Bob Katz

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Bob Katz



Average rating: 4.34 · 618 ratings · 47 reviews · 9 distinct worksSimilar authors
Mastering Audio: The Art an...

4.44 avg rating — 543 ratings — published 2002 — 9 editions
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The Whistleblower: Rooting ...

3.65 avg rating — 52 ratings — published 2015 — 11 editions
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iTunes Music: Mastering Hig...

3.82 avg rating — 11 ratings — published 2012 — 8 editions
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The New Public School Paren...

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2.80 avg rating — 10 ratings — published 2002 — 2 editions
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EZ and the Intangibles

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really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 6 ratings3 editions
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Waiting for Al Gore

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 5 ratings3 editions
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[(iTunes Music: Mastering H...

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Hot Air

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More books by Bob Katz…
Quotes by Bob Katz  (?)
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“Confusion over how a person's extraordinary skill is developed runs deep. The heated debate over writer Malcolm Gladwell's "10,000 hour rule," as put forth i his popular book Outliers: The Story of Success, indicates that it is not just refeerees who get tongue-tied trying to pinpoint the fundaments of their expertise. Proficiency in activities from musicianship to athletics, Gladwell contends, can be achieved only through vast amount of practice (10,000 hours was the ballpark figure he cited, applying it to the triumphs of Bill Gates and the Beatles, among others.)”
Bob Katz, The Whistleblower: Rooting for the Ref in the High-Stakes World of College Basketball

“For those, like me, who fastidiously kept track of each time the basketball was being passed among white shirts yet somehow managed to overlook the conspicuous presence of a Halloween gorilla that strutted dead center into the visual field, the study served as a vivid demonstration that the perceptual skills on which we so greatly rely are, to put it mildly, far from flawless.
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There are, however, multiple implications to the invisible gorilla experiment findings. Chabris and Simons point out that their research "reveals two things: that we are missing a lot of what goes on around us, and that we have no idea that we are missing so much." In other words, we cannot see it all and we are affected by the false assumption that we mostly can.”
Bob Katz



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