When I was in high school, "Cool" guys played football, went to movies and had fast cars. "Nerds" were guys who went to debate tournaments, played dungeons & dragons and played with those new "computer" things.
I, of course, was a nerd.
After reading this article, I now realize that I morphed from a nerd into a geek.
Fun article.
Hear from the Engineers
Some of our engineers (program managers, QA, developers and others) have been posting about their experiences working at the LDS Church on the LDS Tech blog.
If you have any interest in what it is like to work at the LDS Church, check it out.
If you have any interest in what it is like to work at the LDS Church, check it out.
Tinkering
I'm a tinkerer. A good friend (who was also a direct report) painted a mental picture of me standing beside a cookie jar with my mother out of the room, debating with myself about whether I should dive in and grab a cookie. This, he explained, was my inherent
"Don't confuse operational or implementation problems with the need for changing strategy."
From Hard Facts, Dangerous Half-Truths & Total Nonsense, Pfeffer & Sutton.
"Don't confuse operational or implementation problems with the need for changing strategy."
From Hard Facts, Dangerous Half-Truths & Total Nonsense, Pfeffer & Sutton.
Book Club: What Got You Here Won't Get You There
What Got You Here Won't Get You There is the best business book I've read in a long time. The premise is that executives (and managers) will be more successful leaders if they quit being jerks. Sounds simple, but he enumerates exceptional examples of his canonical "20 reasons why leaders fail."
It includes things like "always having to be heard," "shooting the messenger," and "not saying thank you."
Not only does he give hard hitting examples, but he talks about how to start getting rid of these personality and leadership flaws.
Here's the one I'm going to work on: "saying but."
Scenario: Colleague comes in with great idea. Instead of saying "thank you" and expressing the enthusiasm that I actually feel, I say something like: "That's really cool, but..." and then proceed to make my mark on the conversation by bringing up some reason why the idea is partially flawed or a "counterpoint to think about" or just some general critique.
What's the point? Think before you talk and thank people for speaking up! Don't be Mr. Debate all the time! I'm resolving to quit.
It includes things like "always having to be heard," "shooting the messenger," and "not saying thank you."
Not only does he give hard hitting examples, but he talks about how to start getting rid of these personality and leadership flaws.
Here's the one I'm going to work on: "saying but."
Scenario: Colleague comes in with great idea. Instead of saying "thank you" and expressing the enthusiasm that I actually feel, I say something like: "That's really cool, but..." and then proceed to make my mark on the conversation by bringing up some reason why the idea is partially flawed or a "counterpoint to think about" or just some general critique.
What's the point? Think before you talk and thank people for speaking up! Don't be Mr. Debate all the time! I'm resolving to quit.
Everybody loves to cha-cha-cha
A young man I was teaching in a Sunday School class today introduced me to ChaCha.
ChaCha is a question answering service for mobile devices. I tried it and it's pretty cool.
You just send a text message with a question to CHACHA (242242). For fun, I typed my first question this afternoon: "How long is a marathon?" I got an answer in just a couple of minutes:
The marathon is a long-distance running event with an official distance of 42.195 kilometers (26 miles 385 yards) road race.
Wow. That was interesting, I figured, but it's still pretty lame because it's a bot (a computer) and therefore can only answer common questions. I asked another common question: "Who is Gordon B. Hinckley?"
Gordon B. Hinckley is the 15th President of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.
The Church is represented. Nice! I can forgive the capitalization error and the missing hyphen. I figured I would ask an uncommon question next: "Who is Joel Dehlin?"
Chief Information Officer for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.
Huh. At this point, I was starting to wonder if was actually a bot or maybe a human. I tested it: "What is the air speed velocity of an unladen swallow?"
That depends, is it an African or European swallow? A swallow needs to beat its wings forty-three times every second, right?
I was a little dumb-founded. Either the computer was trained to interpolate Monty Python quotes, they were really good at planning for what stupid questions someone like me might ask or I was texting with a human. Later I found out that ChaCha is, in fact, staffed by humans and you can ask just about anything and get a reasonable answer (directions, movie review, sports scores, restaurant recommendations, etc.). The answer is limited to 160 or so characters of text so you'll want to avoid questions like my friend Eric Denna's favorite: "Define the universe and give three examples." But for simple answers to a surprisingly broad set of questions--basically anything a reasonably smart person can find on the Internet in a few minutes--it's a really neat service I'll be using often.
And it's free--at least for now.
ChaCha is a question answering service for mobile devices. I tried it and it's pretty cool.
You just send a text message with a question to CHACHA (242242). For fun, I typed my first question this afternoon: "How long is a marathon?" I got an answer in just a couple of minutes:
The marathon is a long-distance running event with an official distance of 42.195 kilometers (26 miles 385 yards) road race.
Wow. That was interesting, I figured, but it's still pretty lame because it's a bot (a computer) and therefore can only answer common questions. I asked another common question: "Who is Gordon B. Hinckley?"
Gordon B. Hinckley is the 15th President of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.
The Church is represented. Nice! I can forgive the capitalization error and the missing hyphen. I figured I would ask an uncommon question next: "Who is Joel Dehlin?"
Chief Information Officer for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.
Huh. At this point, I was starting to wonder if was actually a bot or maybe a human. I tested it: "What is the air speed velocity of an unladen swallow?"
That depends, is it an African or European swallow? A swallow needs to beat its wings forty-three times every second, right?
I was a little dumb-founded. Either the computer was trained to interpolate Monty Python quotes, they were really good at planning for what stupid questions someone like me might ask or I was texting with a human. Later I found out that ChaCha is, in fact, staffed by humans and you can ask just about anything and get a reasonable answer (directions, movie review, sports scores, restaurant recommendations, etc.). The answer is limited to 160 or so characters of text so you'll want to avoid questions like my friend Eric Denna's favorite: "Define the universe and give three examples." But for simple answers to a surprisingly broad set of questions--basically anything a reasonably smart person can find on the Internet in a few minutes--it's a really neat service I'll be using often.
And it's free--at least for now.
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