Jul 4, 2007 | blog
Some, (including some blogger’s I read), suggest our country is mirroring the spiraling demise during the end days of the Roman Empire. While I do see issues and concerns for our country that may or may not have been experienced by previous generations, I do not subscribe to this line of thinking. Call me what you will, but the defeatist attitude that the leftist liberals in this country want you to believe is one of many tickets on the bus of doom.
I believe in what the founding fathers of our country laid down in the Declaration of Independence. I believe control of one’s destiny is the cornerstone to success and happiness for all. The truth of it is that each of us has this right, this independence to prosper impressively or fail miserably & spectacularly. The choice is up to each of us – it IS that simple.
Actually, the challenges facing our country, and frankly the world, are the same hard life lessons that every generation has had to come to grips with. You have to work in some way to make a living. You have to care and nurture your children above all else. That you have to take responsibility for your actions and opinions. That some people will hate you, and you can’t do anything about it. That we are mortal and life is shorter than you believe as a child. These lessons are not learned evenly by any generation.
My question to those who think America’s best days are behind us is this. What are you doing to change “it”?
- Are you paying more attention to the news stories and finding the truth, or do you simply believe what you hear?
- Are you suggesting peace solutions for Iraq that appease all parties? Do you even know the history of the problems there (I bet most don’t)?
- Are you out protecting our freedoms to protest and demonstrate? Do you thank every vet you meet?
- Are you helping to reduce the rate of fatherless households or broken homes in our country?
Or are you waiting for congress to decide for you, use your tax dollars to do it, and only do the job halfway?
My point on this July 4th,2007 is that only by answering the really tough questions can you see the light at the other end. I can see that shining city, I can see that America is an ongoing beacon for those oppressed. What do you see?
Technorati tags: Independence Day, Freedom
Mar 15, 2007 | blog
So while reading Twitter this morning, I ran across a link from Steve Rubel to this blog post that is predicting the demise of Twitter. Whether this will turn out to be true or not, I can’t predict.
Twitter will flame-out before the end of 2007, in one of the most awe-inspiring lessons in irrational exuberance we’ve seen since the turn of the millennium.
However, I do take issue with one or two points in this posting. Below are the points Mat Balez of web1979 posits, and my rebuttal to them.
1. Where’s the Value? There is no substance to the house of cards that is Twitter. No deep content, nothing to learn, no reason to keep coming back to the trough, other than the thrill/obsession of pre-adolescent voyeurism – which is simply not reason enough for busy professionals. I’ve not seen a single legitimate, value-generating use of Twitter explained or demonstrated.
Where’s the value – No deep content? The going’s on of many interesting and influential people, committed to transparency in the conversation talk about everything and nothing. The number of links to great content on blogs and other sites is huge if you pay attention. I’ve found more interesting blogs in just one week of Twittering than several months of reading blogs and feeds – that is value.
2. Too Much Effort People are lazy. Anything that requires too much time, effort and attention simply won’t succeed in a sustainable way unless it’s tremendously valuable (which Twitter is not, see #1).
What? What could be simpler than a one-sentence blog post? How is this too much effort? You can put as much time into it as you want to get the value you need. For instance, in just a few minutes this morning, I found this article that inspired my blog posting today. In another minute or two I found this, this, and this. How is it too much effort for the value it returned to me in just under 10 minutes?
3. Key Users Will Bail Ah, the double-edged sword of network effects. I suspect that once the community anchors in Twitterati start to give up on it (and they will; wait for the SXSW hangover to take effect) it won’t take long for the entire house to crumble.
This is possible. If a person does not see the value, or get any return on their time investment, they will stop using the service. If they get overwhelmed by the chatter that may not be relevant to them, they will stop using the service. Or if one of their favorite A-Listers chooses to stop using the service, do people follow their lead? That could be the one area that could trip up Twitter.
In the end, we’ll find out if Twitter has staying power over the long term. There are definitely things that could be improved upon, features that could add more value, or too many things could be tried on the Twitter user base that hinders the simple usability that everyone I’ve interacted with loves about the service. Time will tell, but to suggest that there is no value or its too much work makes me think that someone didn’t try to look very hard.
Mar 4, 2007 | blog
Mark Evans talks about the current entrepreneurial movement going on. I have to admit that I am more and more leaning towards that option as I think about the future of my career.
There are a lot of reasons that starting my own business is appealing. Mainly its because I’ve been at one place too long. A person fights the same battles every year, follow the same “leader” month after month, and it doesn’t seem to make a huge difference.
That’s not to say that being part of a large (or small) organization where you have no direct monetary involvement is the wrong choice for many. But I came from a consulting background. My core strengths are the ability to observe and advise on the best use of technology for an organization. These are not being used to their full advantage in an enterprise environment focused on a “maintenance mode” mentality.
The current move by many individuals to become their own boss, to become the decision maker, the marketing person, the finance person, and the billable worker has its appeal in the control over one’s life. By becoming an entrepreneur, you gain control over your life, and the direction of your career.
While, yes, you also take on the enormous responsibility of financial success or failure, critics also have to admit that it really is dependant on your effort in pursuing success. And when a person has the interest and desire to take control of their destiny, magical things can happen when they take the initiative.
Via: Mark Evans – It’s Raining Entrepreneurs
Mar 4, 2007 | blog
I’ll admit I’ve been linking to jkOnTheRun a lot for news lately, but James and Kevin are simply on top of everything a mobile pro needs. I’ve been following James Kendrick’s use of his P1610 for several months and have to admit it’s currently my top choice for my next computer. My second choice would be a Samsung Q1P which happens to be Kevin Tofel’s current machine.
I’ll claim not to be a follower, but the P1610 has just crossed another threshold that makes it a sure bet for me. Fujitsu is now shipping the device with Windows Vista Business as an option to Windows XP. This is great news as James has talked about audio driver issues (here, here, here, and here) with his from-scratch Vista install. Hopefully, these are resolved in the shipping OEM install.
Via: jkOnTheRun – Fujitsu P1610 now available with Vista
Technorati tags: Fujitsu P1610, P1610 Vista
Mar 4, 2007 | blog
According to this post over at jkOnTheRun, CompUSA is closing up to half of its brick and mortar stores. While customers should be able to clean up with discounts starting around 20% off, the big question to me is why.
Personally, I think this is a natural cycle for the computer industry. The consumer base has gotten comfortable with Internet purchasing of big-ticket items like computers and HD TVs among other things. At the same time, more and more technology products have been comoditized to the point that you can find almost everything you need at Wal-Mart, Target, or K-Mart. Not to mention long-time technology chains like BestBuy and Circuit City carrying everything from laptops, to cell phones, to car stereos, to HD TVs, to refrigerators, to… you get the point.
Trying to be a computer superstore when computing products are as common as toasters is a tough business. I’m not surprised that they are reducing the number of retail outlets when you factor it all in. Of course, this is my opinion of what’s happening, and did not contact CompUSA for any information on the topic, so take it for what its worth.
Via: jkOnTheRun – CompUSA’s closing stores- good deals to be found
Technorati Tags: CompUSA Closing Stores