Deucalion to Uranus

Reflections|Pi-hsien Chen 2025 Piano Recital

Pi-hsien Chen’s recital showcased the piano’s acoustic diversity. The first half delved into the structural “language” of sound, while the second half used sonic textures to evoke color and ideas. For me, the most stirring and impressive moment arrived with that evening’s performance of Beethoven’s Piano Sonata No. 32—though not without minor imperfections, it struck me as precisely how Beethoven should be realized.

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Reflections|Kun Woo Paik & Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart(Taipei)

Mozart’s music, behind its splendor and harmonic grace, wields a profound resonance with humanity’s essential emotions. Like a flawless mirror reflecting the performer’s mind and the listener’s heart, it balances clarity with nuanced sentiment. In Paik’s piano lines, you sense a forthright representation of his innermost self, drawing the audience into his musical realm.

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When AI Pulls Up a Seat at the Table  (I): Communication in Cross‑Functional Teams

Bringing AI into an organization is not simply a matter of “speeding things up” or “cranking out more output.” It demands a redesign of workflows and a recalibration of value. The best vantage point, therefore, is to begin with flow assessment and redesign. And the most immediate lens through which to view that is communication.

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2024 Recap|In Formation

Life unfolds like a fugue, its polyphonic textures yielding not chaotic drift but a hidden order—meticulous, finely wrought, but still supple and charged with feeling. As the year’s end invites reflection, it resembles gathering fragments once lost in the current, discerning form amid scattered pieces, and sensing continuity despite interruptions. Having navigated obstacles, one grows less fearful of new stumbles.

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