December 7, 2007

Learning From People You Don't Know

On some conscious level, at some point in your life you may realize that you learn a boatload from people you don't know.

During your formative years, you learned out of school books from people who wrote those books and I bet for the most part you never even had a clue who or where they were from.

For me, I guess it is easy to pick up a news paper or magazine, read something, learn something new and not even think of the person who wrote the article.

Not "knowing" your source is now so OLD SCHOOL.

For you see, with the Internet and BLOGS you have a direct connection to the author. It may take you some time as it has with me to find bloggers that you can connect and understand, but eventually you can find individuals out on the Internet who have knowledge, who share it willingly and from whom you can learn a great deal about life, liberty and the pursuit of your happiness...

Of the seventeen blogger's that I subscribe to via RSS and read everyday, there are about three that I would say I really often learn something tangible from them.

  • Seth Godin: http://sethgodin.typepad.com/seths_blog/; Seth gives great business insights from the perspective of marketing. Real marketing isn't show biz and commercials, it is how you talk to customers and tell them about your company's products and services. This guy gets customer relationship building and management. I've been reading his blog for well over two and a half years and never not learn something from his posts.
  • Joel Spolsky: Joel on Software, http://www.joelonsoftware.com/; Joel is a software developer who started his own company that builds software. His blog chronicles his journey through the process of building a software company and his thoughts on how to build "world-class" commercial software. You may think that just because his blog is about software development that it would be boring to non programmers. If you though this, you would be dead wrong. His thoughts and opinions on how to create software can be liberally applied to creating any product. Learning from his mistakes and journey is indeed a privilege.
  • Zac Smith; Hello-Righton.com, http://www.hello-righton.com/; I have a real, personal connection to Zac. He and I work at the same company and for about two years we worked on the same team. Long before I started reading Zac's blog I knew he had a spiritual side about him. I started reading his blog about a year ago. As he states in his blog "The purpose of this blog is to SHEPHERD others."

Who do you really learn from?

November 26, 2007

Dear Robert Scoble...

Robert,

I like your web blog. Although since you left Microsoft your blog has lost some clarity and specialization, which is natural given your new home at PodTech.

But today, while reading through my feed list and looking at your Amazon Kindle review on Kyte.Tv video I just couldn't resist the desire to let you know my opinion on the video.

My initial feelings on the video were that you looked like a goof, a nerd and in one particular place, even stupid. But I wanted to give it time to settle in so I re-viewed the video. After some reflection here are my thoughts:

  1. You used cuss words several times throughout the video. I'll be the first to admit it that with my friends in casual conversations I use cuss words. However, I have learned through the years that in a professional setting the use of cuss words indicates a lack of courtesy to the audience. Since you are catering to professional people I am suggesting that you refrain from the use of cuss words -- it just turns people off in a conscious and sub-conscious way. I think for a A-list blogger like you and with your audience the golden rule should be "Would I want my kids hear me talking this way?"
  2. You tone became personal in attacking the "designer(s)" of the device. I know you know that a product like this doesn't get designed by one person or one team. I guarantee that Jeff Bezos even took a gander at the prototype and blessed the final design. In doing reviews I think it is un-professional to directly attack an identifiable person or group of people at a company -- attack the company. You could say the same thing much more tactfully.
  3. If I removed the attitude from your video I could actually understand your criticisms. In my opinion you had about ten minutes of constructive criticism, three minutes of redundant babble, fifteen seconds of things you liked and about ten seconds of confusion where you didn't really know the device had a highlight function, which is where you looked stupid.
  4. I'm not the only one who has a problem with your presentation. I looked through the Kyte.TV remarks and there are several remarks about your review "what a whiner", "what he's saying may be valid but he comes across like a 5 year old who didn't get what he wanted for x-mas", "he needs to take a college class on making a point", "it could have been a 5 minute video if the words really suxs were editied out of it", "He should design his argument .... people don't ramble this much.", "As a public presenter, this guy 'sucks'", "he is really reducing his credibility as a reviewer and a guru".

Now I know there is a bunch of goobers out there that just want to bash you Robert. But you know that I support you and enjoy your blog and "some" of your lengthy technology videos. I think your interests would be better served if you refrained from attitude based reviews. Be the to-the-point Scoble we've come to know and read.

In the future I'd also suggest that you stay away from impromptu video sessions. Take an hour or two and script out a review so you stay focused and you say intelligent sounding and entertaining remarks.

Burning bridges at Microsoft by saying "Did you guys come from Microsoft, you probably hired old Microsoft designers" isn't intelligent nor is it entertaining.

Oh yea, and do you really think Jeff Bezos actually viewed the video? If your review where more professionally done and with less attitude, given your blogging stature, you might have had an opportunity to actually get Amazon's attention and possible impact the next product version. From where I sit, all you did is piss off a bunch of people at Amazon who will use your attitude to dismiss your valid complaints.

Your product review videos need more work Robert. I want to love ya, but I can't right now.

November 15, 2007

The Middle Ground in the Music Business

There are human beings that will never be capable of finding the middle ground in any discussion - it is their way or the highway.

But with the music business and the dilemma of digital music distribution, there is a middle ground somewhere.

  1. Artisans want to be compensated for the investment of time and development of their skills that they put into their craft - period.
  2. Record companies want to be compensated for the investment of money that they put into manufacturing, marketing and selling the music that the artists create - period.

EVERYONE ELSE is consuming this product and must pay for the use of the music one way or another - period.

The problem is figuring out how much each consumer must pay.

Traditional, legitimate, end of the line (eol) consumers pay a few dollars to eighteen dollars for a physical copy of the music. With this media they are free to listen to the music anywhere they can carry their music. When you throw into the discussion of all the technological innovations of the past twelve years, the black and white of what an EOL consumer can do with their physical copy of the music becomes muddy. But the general rule is that you would treat the media as you do a book -- only one person at a time would be able to listen to any part of compac disc or electronic copy of the music (MP3), no matter what form it has been transformed into and no matter how many different times it has been copied.

At the core of the 21st century music distribution dilemma is the underlining fact that CONSUMERS WANT TO PAY ZERO DOLLARS FOR CONSUMMABLE PRODUCTS. Economist will tell you this fact as well as psychologist who study human behavior. You can disagree all you want with that statement, but disagreeing will not change the fact. If given a choice, consumers will opt for free over spending their money any day of the week. And when you create a technology that obfuscates that the product is indeed a product the morality of steeling the product is hidden from the consumer. 

If you discuss taking a recorded piece of music from a CD, digitizing it into a MP3, copying the MP3 to a friends iPOD or computer, many people will say that act is not stealing. Why isn't this act stealing in their mind?

Songs in all their forms actually belong to the artist or record company for whom grant a "listening" license to the purchaser of the songs - no matter what form the song may take (physical CD, written musical notes, mp3 or virtual).

Without going on and on about what is stealing and what is not, I think The Middle Ground here is this:

  1. The record companies and artisans need to create their products so that they can be distributed easily and efficiently into the new technologies that consumers want to use.
  2. Consumers need to realize that they must pay for the product of music no matter what form it takes.
  3. Both parties must meet in the middle ground and work with each other to find new ways to produce and consume music so that everyone wins.

"Intellectual Dishonesty" Is Killing America

Slowly the blood of freedom flows from its veins. A malicious word here, one dishonest thought there, one act of indecency that little by little is killing the spirit of America from the inside-out.

You would have to be a bloody fool to not see the growing divide among the people of America. I know I make such a grand generalization. But in story after story I read a small voice whispers "there it is..."

Every now and then I get into a discussion with a smart person and I ask a pointed question on a subject like taxes and ask "would you give up fifty percent of your income to help the poor." Inevitably they respond with the answer "yea, no problem." I then tell them that they are not intellectually honest with their answer and they look at me like I'm crazy.

For you see, if you then asked them to pull out their checkbook and make a ten thousand dollar donation to the United Way they politely decline.

AND THIS IS THE ATTITUDE THAT IS KILLING AMERICA.

The press hears "the people" saying one thing, but the people of America elect and allow the politicians to act totally contrary.

This ABC News article got me thinking about this subject. I've read and seen video of Warren Buffet arguing that rich people aren't paying enough in taxes. In this particular article he was testifying against repelling the estate tax. A tax that I remind you takes wealth away at the end of a life from Americans who have already paid taxes throughout their lives. Hence, the estate tax has been popularly named the "death tax."

In previous interviews he's made the point that from a percentage perspective he's not paying as much in taxes as people that work for him. But from a numbers perspective he's paying millions more in taxes than anyone working for him. So there he is, using smoke and mirrors to deflect the truth about taxes. A truth that most people don't want to hear. A truth that without any doubt in my mind Warren knows the facts about. So based on the facts I have in front of me it is appears that Warren is being Intellectually Dishonest.

By the way, when it comes to who pays the taxes in America here are THE FACTS.

The real problem facing America is that most people don't want to know the facts. The facts will simply interfere with their opinions. Opinions that are mostly formed out of the dark void of ignorance and stupidity. For me, what is even worse is that there are a class of people who are not ignorant or stupid. These people allow themselves to be lead by their desires for the world to be a better place, no matter what the cost or facts may offer. The people afflicted with this attitude actually have what I call the Do Gooder Disease.

There are so many people who are intellectually dishonest with themselves and this disease will eventually allow people to believe in anything that affirms their belief system.

If I ever met Warren Buffet I'd ask him "What percent of personal income taxes did the top five percent of taxpayers pay in 2002 (the latest year of available data)?" I'd then ask him to pull his check book out and write a check to the Treasurer of the United States for fifty percent of his estimated 52 billion dollar estate.

Warren, why wait for death to give it back to the poor people of the United States? And who better to manage this redistribution of wealth than the efficient Federal Government of the United States of America?

November 11, 2007

An Open Letter to Ivan Seidenberg

Bear with me for a few minutes as I walk the plank and put my "big" ideas out there for all to see.

I've been working in the Telecommunications business for ten years now. First with MCI and now with Verizon. Although I work in the telecommunications industry I really work in the Information Technology industry. As I supply computing systems that the telcom business folks use to do their day-to-day work.

So I think I have a unique perspective from inside the business.

The Google and Technology Attack:
While reading this evening I came across Robert X. Cringley's dire prediction with what Google is going to do with their GPhone initiative. You see the government is selling off the 700MHz wireless frequency. There is a lot of speculation that Google is going to bid, win and come out with a free mobile phone product that they will then turn around and use for delivering to the end-user ultra sophisticated targeted advertisements.

Historic Reference:
If you have any historical context, you understand that telecommunications is fundamentally a highly technical product. And in high-technology industries there is always a stream of steady innovations. Innovations that, in the course of a few years, antiquate business models and business practices. For instance, at the time of the big Ma Bell breakup MCI came along and brought competition to the long distance telephone service market. But a little invention call the mobile phone grew so large that operators started providing "free" long distance service to stay competitive, effectively killing the consumer long distance business.

And then came the cable operators. They realized that they could make more profit by getting into the Internet Service Provider business since the incremental costs weren't so high for infrastructure and they already had a relationship with the customer.

When the technology, Voice Over IP, surfaced the phone business changed yet again. Now any Internet Service Provider can sell telephone service, thus putting downward pricing pressures on all telephony providers.

Providing communications services has become deadly serious in today's changing market. A telecommunications company can ill afford to make a poor technology choices going forward as the opportunity to recover development and deployment costs is significantly reduce.

WHAT TO DO
Given my limited sight into company operations I can only offer visionary type of suggestions for future actions. If I were at the top of Verizon or other big Telcos I would get serious about competing with the future.

1) Create a advertisement placement group within the company. This team's mission is to seek out advertisers to place their ads within consumer based products and services that we provide. The vision here is to own the entire relationship with the customer and advertiser.

2) Across all consumer products and services introduce tiered offerings: 1) Free, 2) Almost free and 3) Totally paid by the consumer.

  • Example 1: If a consumer wants a free mobile service, utilize the placement of position aware advertisements prior to a call. There are many examples of this business model today in the VOIP long distance sector.
  • Example 2: In the ISP world a free service could be offered that had advertisements inserted into the HTML browsing stream. There are examples of this in the Wireless Hot-Spot market.
  • Example 3: T.V. services that are tailored to each consumer's need. Do away with bulk packages and provide consumer's ala-cart services.

3) Remove barriers to creativity within the corporate environment. The company is so large that it seems daunting for individual contributors to innovate processes and procedures.

4) Re-organize the business into divisions that make sense. In today's world Wireless is the cash cow, but will Google's or some other technology company's innovation kill the cow in five or ten years? Align business units by the markets that they serve. Realistically, there should be an A) An Internal Infrastructure and Services Division, B) A Consumer Division, C) An Enterprise Division and a D) Wholesale Division. Don't discriminate between domestic and international markets because in fifteen years the world will be so much smaller and the costs to communicate to someone on the other side of the world will be the same as calling your next door neighbor.

5) Embark on creating real long-term value in the telecommunications business by being a leader! Become a technology savvy company with a reputation for innovation like Apple. Shed the mask of a big telecommunication giant. Forge high-profile partnerships with company's like Microsoft and Leveno to develop a series of computing devices that blur the lines between computing and communications. Don't you remember the dream of those millions of little boys who wanted a Dick Tracy communication watch? So, go out and build it!

Those are just five things that would rejuvenate and revolutionize the telecommunications industry. The key to moving forward and being a leader in this business is to have vision and execute on that vision and to execute flawlessly.

November 8, 2007

Sorry John Coleman, Al Gore is basically saying you have no voice

Al Gore recently said, and I paraphrase, that the scientific community has a very strong consensus that global warming is real and humans are the cause. Using a colorful analogy about "the world is flat" Mr. Gore alluded that the media shouldn't show both sides of the global warming story.

Re-think that for a second. He is saying that the media shouldn't report alternative opinions on the science behind the current global warming theory -- a theory I remind you.

I'm sorry Al, but that is NOT in the spirit of science nor the scientific method. Science is the continual gathering and analysis of data to substantiate or refute a scientific theory.

I bring this up because I grow tired of the constant egregious abuse of science by politicians to further a political agenda.

The other reason I bring this up is that there are alternative views on climate change. The Weather Channel's founder, John Coleman, writes "It is the greatest scam in history."

As I previously wrote, "When you hear a voice of dissension that differs from the popular views of politicians and activist I suggest you do your own thinking and research."

Al Gore on the climate crisis
Al Gore on the climate crisis

November 1, 2007

Hillary Clinton, A True Politician

It seems that in today's political environment instead of answering direct questions it is easier to blame the incumbent President for all the nation's problems.

I give to you for your consideration Hillary Clinton. She will most likely be our next President. Why do I say this? Well, watch this exchange from last night's debate. What is her answer to "Why does it make a lot of sense to give a drivers license to an illegal immigrant?"

She dances around saying "it makes sense" and then saying "I did not say it should be done."

This shows that she's a true politician. With this performance you don't know what she really thinks and she has given herself wiggle room to cater to different voting constituents in the future.

Al Gore: Is He the "Boy Who Cried Wolf"

As a school boy I learned about the Scientific Method. Generally speaking, the Scientific Method is a process by which a scientist formulates a hypothesis and then collects data through observation and experimentation to validate or in-validate the hypothesis.

Our formal Vice President Al Gore recently won a Nobel Peace Prize recently for his work on global warming. It seems that the work he put into An Inconvenient Truth sparked heated debate around the world.

When it comes to the debate and conversation surrounding global warming I take the middle ground because to be honest with you I don't have enough data to make an informed opinion. I find it interesting that with such a complex system such as with Earth's climate system, there are so many people with iron-clad opinions that humans are indeed causing global warming and we have to act now or all will be lost.

Is Al Gore crying wolf? What are his motivations? For a man who espouses saving the planet from the human race insatiable thirst for energy he's not doing a good job at keeping his own energy use down. Several articles like this report on his large energy consumption. In general there is a lot of mistrust of politicians due to hypocrisy such as this example shows.

So, I think we should place less confidence in politicians-turn-activist and pay more attention to what scientist have to say and more importantly on the data they are collecting. We should diligently look at the science behind their claims. Based on what I have read and learned there are not as many experts in climatology as the press would lead us to believe. So before you place your bet and the future of the humanity on a particular scientific hypothesis, you better know the facts.

When you hear a voice of dissension that differs from the popular views of politicians and activist I suggest you do your own thinking and research.

Here's an interesting opt-ed from The Wall Street Journal (original link here).

My Nobel Moment
By JOHN R. CHRISTY
November 1, 2007; Page A19

I've had a lot of fun recently with my tiny (and unofficial) slice of the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize awarded to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). But, though I was one of thousands of IPCC participants, I don't think I will add "0.0001 Nobel Laureate" to my resume.

The other half of the prize was awarded to former Vice President Al Gore, whose carbon footprint would stomp my neighborhood flat. But that's another story.Large icebergs in the Weddell Sea, Antarctica. Winter sea ice around the continent set a record maximum last month.

Both halves of the award honor promoting the message that Earth's temperature is rising due to human-based emissions of greenhouse gases. The Nobel committee praises Mr. Gore and the IPCC for alerting us to a potential catastrophe and for spurring us to a carbonless economy.

I'm sure the majority (but not all) of my IPCC colleagues cringe when I say this, but I see neither the developing catastrophe nor the smoking gun proving that human activity is to blame for most of the warming we see. Rather, I see a reliance on climate models (useful but never "proof") and the coincidence that changes in carbon dioxide and global temperatures have loose similarity over time.

There are some of us who remain so humbled by the task of measuring and understanding the extraordinarily complex climate system that we are skeptical of our ability to know what it is doing and why. As we build climate data sets from scratch and look into the guts of the climate system, however, we don't find the alarmist theory matching observations. (The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration satellite data we analyze at the University of Alabama in Huntsville does show modest warming -- around 2.5 degrees Fahrenheit per century, if current warming trends of 0.25 degrees per decade continue.)

It is my turn to cringe when I hear overstated-confidence from those who describe the projected evolution of global weather patterns over the next 100 years, especially when I consider how difficult it is to accurately predict that system's behavior over the next five days.

Mother Nature simply operates at a level of complexity that is, at this point, beyond the mastery of mere mortals (such as scientists) and the tools available to us. As my high-school physics teacher admonished us in those we-shall-conquer-the-world-with-a-slide-rule days, "Begin all of your scientific pronouncements with 'At our present level of ignorance, we think we know . . .'"

I haven't seen that type of climate humility lately. Rather I see jump-to-conclusions advocates and, unfortunately, some scientists who see in every weather anomaly the specter of a global-warming apocalypse. Explaining each successive phenomenon as a result of human action gives them comfort and an easy answer.

Others of us scratch our heads and try to understand the real causes behind what we see. We discount the possibility that everything is caused by human actions, because everything we've seen the climate do has happened before. Sea levels rise and fall continually. The Arctic ice cap has shrunk before. One millennium there are hippos swimming in the Thames, and a geological blink later there is an ice bridge linking Asia and North America.

One of the challenges in studying global climate is keeping a global perspective, especially when much of the research focuses on data gathered from spots around the globe. Often observations from one region get more attention than equally valid data from another.

The recent CNN report "Planet in Peril," for instance, spent considerable time discussing shrinking Arctic sea ice cover. CNN did not note that winter sea ice around Antarctica last month set a record maximum (yes, maximum) for coverage since aerial measurements started.

Then there is the challenge of translating global trends to local climate. For instance, hasn't global warming led to the five-year drought and fires in the U.S. Southwest?
Not necessarily.

There has been a drought, but it would be a stretch to link this drought to carbon dioxide. If you look at the 1,000-year climate record for the western U.S. you will see not five-year but 50-year-long droughts. The 12th and 13th centuries were particularly dry. The inconvenient truth is that the last century has been fairly benign in the American West. A return to the region's long-term "normal" climate would present huge challenges for urban planners.

Without a doubt, atmospheric carbon dioxide is increasing due primarily to carbon-based energy production (with its undisputed benefits to humanity) and many people ardently believe we must "do something" about its alleged consequence, global warming. This might seem like a legitimate concern given the potential disasters that are announced almost daily, so I've looked at a couple of ways in which humans might reduce CO2 emissions and their impact on temperatures.

California and some Northeastern states have decided to force their residents to buy cars that average 43 miles-per-gallon within the next decade. Even if you applied this law to the entire world, the net effect would reduce projected warming by about 0.05 degrees Fahrenheit by 2100, an amount so minuscule as to be undetectable. Global temperatures vary more than that from day to day.

Suppose you are very serious about making a dent in carbon emissions and could replace about 10% of the world's energy sources with non-CO2-emitting nuclear power by 2020 -- roughly equivalent to halving U.S. emissions. Based on IPCC-like projections, the required 1,000 new nuclear power plants would slow the warming by about 0.2 ?176 degrees Fahrenheit per century. It's a dent.

But what is the economic and human price, and what is it worth given the scientific uncertainty?

My experience as a missionary teacher in Africa opened my eyes to this simple fact: Without access to energy, life is brutal and short. The uncertain impacts of global warming far in the future must be weighed against disasters at our doorsteps today. Bjorn Lomborg's Copenhagen Consensus 2004, a cost-benefit analysis of health issues by leading economists (including three Nobelists), calculated that spending on health issues such as micronutrients for children, HIV/AIDS and water purification has benefits 50 to 200 times those of attempting to marginally limit "global warming."
Given the scientific uncertainty and our relative impotence regarding climate change, the moral imperative here seems clear to me.

Mr. Christy is director of the Earth System Science Center at the University of Alabama in Huntsville and a participant in the U.N.'s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, co-recipient of this year's Nobel Peace Prize.

October 22, 2007

I'm Ashamed He's An American

Pete Stark, thirteenth district congressional representative from California, should be ashamed. Hell, I'm ashamed that he's an American after the remarks he made towards our President.

I understand that sometimes in politics you really have to say outrageous things to make the news headlines. But going so far as to say "You [President Bush] don't have money to fund the war or children. But you're going to spend it to blow up innocent people -- if we can get enough kids to grow old enough for you to send to Iraq to get their heads blown off for the President's amusement."

".. for the President's amusement" - UNBELIEVABLE. Does he think that Bush is amused to see young American's die?

I didn't live through WWI, WWII or Vietnam. But from what I know I don't think we've ever heard a congressmen say these words on the floor of the House of Representatives about the sitting President during those wars.

I am so ashamed for him.

 

 

October 15, 2007

the environment

Every now and then I see something that I jump into and get involved with. While reading through my daily RSS feeds I found out about blogactionday.org and the issue of the day "the environment."

I'm no tree hugger mind you, but I do think we need to be mindful of the environment and our impact.

There is so much mis-information when it comes to the environment. Politicians have taken the issue and politicized it to promote an economic and political belief. Unfortunately scientist are people too and many of them have jumped on the political side of the issue, leaving behind their intellectual, scientific independence.

Sadly, for me and the average human, we don't have enough information or the ability to filter the existing information to come to an intelligent opinion about what to do.

When I don't really know the facts I tend to rely on my "common sense."

My common sense tells me that human beings do impact the environment; there's just so many of us on the planet. To what extent I can't tell you. But, we should try to minimize our impact to the environment as much as possible where it makes sense balancing the economic costs with the humanitarian costs.

There are so many little things we all can do that together adds up to positive impacts to the environment.

I've written previously that we could adopt hybrid car technologies to get our country off it's oil craving.

Think about the environment today and think about what you can do to make a positive difference.

September 25, 2007

How Can a CEO Say Something So Stupid

Continuing my hobby of following the music business...

Riddle me this Batman! How can Vivendi CEO Jean-Benard Levy tell reporters "The split between Apple and (music) producers is indecent... Our contracts give too good a share to Apple."

Take a second and really breathe that stupidity in... Ahh, smells kind of like a bunch of horse shit doesn't it.

Fact, Vivendi and/or it's subsidiaries NEGOTIATED the contract with Apple. If Apple gets too good of a share, then damit, Vivendi and ultimately Jean-Benard Levy simply made significant mistakes. Mistakes that costs the share holders of Universal Music Group a lot of money.

Benard and the executives who made these mistakes should do the good ole Samari death march. Or better yet the shareholders ask for their resignations.

The reality is that Benard is doing the media hype marketing war against Apple to help Vivendi during contract re-negotiations. If you can't negotiate with your vendor, smear their name in public and accuse them of making too much profit. For we all know that being a profitable capitalist isn't good in today's world. It's ok for Vivendi and other music companies to collude and keep the prices of CD's high and keep new talent off radio stations, but it isn't ok for anyone else to make a profit.

Kind of makes you laugh, cry and get pissed all at the same time?

 

Reference Link: http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/content_display/music/news/e3ia0cdb8453c13aaf151fe1987b400bdea

Want to use Grand Central?

imageSo, I wrote about Grand Central here and here. It is a really great phone management application. The great thing is that it is free and and owned by Google, so I'm sure it will be around as long as Google stays around.

Anyway, it is still in what Google calls "beta" and like all Google betas you have to get an invite from an existing user. Lucky me has several invites left. So, if you want an invite, send me an email or leave a comment.

September 20, 2007

The Long Arm of the Internet

In the computing business I have a long history. I'm of the first generation to really grow up with a computer at home; getting my first Texas Instruments 99/4A about 25 years ago.

I've watched as computers have migrated from the realm of the nerds to mainstream society. It seems that everyone has a computer now. As technology has evolved, the computer world has evolved beyond the physical world to what we call cyber-space. You see cyber-space is indeed a paradigm shift in how we communicate and interact with each other.

A friend of mine doesn't want himself or his family "ON the Net" as he puts it. He's a private person and I respect that he wants to keep his personal life private. For me, I'm pretty open. I enjoy that technology allows me to what I call "time-shifting" communications. That is, you can communicate to anyone at any time, except for the past, of course.

But with this ability to time-shift communicate also comes liabilities. This is what I call the "Long Arm of the Internet."

You see, what you or anyone posts to the Internet today will most likely always exist somewhere forever. Yea, you may be able to clean up a picture of you drunk off your buttocks on MySpace where you originally posted it, but you can't control if someone has copied that picture and posted it somewhere else. Mark Cuban hits on this in his blog where he discusses that All Publicity Isn't As Good As It Used To Be.

Just recently there were two examples of where people did goofy and off the wall things and these actions will always be with them.

Example number one is of a fan who really loves Brittany Spears so much that she made a video defending Brittany's MTV 2007 Awards appearance. After viewing the video would you ever hire her, take her out on a date, trust your children with her or live next door to her?

And then there's this smart dude, Andrew Meyer, at a John Kerry speech. I think this example really shows just how much your actions today will have long lasting effects tomorrow and beyond.  Searching on YouTube you can find that there were no less than five different videos posted.  Just one video alone had 332,824 views.
 
Now, I'm all for asking questions and getting to the truth, but being stupid is one thing, being stupid in public is another thing and now being stupid and being caught by five different cameras angles doing so can have long lasting effects on your life. How long do you think a Google search of Andrew Meyer will result in Andrew's stunt being the first result.
 
So, we live in a world that communicates at light speed and the Internet has unlimited capacity to remember EVERYTHING.
 
So, I'm still going to be an open person, but I think I'll do as people should always do, be thoughtful before you speak, act or post on the Internet. There's an old saying that's been around since I can remember -- "It is better to be thought a fool than to speak and remove all doubt."
 

September 13, 2007

Finger Fun

I'm not a tattoo person. But I found this to be humorous.

August 22, 2007

The Value of Real Friends

I have found that true friends take time to find and take time to nurture. Luckily, I'm not famous or rich and don't have to deal with many phony people approaching me trying to be my friend. I think if I ever won the lottery developing new friendships would be difficult. But, since winning the lottery or becoming famous is harder than getting hit by lightning, I guess I don't have to worry about that.

But over the past few weeks I've had countless reminders that true friends are so valuable. My wife got a job offer recently and so we decided to pick up the family and move to Lake Charles, Louisiana. Since I grew up in Atlanta and lived there most of my adult life, most of my real friends are there. During the lead up to moving we had several send off lunches and dinners and although we knew we were moving away and talking about moving, it really didn't hit that we were moving until yesterday.

After the packing, loading, driving, unloading, and unpacking got done, we sat down yesterday and realized during a conversation we were here, by ourselves, with no friends, no one to get support from.

And of course our friends have all called us, asking how we are doing and if we made it ok, to which I say we have and thanks for the well wishes.

I'm not the kind of guy to pick up with just anyone. It takes time for people to get me and it takes time for me to trust people and their intentions. My wife, I think she's about the same. But since she's a much nicer person than I, she has less trouble finding friends.

Although I think sometimes moving is a good thing and gives a person perspective, it can be difficult and hard to get through.

But at least I have my best friend and my new best friend with me. Together we can make a new life here, while not forgetting about the friends and family left behind.

As I try to remind myself... "Don't worry about yesterday, or tomorrow, do what you can do today and tomorrow will be better and yesterday, well, it's already done."

August 15, 2007

Robert Scoble NOT Fired... and the value of old technology...

So I don't reference a lot of bloggers on my blog because I guess I'm mainly full of myself. I don't even try to get links because my blog isn't so centered on any specific topic. But every now and then when I talk about blogging and when it comes to blogging as a profession I like to mention Robert Scoble because he's done so much for technical blogging.

If you are into technology, he's one of your top ten geek bloggers. Every now and then he will go astray and his posts get a little boring, but at least 90 percent of his blog posts gives you information on something you didn't know before, which is a great hit number. I think mine is about 2% or somewhere around there.

Anyway, rumors started that he got fired from his job and then on Monday he stopped posting to his blog saying he needed a break. Well, I know how he feels cause I get tired of working and then I get tired of the computer and then I get tired of typing and then I get tired of thinking, tired of blogs and then just tired. So, I simply take a break and don't post anything. But with me being a "ZZZ list" blogger I don't have to announce that I'm taking a break.

Well, after reading the rumors that "Robert got fired" I decided to use some old fashion technology and contact him. Since he posts his phone number on his blog, like I do, I decided to call him. I introduced myself and said "we met a couple of years ago at Microsoft and I wanted to call to see if you are ok and if there was anything I could do for you." He said "I'm fine and not in need of anything" (or something like that) and then I asked if he was fired because I was concerned he hadn't posted and there were rumors echoing in Internet land. Robert said "No, I haven't been fired from Podtech."

Not being an astute reporter or anything I didn't think to ask if he were still working there. But since he is traveling I didn't want to be a pest or the such. I just really wanted to let him know that strangers like me get value from his blog and that I'm concerned for him and would help him if he needed help.

With the old technology called the telephone I was able to instantly figure our what was going on with Robert. Beat that Internet!!!

July 19, 2007

Capturing Savings Versus Innovation

I work in a challenging environment. Unlike small information technology environments this environment is very, very large, which creates a lot of the challenges. You see as an IT and IT operations team becomes very large it also becomes very cumbersome.

Over time, very large IT environments (VLITE) slowly shift into more and more focused groups providing services to their internal customers. As this specialization grabs hold in the enterprise, individual contributors and management loose track of the big picture. And that big picture is to provide efficient and cost effective computing resources, hardware and software, that enable business matter experts the ability to execute in the marketplace.

Many VLITE's over time become slow and incapable of delivering innovative technology that actually makes the company money. How many times have you heard a business executive murmur "Damn, IT says it will take six months to make the modification to my application and then when they deliver it is all wrong."  

There are many reasons for this failure. Some of the problem resides solely with IT. They become so large that senior management looses touch with what is really going on five levels below them. Some of the problem is due to the short-sighted, share-price management mentality pervasive in Fortune 100 companies. An frankly, a lot of the problem is the result of bad thinking and execution due to the "momentum" effect.

In the future I'll write more about the share-price management mentality and the momentum effect. But this writing centers on the words capturing savings.

What is exactly "capturing savings." Well, it is a buzz word that executives like to throw around when they've been asked to reduce operating costs in their organizations. In very large corporate companies, the best easiest brainless most effective method for capturing savings is to lay off personnel. Layoffs are the last ditch action taken because it shows instant savings and if all other "cost savings" initiatives fail, laying people off is a sure bet for the non-thinking executive and will ensure the executive will receive his yearly bonus.

Without digressing to far, the problem with layoffs is more to do with the problem of hiring. I've found in my anecdotal experience that if a company has great hiring and firing practices, they generally don't have to conduct annual layoffs.

In my honest opinion, executives need to remove the two words "capturing savings" from their vocabulary. Replace those words with one word and one vision -- INNOVATION. No matter what your position in a business may be, you should always look for ways to innovate what you do. "Capturing Savings" is a mentality that people have when they know they have not been executing their responsibilities effectively and they know they need to go back and get it right.

If you do it right the first time, then their shouldn't be any savings to capture unless a new technology comes along that renders your old methods obsolete.

July 18, 2007

You Know It Is Bad News When Rolling Stone Magazine Reports IT...

I've written several times about the malay that is now upon the music business. I don't like saying I told you so, but I've told you so many times and when The Rooling Stones magazine writes the same thing, you know it is true.

The major record companies are in so much trouble as this article reports.

The big thing to figure out is how to make money in the music business ten years from now when the dust settles.

July 16, 2007

Dumb Software Development - Facebook Example

I've done some software development in my career, but I'm mainly a systems person. Although I don't do software development as a money-maker I keep up-to-date with developers and I think I have a good eye for good and bad software development.

One developer that I follow is named Joel Spolsky. He has his own company,  Fog Creek Software, and does a great job on his web site. Even if you aren't a developer he gives out some pretty damn good management advice along the way. Anyway, Joel has some really good writings on the subject of user interface design, which brings me to the main reason of this post...

Another blog that I follow is Scobleizer and he's been touting Facebook. So I browsed over there to check it out. During the registration I came across two blantly STUPID programming/UI problems. While writing this post I'm leaning on the fact that this isn't a UI issue, but more of a programmatic issue. In either case it is bad programming.

Go register at http://register.facebook.com/r.php

The first thing you'll notice is that option for 1910 is there...

facebook01

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

but if you choose it you'll get an error...

facebook02

 

 

 

 

Now, I went back and put 1922 as an option and apparently Facebook is alright with me being born then.

Oh and if you scroll down you'll see an option for 2006. If you choose that option and try to register it will tell you...

facebook03

And then forever more on that machine you will not be able to change your email to register as a cookie or something remembers you tried to register when you are not eligible.

This is a prime example of bad programming and worse testing. I guess the UI is fine though.

In this example Facebook is showing they they lack the ability to test their software properly. If a person is ineligible to register (born after a certain year) don't give options during the registration that later disqualifies them. This is a small thing I know. But if you are new on the block with a killer application make sure it is right the first time instead of using the "release beta code now so we can get to market and we will fix problems as users find them" method.

And one thing that really grips me is that "social network" applications want to know my age during registration. If modern web applications are so damn good, shouldn't they state "We only allow people over the age of 18 to use this service, do you qualify?"  And be done with it. If my "social" friends want to ask my age inside the network then they can do so.

But the bottom line is that the first thing you are asking your customers to do isn't working properly. Dare I test the other features to find them not working either?

"Bad programming... that's easy, even I can do it. Good programming... that takes skill, experience, time and the desire to test!"

July 15, 2007

Top Ten Questions at 12:08 AM Easter Time

Letterman made a staple out of using ten sentences to make a great statment of the week's activities. Mine are more like questions rather than statements...

1) Hotel Rwanda... If you don't tear up are you really human?

2) How come 21st century man is still killing each other? Period?

3) Are we going to make tommorow a better place for our children or are we going to continue to think that yesterday was a better time and place?

4) What is the good in having all this technology if we don't really use it?

5) When you look into a child's eye what do you see?

6) Are you listening to your heart?

7) Do you have a 6th sense?

8) Do you believe that you are part of something wonderful?

9) Is Science fiction really fact from a historical perspective?

10) How will you feel and what will you think 40 years from now?

Going to be tired tomorrow!!! But what a day!!!

July 12, 2007

Blogomaniac - A Super Hero for the 21st Century

So I called Robert out yesterday that he doesn't actually read 28,000 or so items a month. He responded to my post and my comment in his comment section stating...

Herschel: I cover how I read my feeds here on video: http://www.fourhourworkweek.com/blog/2007/05/16/how-scoble-reads-622-rss-feeds-each-morning/

On first pass I’m not “reading” per se, but looking for items that are worthy of reading.

On second pass I, indeed, do read.

And, anyway, the proof is in the pudding. Are the items consistently high quality? Does noise slip through?

I’d say “yes” and “no.” So, if that’s the case then how did that happen if I didn’t “read” every item?

Comment by Robert Scoble — July 11, 2007 @ 4:05 pm

So I checked out the video and indeed, in my opinion, he doesn't really "read" all the items in his link blog. I responded to him with this...

Ok Robert, yea, you always have interesting posts on your Blog and you do have good link items. After watching the shaky video, I realized that you indeed do not “read” every link item. You have developed a really good “human filtering algorithm” that works well.

UnderdogYou should apply for SCI-FI’s “Who wants to be a superhero.” Your shtick would center around “saving IT from boring blog posts… — Blogomaniac.”

Keep up the good work…

Comment by Herschel — July 12, 2007 @ 7:20 am

So I think he's going to be known now as Blogomaniac...  You know, at least us nerds have fun with each other.

July 11, 2007

Robert Scoble is a LIAR!

Well, I like Robert's blog. I like his videos. And I've met him once when I visited Microsoft and I can say that I like him and his funny personality.

Sure, he's on the blogging A-list and sure, he meets all these jet-setting, high profile, technology go-getters. And yea, I know his blog is about a gazillion times more popular than mine.

However, I have a bone to pick with him.

HE'S FLAT OUT LYING WHEN he says he reads 28,433 items on his Google Reader in a thirty day period. I looked at his shared items and just on his first page there are 10 items that had a total of 5786 words for an average words per item of 568.

Now if you generalize and extract that out to 28,433 items that would be about 16,149,944 words that he's allegedly read over the past 30 days or about 538,331 words a day, WHICH IS A HELL OF A LOT OF READING.

I found out from this reading test that I read at about 310 words a minute with better than 80% comprehension.

So maybe Scoble can read and comprehend way better than I can. But even if he is an "excellent, accomplished reader" (700-1000 words per minute) by my rudimentary calculation he should be spending about 10 hours a day reading his feeds.

BIG FAT CHANCE and hence why I call Robert out as a LIAR about his reading habits.

July 10, 2007

Now That's a Blender...

blendit I need one of these blenders. But to be honest, if you did this at home how long would the blender last?

From a marketing perspective, Blendtec has an absolutely "flawless victory in getting their product message out.

Wow, I just looked at the price for that wonder blender... Can you believe $ 399.00. For that price it better blend titanium.

July 6, 2007

US Aviation Leaps Ahead Again...

787ReleaseI don't pretend to be "the" subject matter expert on the aviation industry. But since I have a private pilots license I can say with some authority that what's going to happen on Sunday July 8th is pretty damn important.

Boeing, one of the pioneers in aviation, is rolling out their new 787 Dreamliner. This airplane will re-define the way a commercial airliner is designed and built for the next fifty years.

I've been to Everett field in Washington and took tour of the manufacturing complex there, which is amazing. The rollout is going to be simulcast over the Internet and around the world via satellite.

July 3, 2007

Google Purchases Grand Central

I previously wrote about Grand Central and low and behold they recently got purchased by Google. I'm not sure how Grand Central fits into Google's future, but the software is so good I think Google thinks it's a great deal for them if only they use it for their internal employees.

If you haven't already gotten a Grand Central account, go get one now -- you'll love it.

My Grand Central phone number is (404) 254-6870.

June 27, 2007

Delta, "We're Ready When You Are" - Kind Of!

So, if traveling via the airlines isn't bad enough, could you imagine being stuck on this airplane?