I bought four of them, and now I’m using the next one on the next novel, and it may well go into another one. I’m not sure….

Read more of the transcript: Neil Gaiman Talks Dreamily About Fountain Pens, Notebooks & His Writing Process in His Long Interview with Tim Ferriss

Or watch the video:

A Japanese Chef’s Notebooks

I love getting tips from readers, and this is a really special one. (Thanks Matt!)

Itsuo Kobayashi, a former Japanese soba chef born in 1962 … has recorded his meals in painstakingly detailed, hand-drawn food diaries of sorts for the past 32 years. In addition to recollections about taste, Kobayashi’s pen has accounted for every last spring onion and grain of rice, for the sheer pleasure of tasting life twice…

japanese chef's notebooks
Itsuo Kobayashi’s artwork at the New York’s 2020 Outsider Art Fair
japanese chef's notebook
©Kushino Terrace

Check out the full story, with more pics: For Over 30 Years, a Tokyo Soba Chef Drew Everything He Ate

Other posts about chefs’ notebooks.

Nolty Daily Book and Other 2020 Diaries

My Nolty addiction went a little overboard this year. I was so intrigued by some of the 2020 formats that I ended up buying 4 diaries, including the new Nolty Daily Book. I’m not totally sure how I’m going to use all of them!

2020 Nolty Diaries
2020 Nolty Diaries

First, the Nolty Efficiency Notebook Gold. This is my second year using the Nolty Gold (click that link for more details). It is an indulgence, but the leather cover is so lovely. I also love that it comes with extra lined booklets that can be tucked in the back– handy for long-term lists like books to read or movies to watch. This notebook is a daily carry, where I track various habits, note appointments, daily exercise and meals, and weekly to-do and shopping lists.

Nolty Gold Efficiency Notebook 2019 and 2020

I also got a regular Nolty Efficiency Notebook model 1221 (see my detailed review of my first 2019 Nolty Diary). This one has the standard vinyl cover and black page edges. I got the version with the extra Japan railway maps, for no particular reason other than that they are fun to look at, and because the version that includes these maps has a slightly different texture on the vinyl cover. I am using this as my 2020 “image diary.”

This year was the first time I tried model #1181, which they seem to call the “Lights Memo.” (Google’s translation calls it that, anyway.) It is the smaller size, which fits in a passport Travelers Notebook. I was interested in the week-on-2-pages layout with small blocks for the days across the top and free-form squared space underneath. But once I had it in my hand I felt like the daily blocks were too small to really be useful. This Nolty has a removable vinyl cover. The inner notebook tucks into clear plastic vertical pockets in the front and back. There is a plastic pen loop on the cover. A supplemental graph paper booklet is included in the back. I may just use this for handwriting practice and doodles, and don’t plan to buy another one next year.

I ordered those 3 diaries last fall. Shortly thereafter, Nolty announced some additional new products celebrating their 70th anniversary. When I saw the Nolty Daily Book (model #1227, also available with a red cover as #1228), I totally fell in lust. A chunky day-per-page Nolty was my dream, the perfect alternative to the Hobonichi Techo, which is a bit too big for me. I kept hoping I’d be able to order the Daily Book from the Rakuten Global seller where I bought my other Nolty diaries, but they didn’t have it. For a while, it looked like the Daily Book was out of stock, and I wondered if I’d missed my chance. But I kept checking, and saw stock was available on Japanese sites, but not anywhere I could understand how to order. After lots of waffling, I finally special ordered it in January through Kinokuniya, even though their price was rather high ($36.99 plus tax, for pickup in their NYC store. The Japanese price on Nolty’s website is 2420 Yen, or around $22, but shipping direct from Japan would add cost. For context, Kinokuniya I think was charging around $45 for the Hobonichi Techo. JetPens charges $37 for the Hobonichi.).

Nolty Daily book 2020-1227

When I got my Daily Book, I wished I had pulled the trigger earlier. and not missed being able to use it all through January. It is quite adorable. I love the extra thickness. I love the page layout, with some blank space at the top and grid lines underneath. The paper seems to be the same as in the Efficiency Notebooks– thin, creamy, smooth and fountain pen friendly– writing does show through somewhat, but no bleed-through or feathering. For some reason, this Nolty has a big red headline saying “REMARKS” on the page that seems to have space for you to write your name and contact details. (Kinokuniya didn’t put their price sticker there, I just decided to save it there myself.)

Nolty Daily Book day per page spread
Nolty Daily Book inside back cover
Nolty Daily Book inside front pages
nolty daily book removable cover
With cover removed

Here’s a few shots comparing the Nolty Daily Book to the Hobonichi Techo:

There are a couple of things about the Daily Book that I wish were different, though. This has a removable cover with a pen loop, similar to the #1181. It’s nice to be able to tuck things in the front and back, but it makes the cover overhang a bit wider, so I think I prefer the glued-on cover of the regular and Gold Efficiency Notebooks. (But on the other hand, a removable cover means the interior block could be put into some other cover. I checked to see if it would fit in my emptied out Moleskine City Notebook cover, but it’s a little too fat. It might work if I ripped out the endpapers and back pocket. It would fit in an emptied out Moleskine Daily Planner cover, but there might be too much extra room…)

I also wish the monthly pages in the beginning were the Gantt chart available in some of the Efficiency Notebook versions. The Daily Book only has the month-on-2-pages layout. The Daily Book doesn’t include any supplemental booklets to tuck in the back, and it’s not really designed for that extra thickness, although you can add a booklet from another Nolty without it causing any problems. And a supplemental booklet might be needed with the Daily Book, because it only has one lined sheet and one graph paper sheet in the back for extra notes. (The Daily Book has a yearly layout and monthly pages in the front, then the daily pages, and at the end, the lined page, the graph page, and then a few pages of Japanese info and transit maps.)

So now my new dream is that Nolty will make a Daily Book Gold. The leather cover would be glued on, without too much overhang. And they’d add a supplemental squared booklet in the back.

How am I going to use the Nolty Daily Book? I’m not sure. I’ve owned a couple of Moleskine Daily diaries and never really formed a habit of using them, but I never liked their lined page format. Using both the Daily Book and the Efficiency Notebook Gold might be kind of overkill. I’m thinking it may be nice to use for a daily doodle and drawing, and maybe more detailed notes about what I did each day, since there’s not as much space for all that in the Efficiency Notebook. But the Efficiency Notebook is thinner and more portable. I might prefer to leave the chunky Daily Book on my bedside table or desk… though I think I’d miss having it with me! My daily carry is ballooning…

If they continue to offer the Daily Book in future years (and I can’t imagine why they wouldn’t), I’ll have to decide how best to justify buying all my favorite models!

Sketching Through Stroke Recovery

This is pretty inspiring: Sean Äaberg is an artist and game designer who had a stroke in late 2018. During his recovery over the following 16 months, he kept sketchbooks, re-learning how to draw day by day. His wife shares them in this video.

Read more about him at Boing Boing: Artist Sean Äaberg’s stroke recovery sketchbooks

Yoseka Notebook Review

Yoseka Stationery is a wonderful little independent stationery shop in the Sunnyside neighborhood of Queens, NYC. I visited the shop about a year ago and had a great chat with the owners, Daisy and Neil. I bought my Kokuyo Sketch Book there, as well as some ink. (I felt like I’d showed admirable restraint, given all the goodies that caught my eye on their shelves!) More recently, Daisy and Neil offered me a sample of their own Yoseka Notebook to review. YES PLEASE, I said!

yoseka stationery notebook

The Yoseka Notebook will immediately appeal to anyone with an eye for minimalist design. They’ve used lovely materials and the branding is subtle and elegant. Once you’ve removed the shrinkwrap, the outside is an uncovered heavy grey cardboard, with an exposed spine and square corners. A vellum band has a silver foil stamped Yoseka logo on the front, and the name on the spine. The company info is on the back of the paper band, and the back cover is debossed with the Yoseka logo. The size is a pretty true A5, with actual measurements of 5.75 x 8.25″. (About 5/8″ wider than a large Moleskine.) Everything seems very precise and squared-off and well-made.

Inside, the Yoseka Notebook has pale yellow endpapers in a slightly textured paper. They picked a shade of yellow that perfectly complements the grey cover– the overall palette is very soothing, somehow. (But also very difficult to focus a camera on unless you have some contrast in the photo!) The 224 pages of bright white paper, which they have sourced from Taiwan, are unlined and super smooth, and open perfectly flat so you can use the pages all the way across the gutter.

The paper almost reminds me of the stone paper notebooks I’ve tried in that it gives a little feedback with pens and pencils produce a darker than usual line. The paper weight is not stated on the packaging, but Yoseka’s website lists it as 85 GSM. It feels quite light but substantial, with show-through perhaps a bit less than average. Where it really shines is in the bleed-through performance. No pens bled through, even the Super Sharpie, except in a couple of tiny specks when I was using a lot of pressure to flex a nib and get a wetter, wider line. There was no feathering whatsoever. Every pen laid down a tight, vibrant line, with lighter colored inks really glowing on the page and showing off their shading. The only drawback with smooth, tight papers like this is that drying times can be a bit long (though I have not compared this to see if drying is longer or shorter than other smooth papers like Rhodia’s.). I really love using this paper– as you can see, I started doodling a bit more than usual and attempted to draw Totoro. I even tried a few splashes of watercolor paint– this is by no means a proper watercolor paper and big wet washes would not be a good idea, but you can get away with light use of watercolors if you just want to add a few pops of color to a page.

Yoseka notebook pen test
Yoseka Notebook pen test back of page

The Yoseka Notebook is $20, which I think is quite reasonable for a beautiful, high-quality, fountain pen friendly A5 notebook. Some users might miss having a ribbon marker, back pocket and elastic closure, but you could use the notebook with a cover if you need those things. A cover would also protect the square corners, which could get a little bent over time, and the light-colored cardboard, which is likely to get stained. To me, this notebook is great as it is– I’m just rooting for them to make a pocket size 9x14cm version too!

If you love simple, minimal design and vibrant, clean fountain pen lines, you will love the Yoseka Notebook! Definitely visit their shop if you can, but you can also purchase online via the Yoseka website.

As noted above, I received a free sample of this notebook to review, but all opinions expressed here are my own.

No More Notebooks for NYC Cops

Will police notebooks become a thing of the past? Officers in New York City will no longer be keeping hand-written activity logs, as they are switching to an iPhone app:

For more than a century, the New York City Police Department has required its officers to keep a detailed, handwritten memo book while on patrol.

“It’s basically our bible,” said Officer Ramses Cruz, who joined a platoon of officers writing down patrol assignments in oversize black leather binders at a recent afternoon roll call at the 90th Precinct Station House in Williamsburg, Brooklyn.

Officer Cruz’s locker at the station house holds dozens of completed memo books chronicling his 23 years in the department, with details about big arrests, countless 911 calls and even what time he took lunch.

The memo book may be the department’s oldest policing tool, one that has appeared in countless movies and television shows and become as much of a staple as the gun, handcuffs or the nightstick.

Read more: Why the N.Y.P.D. Dropped One of Its Oldest Crime-Fighting Tools

Notebook Addict of the Week: Isabel Val Bento

This week’s notebook addict was spotted on Instagram, with quite the stack of notebooks and journals! (There are more in the video.)

“Who Needs a Ratty Old Notebook?”

Mark LaFlamme at the Lewiston Sun Journal isn’t so sure if he still needs notebooks, but you’ll find his musings on the topic quite hilarious!

The humble reporter’s notebook, slim enough to slide into a back pocket, used to be my best friend. My partner in crime. My lover. 

OK, maybe not my lover. That would just be weird. 

Point is, I used to rely so heavily on the notebook for reporting news, I had more stash locations than a professional dope runner. 

In the car? They were everywhere: under the seats, jammed into the glove compartment and stuffed above the visors to the point where notebooks would rain down onto my lap whenever the sun was out. 

At home? Yeah, bruh. Notebooks all over the place. In the tool box, you’d find nothing but pens and notebooks in place of hammers, screw drivers and drill bits. If you wanted a spoon out of the silverware drawer,  you’d have to dig through a mile of notebooks to get it. My mattress was stuffed with notebooks instead of feathers. If you wanted to take a shower. … 

Wait, why are you showering at my house again? 

I had a lot of notebooks, is what I’m saying. They were as ubiquitous in my world as loose change, shoes or crack pipes in yours…

Read more: Street Talk: Much Ado About Notebooks

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Notebooks, journals, sketchbooks, diaries: in search of the perfect page…