Archive for March, 2009

Big Love

March 27th, 2009

Other fans of the HBO Series “Big Love” may share my new found passion for The Velvet Underground’s “I Found a Reason.”  (and for the record, I can’t wait until next season …)

These are all the known cover versions of this song;  I hope you enjoy them as much as I do.

Regina Spektor, I Found a Reason (The Velvet Underground Cover)

Phish, I Found a Reason (The Velvet Underground Cover)

Ladybug Transistor, I Found a Reason (The Velvet Underground Cover)

Cat Power, I Found a Reason (The Velvet Underground Cover)

The Velvet Underground, I Found a Reason (Demo Version) (The Velvet Underground Cover)

Related Content:

Cover Songs 

For better or worse, it’s impossible for me to do the same <task, phone screen script, etc.> the same way every time; I need to change one thing, no matter how small. So – perhaps not suprisingly, when I like a song, I soon start to seek out cover versions of that …

Here Comes the Sun 

 While we try to keep it a secret, Seattle summers usually are in a class by themselves. Now that ours is back again, at least for a little while – here are three cover songs to enjoy while soaking it in yourself:  Sheryl Crow, Here Comes the Sun (The Beatles Cover) Coldplay, Here Comes the Sun (The Beatles Cover) Jewel …

Abdel Wright: Another Great Musical Artist You’ve Probably Never Heard Of  

“Abdel Wright was born in 1977 in Trinityville, St. Thomas, Jamaica. His single mother was mentally unstable, and Wright was placed in the custody of the state when he was only nine months old, bouncing from orphanage to orphanage until he finally ended up at the SOS Children’s Village in …

Rachael Cantu … Rocks.  

Rachael Cantu peforming ”Devil’s Thunder,” Tangiers, Los Angeles, CA, 10/26/08

The Eli Young Band: One of the Best, Hardest Working “Red Dirt” Bands You’ve Never Heard Of 

“Eclectic” is probaby a good description for my taste in music; I like most styles and genres, except classical and opera. Eli Young’s music is “Red Dirt Country,” which is a mix of Southern rock, country rock, alt-country, outlaw country, folk and Texas honky-tonk. In any case, I’ve been a fan of the Eli Young Band …

If you lead your life the right way… the dreams will come to you.  

I’m a big fan of Randy Pausch, and rewatch his Last Lecture about once a week.  I had hoped he would outlive us all, but he died early this morning. I believe in wakes and not in funerals, and appreciate the world is a better place because Randy was here: The Academy is… 

Last.fm  

I’ve become a fan of last.fm.  Most of the time I just let it run while I listen to my itunes, and don’t think about it. Sometimes though I actually listen to last.fm instead,  using either the “friends” or “neighborhood” feature; which I’m actually doing right now, and so am listening to …

Tags: cover versions, dirt bands, probaby, cover jewel, abdel wright, demo version, reason demo, cat power i found a reason
  • Share/Bookmark

Sometimes the Truth is Stranger Than Fiction.

March 15th, 2009

It’s been a while since I looked at my logs for this site, but I did tonight.

One log entry jumped out at me – a visitor from 58.211.234.194:

% Whois data copyright terms http://www.apnic.net/db/dbcopyright.html

inetnum:      58.211.234.192 - 58.211.234.199
netname:      SUZHOU-WJ-POLICE-BUREAU
descr:        Public Secuity Bureau office  Wujiang city
descr:        Suzhou City
descr:        Jiangsu Province
country:      CN
admin-c:      CH446-AP
tech-c:       JZ825-AP
changed:      ip@jsinfo.net 20060217
status:       ASSIGNED NON-PORTABLE
mnt-by:       MAINT-CHINANET-JS
mnt-lower:    MAINT-CHINANET-JS-SZ
source:       APNIC

who landed from a German porn referrer site, specifically for this blog posting:

INTEGRITY IS DOING THE RIGHT THING, EVEN IF NOBODY IS WATCHING.

Posted on December 14, 2008, 2:05 am, by andi, under Every Day Life.

This begs for several questions to be answered, the first of which is – how did a Chinese netizen from the SUZHOU-WJ-POLICE-BUREAU access a German porn site in the first place?

:-)

Tags: truth is stranger than fiction, chinanet, province country, jiangsu province, porn site, whois data
  • Share/Bookmark

Tweet, Tweet

March 14th, 2009

Last night I finally broke down and joined Twitter; if you can’t beat them, join them.

Rohit Bhargava recently wrote several worthwhile posts on his  thoughts on the real secrets behind Twitter’s success:

7 Lessons Entrepreneurs Can Learn From Twitter’s Success

by Rohit Bhargava

  1. Focus on real time. For the socially connected online, there is little use for yet another place to talk to your friends. If anything, we all have too many of those to start with. But a site dedicated to RIGHT NOW stands out. It’s useful in a way that none of the other sites we use are.
  2. Skip the extra step. Approving every friend request can be a lot of work – even if you’re not the most popular of people. It does make sense on most social networks, but when it comes to posting updates on Twitter, if you do it publicly, anyone can follow you without approval. The result is that any user’s audience on Twitter can grow exponentially without barriers.
  3. Force your customers to do less. If you have ever heard the saying that “less is more” – Twitter is the ultimate proof of that. The forced 140 character messages have made us all refocus on brevity, and as a result of this volume decrease, those of us that are constantly overcommunicated look to the site as the one place where we can still feel that we are on top of the flood of communication that rules our lives.
  4. Build enough evangelists to compensate when things go wrong. One of the most well known facts about Twitter is that the service has been notoriously unreliable and crashed frequently. Though it is much improved from those days, the site still goes down or loses functionality relatively regularly. Yet it has managed to build up enough power users and evangelists, that people forgive their down times and keep coming back.
  5. Integrate with the most popular competition. The single most useful feature I personally uncovered from Twitter was the ability to integrate it into my Facebook page so that may Twitter updates also become my status on Facebook. This demonstrates a fact that many entrepreneurs already know – by integrating with your competition where your “customers” currently are, you make it easier for them to migrate over to your site.
  6. Launch where your influencers are. A big reason for the early success of Twitter was their launch at the SXSW Interactive festival two years ago. It was a place where all the influencers that matters for Twitter were already going to be and putting the site in front of them there allowed them to become word of mouth ambassadors for the site following the event.
  7. Offer a public ranking or authority. The final element that has helped Twitter to succeed is that it has a built in authority ranking with the number of followers you have. This is located right beneath your username on the site and it’s high visibility means that it is easily the ultimate metric for anyone using the site. And you can’t help but want that number to go higher. 

I also highly recommend reading another post on Twitter by Rohit: 

9 Ways To Make Twitter More Useful For You

by Rohit Bhargava

Yesterday I wrote a post about the “5 Stages Of Twitter Acceptance.” Part joke, part insight – I was trying to focus on the evolving way that people are uncovering their own personal usefulness out of the site. Several hundred retweets later the post seems still to be travelling around the web and I hit a rhythm of a few hundred new followers on Twitter yesterday and likely will have the same today. But aside from getting all this conversation, the more interesting point of view that several commenters to my original post shared was that they are making their way through the stages and finding the one that is most useful for them. So for today’s post, I thought I focus on nine ways that Twitter can be more useful for you. It’s still not a tool for everybody (I don’t really believe any tool can be). But hopefully these tips offer you some ideas on using the site well, regardless of what stage you happen to be in. =

  1. Listen to conversations real time. This is the easiest thing to do. Just go tohttp://search.twitter.com and type in your brand or company name, a subject area, or even your own name. Within seconds you’ll start to get an idea of people’s perceptions, trending discussions and who some influencers are.
  2. Track emotion moments. At any given time, you may need to email someone to ask for something or tell them about something. Sometimes, it’s a journalist or blogger you want to talk about you. Other times it’s a colleague. Looking at their latest status on Twitter can give you a wealth of insight about timing your message. If they’re on holiday in Jamaica, you might want to wait till next week. If they just talked about how much they hate sales emails – maybe you should think about calling. If they happen to be travelling to your city, invite them to coffee. The uses are almost endless.
  3. Get link love. There are times when you may want to get the word out about a piece of content or something that you are doing online. To get bloggers to do a post about it is a time commitment that many times may not be possible. Getting a mention on someone’s Twitter stream, however, can reach an equal number of people and can be easier to get, as long as what you’re asking for is still relevant.
  4. Reach unreachable people. Sure, you could use Twitter to send a message to Robert Scoble and he would likely see it, but in recent news, now even Shaq has his own Twitter account, as does Lance Armstrong. Do you think either of those guys picks up their own phone or reads their own emails? Probably not, but as more high influence unreachable people start to use Twitter, this alone might create it’s ultimate usefulness.
  5. See what’s popular/important. If you wanted to, you could probably use Twitter as your single source of news information. Trending topics often mirror the big news stories of the day, and in cases of tragedy such as the recent Mumbai bombings, Twitter could offer a more direct lens into real recaps and news on location than any traditional media site.
  6. Introduce more people to your personal brand. Before I shared a link to my own post about the 5 stages of Twitter yesterday, I tweeted that my word of the day was “sarchasm” (the gulf between the author of sarcastic wit and the person who doesn’t get it). My aim was to create a few different reasons for people to pay attention to my Twitter stream in the same shorter timespan. The result was hundreds of people sharing either thought, or both, within an hour of posting and more than 250 new followers within 12 hours. Those people now know my name (at the very least) and at most they may have been introduced to my blog and my book.
  7. Get quick answers. People on Twitter love to share answers to questions and things they have learned. When I wanted to know how to get a new logo designed for my blog, I got an answer on Twitter. The community there has also helped me find apps for my Blackberry, solve issues with Typepad, find examples of companies with personality, decide whether joining a particular social network or organization is worth it, and translate pieces of content in languages I don’t speak. All usually within minutes of posting a request.
  8. Optimize your event attendance. Of course, it depends on the type of event you’re going to, but just about every business related conference or gathering these days (no matter how traditional) will likely have some attendees twittering about it. And paying attention to those conversations can give you vital inside information about an event, such as what sessions to attend, where the parties will be, what the key trends or topics of discussion happen to be, and who the influencers at that particular event are. Typically, a “hash tag” emerges for any event (such as #sxsw08 for the SXSW show in Austin this year). Once you have this, you can also easily aggregate all the conversations about a particular event as well.
  9. Read instant feedback. If you launch a new service or product, or speak at a conference, or do a new blog post … you can get instant feedback on the effort through Twitter. Often it will be thoughts that people don’t visit your site or email you directly to share, but do post publicly to their networks.

Happy tweets to you, too.

“May you have the hindsight to know where you’ve been, The foresight to know where you are going, And the insight to know when you have gone too far.”

-Traditional Irish Blessing-

Tags: extra step, down times, tweet, proof, real time
  • Share/Bookmark

Twitter Updates for 2009-03-13

March 13th, 2009

Powered by Twitter Tools.

Tags: pmbok, project scope, study group, tools
  • Share/Bookmark

Adobe Software Needs to Eat Its Own Dog Food.

March 13th, 2009

<vent>

Why do so many of Adobe’s web apps crash my computer?  

My lastest Adobe-induced issues come from Shockwave hanging both Google Chrome and Windows IE; but for *months* prior, other Adobe apps *always* caused IE to hang until I had to manually kill the thread. 

I don’t get it.  Why doesn’t Adobe test their software before inflicting it upon web users around the world?    

Shantanu Narayen, are you listening?

</vent> 

 

Tags: web users, test software, adobe software, google, dog food, vent
  • Share/Bookmark

Others’ Thoughts From the Blogosphere.

March 10th, 2009

Yesterday Scott Berkun wrote a very interesting blog post on How to call bullshit on a guru; equally interesting was the reader discussion which followed.  

My favorites:  

“Do you know how to innovate?  How?”

“How interested is this guy in understanding my problem(s)?”. If they’re not, then they’re a hammer looking for nails, or you should just buy their book or read their blog or such. 

Do they ever answer a question with “I don’t know, I’ll have to think about that someone more.”  If they have an answer for everything then either the questions or the answers aren’t that great.”

I also highly recommend reading his essay “How to Learn From Your Mistakes.”  I have a print out of it on my desk; as he notes, “The kind of mistakes you make define you.”

A few highlights from his essay:

The learning from mistakes checklist

  • Accepting responsibility makes learning possible.
  • Don’t equate making mistakes with being a mistake.
  • You can’t change mistakes, but you can choose how to respond to them.
  • Growth starts when you can see room for improvement.
  • Work to understand why it happened and what the factors were.
  • What information could have avoided the mistake?
  • What small mistakes, in sequence, contributed to the bigger mistake?
  • Are there alternatives you should have considered but did not?
  • What kinds of changes are required to avoid making this mistake again?What kinds of change are difficult for you?
  • How do you think your behavior should/would change in you were in a similar situation again?
  • Work to understand the mistake until you can make fun of it (or not want to kill others that make fun).
  • Don’t over-compensate: the next situation won’t be the same as the last.

But – don’t rely on this cliff notes version; read his whole post; you’ll improve your personal lessons learned process,  and perhaps improve the quality of your professional projects, too.

“Success does not consist in never making mistakes, but in never making them a second time.”    –   George Bernard Shaw

 

Related content:

And One More Thing… 

Steven Jobs, cofounder of Apple, has been labeled many things, from visionary to egomaniac. Often I think he is inspirational too: We’re here to put a dent in the universe. Otherwise why else even be here? Innovation is the distinction between a leader and a follower. The system is that there is no system. That doesn’t …

Follow These Footsteps… 

Most of us are aware of the adage “Lead, follow, or get out of the way.”  I like to include “Add value or stay out of the way.” The world would be a better, more effective, and much happier place if “Lead, follow, add value, or get out of the way” was reality ..

Just Do It: Loic Le Meur’s Ten Rules For Startup Success 

Around 2000, during the height of Seattle’s technology boom, one of my friends was a staffing manager for a large Seattle area software company and I was an independent consultant. Periodically she wanted to hire me to work onsite for her as a contractor; but …

Tags: questions answers, hammer, desk, Fun, lessons learned process, professio
  • Share/Bookmark

Ego, Redux

March 4th, 2009

If you gaze long into an abyss, the abyss will gaze back into you. – Friedrich Nietzsche

No men are oftener wrong than those that can least bear to be so. – Francois de La Rochefoucauld

There is a demand in these days for men who can make wrong appear right. – Terence

Power does not corrupt men; fools, however, if they get into a position of power, corrupt power. – George Bernard Shaw

Passion makes idiots of the cleverest men, and makes the biggest idiots clever. – Francois de La Rochefoucauld

I only have ‘yes’ men around me. Who needs ‘no’ men? – Mae West

Men in general are quick to believe that which they wish to be true. – Julius Caesar

There is no better proof of a man’s being truly good than his desiring to be constantly under the observation of good men. – Francois de La Rochefoucauld

Death is not the worst that can happen to men. – Plato

All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing. – Edmund Burke

The evil that men do lives after them; the good is oft interred with their bones. – William Shakespeare

Society is the union of men and not the men themselves. – Charles de Secondat

Men talk of killing time, while time quietly kills them. – Dion Boucicault

There are truths which are not for all men, nor for all times. – Voltaire

There are three kinds of men. The one that learns by reading. The few who learn by observation. The rest of them have to pee on the electric fence for themselves. – Will Rogers

Related content:

Ergo, Ego  

My friend Sherry is Buddhist.  While she and I share many beliefs, she works hard to live her beliefs, and to move towards enlightenment while I will often stumble over the truth, then hurry off as if nothing happened.  Lately we’ve been discussing whether  it is possible for people to fully control …

The Job Posting I Wish I’d Written…. or, We’re All Mad Here, Part 2

There’s a truly brilliant job posting which is making the rounds on some of the developer email lists here in Seattle. I’d love to meet the programmer who wrote this job posting – it’s engaging while still full disclosure; I can already visualize the blog entries about meeting the client and actually interviewing …

Newton’s Law of Reciprocal Actions will get you every time…

Sir Isaac Newton’s third law of motion is often paraphrased as “For every force there is an equal, but opposite, force.” Wow. Newton’s third law of motion is also a paraphrase for life and death; and for good versus evil. Somehow this past year has acquired a Wizard of Oz theme in an attempt …

Work is a Four Letter Word, Part 2  

Maybe four weeks ago, a beloved member of what was our team gave our now former manager (now known as Splat) notice she was leaving the company to work for a manager who was willing to talk with her, among other reasons. The next day, Splat called her and said “Since I have to replace you, what exactly …

Often I Learn the Most from People Who are Clueless.  

Yesterday, my friend Sherry and I were “out and about,” enjoying a relatively warm, dry, and sunny late November day in Seattle. Sherry is a woman of many talents; in a past life was a Specialized Ed teacher.  Eventually our day included a discussion of how those students who most needed help to learn were often …

Splat! 

There are many reasons I really like the company I work for; but this week what I most appreciate is while things sometimes move more slowly than I would like, things here tend to move slightly faster than at other companies – or, a little closer to internet time. For the …

Follow These Footsteps…  

Most of us are aware of the adage “Lead, follow, or get out of the way.”  I like to include “Add value or stay out of the way.” The world would be a better, more effective, and much happier place if “Lead, follow, add value, or get out of the way” was reality …

“We’re all mad here.”  

I’ve often wondered how companies succeed when so much inside seems to be broken.  If we’re lucky, work only consumes 10 or so hours a day, 5 days a week – but if you work in technology, frequently it consumes a lot more time, even if it’s only mental bandwidth and …

Guy Kawaski’s Corollary on Hiring; or, How Work Teams Go Bad  

In July, I blogged about my theory “great managers hire great talent; similarly, bad managers hire themselves.” The more I re-examine the hires I helped managers identify, and then make during almost 14 years of recruiting, approximately 9 years as an independent head hunter, and 5 years as a corporate recruiter who primarily …

And One More Thing…  

Steven Jobs, cofounder of Apple, has been labeled many things, from visionary to egomaniac. Often I think he is inspirational too: We’re here to put a dent in the universe. Otherwise why else even be here? Innovation is the distinction between a leader and a follower. The system is that there is no system. That doesn’t …

If you lead your life the right way… the dreams will come to you. 

I’m a big fan of Randy Pausch, and rewatch his Last Lecture about once a week.  I had hoped he would outlive us all, but he died early this morning. I believe in wakes and not in funerals, and appreciate the world is a better place because Randy was here: The Academy is… …

Tags: shakespeare society, bernard shaw, brilliant job, friedrich nietzsche, corrupt men, edmund burke, george bernard shaw
  • Share/Bookmark

Ergo, Ego

March 4th, 2009

My friend Sherry is Buddhist.  While she and I share many beliefs, she works hard to live her beliefs, and to move towards enlightenment while I will often stumble over the truth, then hurry off as if nothing happened. 

Lately we’ve been discussing whether  it is possible for people to fully control their egos.  

For all but a few – Mother Teresa comes to mind – I think the answer to that question is “no.”

David McClelland’s achievement motivation theory envisions a person has three needs which in differing degrees influence their behavior: 

Within the past five years,  I worked in one org for multiple managers driven by what appeared to be  an insatiable need for power.   The end result was not good; during a 24 month time frame, over 30 people moved on to other pastures.   

One of my favorite parables  is “The Emperor’s New Clothes,” by Hans Christian Andersen was first published  in 1637, but remains highly relevant for our times… Enjoy. 

clothes

The Emperor’s New Clothes 

by Hans Christian Andersen

Many years ago there lived an emperor who loved beautiful new clothes so much that he spent all his money on being finely dressed. His only interest was in going to the theater or in riding about in his carriage where he could show off his new clothes. He had a different costume for every hour of the day. Indeed, where it was said of other kings that they were at court, it could only be said of him that he was in his dressing room!

One day two swindlers came to the emperor’s city. They said that they were weavers, claiming that they knew how to make the finest cloth imaginable. Not only were the colors and the patterns extraordinarily beautiful, but in addition, this material had the amazing property that it was to be invisible to anyone who was incompetent or stupid.

“It would be wonderful to have clothes made from that cloth,” thought the emperor. “Then I would know which of my men are unfit for their positions, and I’d also be able to tell clever people from stupid ones.” So he immediately gave the two swindlers a great sum of money to weave their cloth for him.

They set up their looms and pretended to go to work, although there was nothing at all on the looms. They asked for the finest silk and the purest gold, all of which they hid away, continuing to work on the empty looms, often late into the night.

“I would really like to know how they are coming with the cloth!” thought the emperor, but he was a bit uneasy when he recalled that anyone who was unfit for his position or stupid would not be able to see the material. Of course, he himself had nothing to fear, but still he decided to send someone else to see how the work was progressing.

“I’ll send my honest old minister to the weavers,” thought the emperor. He’s the best one to see how the material is coming. He is very sensible, and no one is more worthy of his position than he.

So the good old minister went into the hall where the two swindlers sat working at their empty looms. “Goodness!” thought the old minister, opening his eyes wide. “I cannot see a thing!” But he did not say so.

The two swindlers invited him to step closer, asking him if it wasn’t a beautiful design and if the colors weren’t magnificent. They pointed to the empty loom, and the poor old minister opened his eyes wider and wider. He still could see nothing, for nothing was there. “Gracious” he thought. “Is it possible that I am stupid? I have never thought so. Am I unfit for my position? No one must know this. No, it will never do for me to say that I was unable to see the material.”

“You aren’t saying anything!” said one of the weavers.

“Oh, it is magnificent! The very best!” said the old minister, peering through his glasses. “This pattern and these colors! Yes, I’ll tell the emperor that I am very satisfied with it!”

“That makes us happy!” said the two weavers, and they called the colors and the unusual pattern by name. The old minister listened closely so that he would be able say the same things when he reported back to the emperor, and that is exactly what he did.

The swindlers now asked for more money, more silk, and more gold, all of which they hid away. Then they continued to weave away as before on the empty looms.

The emperor sent other officials as well to observe the weavers’ progress. They too were startled when they saw nothing, and they too reported back to him how wonderful the material was, advising him to have it made into clothes that he could wear in a grand procession. The entire city was alive in praise of the cloth. “Magnifique! Nysseligt! Excellent!” they said, in all languages. The emperor awarded the swindlers with medals of honor, bestowing on each of them the title Lord Weaver.

The swindlers stayed up the entire night before the procession was to take place, burning more than sixteen candles. Everyone could see that they were in a great rush to finish the emperor’s new clothes. They pretended to take the material from the looms. They cut in the air with large scissors. They sewed with needles but without any thread. Finally they announced, “Behold! The clothes are finished!”

The emperor came to them with his most distinguished cavaliers. The two swindlers raised their arms as though they were holding something and said, “Just look at these trousers! Here is the jacket! This is the cloak!” and so forth. “They are as light as spider webs! You might think that you didn’t have a thing on, but that is the good thing about them.”

“Yes,” said the cavaliers, but they couldn’t see a thing, for nothing was there.

“Would his imperial majesty, if it please his grace, kindly remove his clothes.” said the swindlers. “Then we will fit you with the new ones, here in front of the large mirror.”

The emperor took off all his clothes, and the swindlers pretended to dress him, piece by piece, with the new ones that were to be fitted. They took hold of his waist and pretended to tie something about him. It was the train. Then the emperor turned and looked into the mirror.

“Goodness, they suit you well! What a wonderful fit!” they all said. “What a pattern! What colors! Such luxurious clothes!”

“The canopy to be carried above your majesty awaits outside,” said the grandmaster of ceremonies.

“Yes, I am ready!” said the emperor. “Don’t they fit well?” He turned once again toward the mirror, because it had to appear as though he were admiring himself in all his glory.

The chamberlains who were to carry the train held their hands just above the floor as if they were picking up the train. As they walked they pretended to hold the train high, for they could not let anyone notice that they could see nothing.

The emperor walked beneath the beautiful canopy in the procession, and all the people in the street and in their windows said, “Goodness, the emperor’s new clothes are incomparable! What a beautiful train on his jacket. What a perfect fit!” No one wanted it to be noticed that he could see nothing, for then it would be said that he was unfit for his position or that he was stupid. None of the emperor’s clothes had ever before received such praise.

“But he doesn’t have anything on!” said a small child.

“Good Lord, let us hear the voice of an innocent child!” said the father, and whispered to another what the child had said.

“A small child said that he doesn’t have anything on!”

Finally everyone was saying, “He doesn’t have anything on!”

The emperor shuddered, for he knew that they were right, but he thought, “The procession must go on!” He carried himself even more proudly, and the chamberlains walked along behind carrying the train that wasn’t there.

“Nearly all men can stand adversity, but if you want to test a man’s character, give him power. ” - Abraham Lincoln

Tags: swindlers, end result, hans christian andersen, parables, enlightenment, emperor, buddhist, achievement motivation theory, mother teresa
  • Share/Bookmark