The Nine Biggest Myths of the Workplace, by Penelope Trunk

Brazen Careerist_ The New Rules for Success_ Books_ Penelope Trunk-3.jpgAn excellent summation by Guy Kawasaki that I fully attest to.
  1. You’ll be happier if you have a job you like.
  2. Job-hopping will hurt you.
  3. The glass ceiling still exists.
  4. Office politics is about backstabbing.
  5. Do good work, and you’ll do fine.
  6. You need a good resume.
  7. People with good networks are good at networking.
  8. Work hard and good things will come.
  9. Create the shiny brand of you!

Read them all in detail after the jump (below).

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in .. Leave a Comment »

Re: Apple’s Leaked False Memo

In case any of you missed it, Engadget released a *falsified* internally distributed Apple memo detailing a delay in the (eagerly awaited) iPhone and Mac OS X Leopard. Today they printed a play-by-play explanation of their actions.

Aapl_stock_plunge
Of course this sent immediate shockwaves through the rumor-ridden Mac community, but more importantly the trading community: AAPL stock plunged $2 after the 11:49 am posting, but stabilized after 20 minutes closing the day with a negligible price drop. The estimated loss to Apple, though, was a $4 billion dollar market cap in six minutes. (Billion… with a "B".)

Some say Engadget is at fault, but I say: Let’s get real about blog publishing; it’s unvetted.

The business sector should remind itself that this is the blogosphere and NOT print media. Although information flows fast and furious, it is not impeccably vetted. Hopefully, examples like this will bode well for print media’s future, because that is where they truly shine.

Traders who utilize this kind of
late-breaking information are in the high-risk, high-stakes game. This
is the price one pays for depending on sometimes undependable
information. Although this is the new world we’re living in, everyone
will have to adjust.

The business and public sector will continue to be reminded of this through similar events. The blogosphere is still going through its growth pains. There is room for both media types, and they’ll have to form their boundaries through incidents like this.

Besides, with trading: You win some, You
lose some. Consider this a 21st century growth pains learning lesson
and move on. I’m confidant those traders will make up for it another day.

Sony’s Spiderman 3 NYC Display

The movie was well worth seeing. It doesn’t have the strongest plot line, but as Rolling Stone magazine said: You won’t care!

Spiderman

Sandman

Meteorologist: A Simple Weather Program for the Menu Bar

Menubar_3

Meteorologist

Meteorologist is a great little app I discovered that is highly worth the download.

It’s fully customizable to your city, starting with a concise menubar icon and temp (or just temp) with options for a dropdown of up to 9 days. Data is retrieved from Weather.com.

Note: You must download the patch as well to add a city (it’s a pain without it.)

Stainless Steel Tree Sculptures on Display in Madison Square Park

These incredibly realistic structures by Roxy Paine are 40-foot-tall! Learn more here.
(click on image to view full size.)
0510071727_2

0510071950

North Pole Sunset

Click on image to see full size. (thanks Anuradha)
North_pole_sunset

Pew Web 2.0 Internet Usage Survey

The Pew Internet & American Life Project just released the findings
of a survey of 4,000 U.S. adults that segments users into a
range of groups based on usage of and attitudes toward the Internet and
mobile phones. The report is provocative and surprising, but long; so
here’s the summary:

  • Elite users (31 percent)
  • Middle-Of-The-Road users (20 percent)
  • Those with few "tech assets" and limited use of technology (a whopping 49 percent)

More descriptions of the various sub-segments after the jump. (thx)

Read the rest of this entry »

Jewel In The Jungle is Officially Selected!

The Rural Route Film Festival, July 20-22 in New York City. More details to follow.

TED Talks: Chris Anderson and Majora Carter

Two memorable and extremely inspiring speakers:

Chris Anderson, editor-in-chief of Wired Magazine, describes the "Long Tail" economics currently affecting emerging businesses on the Web.

Majora Carter, a MacArthur Award winning recipient, has proven to be an unstoppable force in revitalizing parts of the South Bronx with her "Green The Ghetto" campaign.

Lecture: George Soros and Joseph Stiglitz

92sty_2
The 92nd St Y hosted George Soros and Joseph Stiglitz, moderated by Jeffrey Sachs. Here’s the highlights (also re-published on the 92 St. Y blog):

Mr. Soros has made his money by following "cycles of human thinking, so was asked what his thoughts were on the current condition of world markets. Mr. Stiglitz interrupted with a correction, "The question should be: Who are the markets working for?"

But much of the dialog focused on the U.S.’s role in the world, and general consensus was that we should be doing more. More Foreign Aid. More on Global Warming. More on Darfur. More in Free Trade. And by "More", they mean "Taking a Leading Role In". Heart-warming thoughts to be sure, but best coming from those lips.

Iraq: "We’re there, but not in charge." and "We need to be an example of peace."

Many times the economic consensus was that the U.S. should strive for what the Scandinavian countries have achieved in Health Care, Education, and Social Services. Most pointedly in Childcare: 1% of the GDP is solely earmarks those purposes so as to free people up and allow them to move forward in their careers, and thus economically. Good for them, good for the country. The State is essentially investing in their people, and their country re-invests in the State.

Being from Canada, this makes perfect sense. The health services of the U.S. compare poorly with Canada. Most notably, Canadian health care costs* are much less (71% of US costs) due to lower physician fees (42% of US costs), hospital fees (33% of US costs), and administration costs (11% of total costs, vs 24% in US).

George Soros’ reaction to health care: "The Single Payer System is the way to go; it alone will save 20-25% of admin costs, alone."

Joseph Stiglitz’s reaction to health care: "The Bush Administration has hamstrung the health care system by passing a bill that does not allow doctors to negotiate with the Drug Companies over medication costs."

Technology policies were seen by both as "essential" to move our country forward, but "it would not be any one policy that would bring change; it would be a cocktail of policies, across the board, that would bring real change."

Simply stated, "The E.U. is doing more for the global society, and are better at being global citizens for the sake of doing the right thing because it needs to be done. The U.S. needs to catch up!"

Ideas they emulated from the U.K. were their bills for taxing emissions going forward. "It makes perfect sense: Tax the rule breakers, not provide incentives that some utilize."

Mr. Soros on Philanthropy: "It’s much harder to give away money efficiently, than it is to make it. Unfortunately, there is no reliable method of measurement to gauge its effectiveness." He had found this inability to measure success "quite frustrating".

His comments brought to mind a tenet of eastern philosophy: Act without attachment to results, or Do something for the sake of doing it.

Of course, this is incredibly hard, since we are only human. But it’s very easy to see how so much suffering is caused by the very disappointment in results that originated as a pure, hopeful idea that we strove to produce.

Closing thought: "The economics of globalization has outpaced the politics of globalization."