Friday, September 30, 2005

Strong Home Team - The Mantra for Guaranteed Success

I have never been so happy in my life.

 

I've been able to achieve great success in recent years. I know success means different things to people. For me, success is to lead a “happy – no worries” life, personally and professionally.

 

I credit this success to having a “strong home team”. A loving and caring spouse, happy and satisfied parents/kids, healthy working environment – I believe these are critical factors for success, for anyone. I seriously think this environment forms a great platform to achieve success. For me, this was 98%. And the rest was my individual effort.

 

Almost all my life, I have been with my parents. They moved with me where ever I went for my job. While time-consuming household work was affectionately taken care by my father, my mother fed me with all possible, traditional Andhra delicacies. I never missed home food for most part of my life.

 

Even the work environment was morale boosting. Most of the teams I worked with were filled with positive people. When I said this last time, someone said, “Impossible!! Do you mean to say in your nine years of professional career, you never got negative/discouraging people on your teams?”.

 

I didn't say this. Of course, there were always such instances. Just the difference is that the association did not last long! Either such people were shunted out of teams, or simply I made the move. Very early in my life, I somehow realized that I could never relate to such teams as my productivity was seriously effected. Hence the moves were mandatory.

All the time along, I was expecting EXACT SAME results from life. In one of my earlier posts, I mentioned that I believe in “Speak What You Want!” principle. I was speaking what I wanted, demanding positive expectations from life.

 

I got married. Ours was an arranged one. Some were surprised to know that Indu and I did not even see each other before we were engaged. We spoke to each other on phone (as I was in UK, and she was in India). In less than an hour, we made the decision. You know if that's the ONE (meant for you), in a heart's beat. Our decision is hardly surprising for people who are aware of this nature's law. Quite coincidentally, both of us believed in it.

 

Today when we look back, we THANK GOD every minute for the decision we have made. We both believed in “Marriage is not about FINDING the right one, it's about BEING the right one”. It was refreshingly surprising for both of us to realize that we had 80% of our expectations met. The rest 20% is about Being the right one, and that's easy.

 

Today I represent one of the fastest growing Irish IT companies in the world. Our R&D center in India is bound to grow by leaps and bounds. I am among the first few to be brought in, to help them to achieve these results. This meant lot of ground work from hiring to delivery. Obviously lots of “stress” and “pressure”!

 

We just started tasting fruits our initial success. I can clearly see the invisible link between the success that I am achieving at work and a strong home team.

 

Indu is a born entrepreneur. She has some of the finest ideas of getting into business. Even in her wildest dreams, she never though of getting a “JOB”. She never liked the idea of working for someone. She is a straightforward “S” quadrant (if you read Robert Kiyosaki – the Rich Dad, Poor Dad fame, you know what I mean). She has these dreams and goals in life. And the best thing is she is clear about them.

 

Once I am home, I help her in realizing our dreams (just to explain, I made her dreams mine, she made mine, hers. Now there are no “Your” dreams or “My” dreams. Only “Our” dreams!!). The mazaa in working together as a team with your spouse – appreciating each other – to achieve a common goal in life! Wah, you have to live it realize the pleasures of it!!

 

Thus Indu and I, from “S” and “E” quadrants respectively, working together to move into our dream quadrant -- “I”. We realize the pleasure of success is NOT in achieving the end goal, but it IS in the journey. That's the reason we both believe:

 

Strong home team is The Mantra for guaranteed success.

 

Tuesday, September 27, 2005

Salam Namaste, Recruitment Teams

I salute your patience and celebrate your spirit of success.

 

My “Hiring Manager” avatar for the last few months made me realize how increasingly difficult it has become to hire good people (oops! I should have said “right” people).  By “Good”, I mean people who match the profile of the position we are trying to fill.  I truly believe everyone is just as good as anyone else.  I think everyone is good for “some” job.  It’s just that the profiles should match.  And that’s THE key.  Finding that right match.

 

It all starts with volatile requirements (you techies over there, this sounds familiar? yeah, it is!).  Is it 10 developers or 12?  What is the mix of college-grads/juniors/seniors?  What are team sizes and their mix? etc.  Once we have a ball-park number, the exercise of “selling” the organization shuroo.  Then you start exploring various means of “finding” these “right ones”.  Media ads, consultants, referrals, word of mouth blah blah blah.

 

If you release ads in news paper, you can be sure that hundreds, if not thousands of resumes start hitting your email.  Be warned to have a bigger mail box.  Once you start receiving these mails, filtering them is another tedious process.  Accommodating curricula received from various sources, and keeping track of them is not as easy as it sounds.

 

Telescreening, logical tests, aptitude tests, code tests!  Personal interviews, office interviews, HR interviews and technical interviews!! First round, second round, third round and even seventh round in some organizations!!!  You have many challenges to find this “right one”.  And when you find one, probably you are justified if you feel you accomplished great achievement of success.  In all probability, you end up negotiating the right deal with your “prospective” employee.  Your colleagues realize your accomplishment as you yell “HURRAHHH!!” while rushing through the exit door.

 

All your “hurrah!!”s turn into “oh! NO”s when you start receiving calls from the “chosen ones” – explaining various reasons why they can’t come on board!!  Someones’ pay just got better, someone else just got a promotion.  Someones’ relocating to a whole new universe, while someone else just realized that they should be “more loyal” to the current organization.  For somebody, their boss wouldn’t let them go, and someone else, its their dog!

 

And finally (sadly) we are back to square one.

 

I pity peoples’ lack of decision making skills (or should I pity myself – they just made a decision NOT to make a move!  But then I wonder why they DID go through all this pain).  Two things that come to my mind in this situation:

 

  1. I thank GOD for not letting me work with these guys who are not great decision makers anyway!
  2. I build my pipeline stronger so that I can have backups!!

 

I know I sound harsh when I say these things.  But that’s reality.  That’s how I feel.  And I guess most of the professionals in the field of recruitment also feel the same way.

 

I did it just once – on a large scale, full time.  I can’t imagine myself doing this all over again for the rest of my life. 

 

This job needs patience.  This job needs Godly patience.

 

That’s why, Salam Namaste, Recruitment Teams.

Thursday, September 08, 2005

Spirit of Pairing

I am currently re-reading Stephen Covey’s classic “Seven Habits of Highly Effective People”.  Each time I read it, I catch a new meaning for certain things.  This time, it is about pairing.  On page 263, explaining “Synergize”, Covey wrote:

 

“Synergy is everywhere in nature.  If you plant two plants close together, the roots commingle and improve the quality of the soil so that both plants will grow better than if they were separated.  If you put two pieces of wood together, they will hold much more than the total of the weight help by each separately.  The whole is greater than the sum of its parts.  One plus one equals three or more.  The challenge is to apply the principles of creative cooperation, which we learn from nature, in our social interactions”

 

I am quite amazed to note how aptly it applies to the spirit of pairing in agile methods.

 

 

 

Tuesday, September 06, 2005

Improvements to Next ASCI Conferences

Another late post.  But we all heard it, better late than never, right? :p (I wanted to scare you all with a lllllonnnnggg post!!)

 

Couple of things I scribbled down during the presentations at the recent Mumbai conference.  I am posting them for the group’s discussion.

 

  1. Mike / sound systems:  We should have professional mike system.  It was too informal, and some speakers were not audible enough for the entire audience.  I think we must consider services of some professionals next time.
  2. Podcast:  It is linked to the above.  If we have an audio system in place, we could record these sessions and post them online.
  3. Video:  Can we think of capturing these presentations on video for further reference/use?  May be reused at local ASCI UG meets (for the benefit of people who could not attend)?
  4. Banners:  It was chaos this time with banners.  I suggest we have one single banner with all participant logos.  What do you think?
  5. Publicity:  Should we try inexpensive methods of publicizing the event (“What’s Up today?” section of news papers, channels, FM etc)?
  6. Notepads:  The notepads we gave in the kit are rarely used.  Is it because of the quality?  Or we don’t need them?  Are we including them in the kit “just for the sake of doing it – as a ritual”?
  7. Timers:  Almost all speakers over run their time limits.  Some even ate into next sessions’ time.  I saw those next session speakers waiting patiently for these guys to complete!  I think we need time-keepers.
  8. Speaker Introduction:  We should have the brief introduction of the speaker at the beginning of the session.  And when it ends, we should thank the speaker, and say some nice words (can be done when we give them mementos)!
  9. Better Auditoriums:  We definitely need better auditoriums
  10. Book Counters:  Many were asking where they can buy agile-related books.  Can we talk to publishers and arrange book counters?  I am sure there will be lots of sales.
  11. Key note timing:  I don’t think the experiment of change in time of key note session really worked out.  I rather prefer it to be at the beginning of the day.
  12. Theme:  How about coming up with a theme for the conference?  And keep all presentations in line with the theme?
  13. Markers etc:  We must definitely make sure that the markers/dusters/white boards are usable and visible.
  14. Learn from other UG meets:  Globally there are many agile conferences happening.  How doe we learn from their experiences and customize it to our situation?
  15. What are other suggestions from the users in this group on running such conferences more effectively?

 

 

Thursday, September 01, 2005

Word of caution

Are words powerful? Are they powerful enough to kill people? If you are not sure, you have not read today's headlines. Words of rumor killed almost 1000 people in stampede in Iraq. Such a sad incident!

Same thing happened couple of years ago. Some preacher convinced people that he can lead them to heaven and people believed him to that extend that they all took poison and died. Even few months back when heavy rains struck Mumbai, rumors of Tsunami killed few dozens.

If words are so powerful, can we use them for obtaining positive results? Can we use them to build lives? Can we change lives with words?

I firmly believe in the power of “Spoken Word’. There something very interesting that I heard couple of years ago from my hero, Kumar Sivaramkrishnan – a millionaire, who became so by mastering the art of spoken word. He once talked about the powerful way of programming brain with spoken words. I was amazed at the power of this, and ever since became fan of this ideology :-)

Let me try to explain.

Our belief system lies in our brain. When we are born, the brain is clean, without any beliefs (clean slate!). As we grow older, we develop our belief systems (through our senses?). Let's say we have a belief that we are poor at public speaking. We believe we are not good at talking to gatherings. We were not born with this belief, did we? So, our clean mind picked it up along the way we grew up. Probably some bad experiences collaborated to form this belief.

Now, we want to change that. How do we do it? Let’s imagine this situation. We somehow get ourselves in front of audience – to speak. Then subconsciously we ask our brain, what our experience is likely going to be. What does the brain do? As David Schwartz talks about it in his “Magic of Thinking Big”, brain is like a “bank-teller”. When asked for information, it looks in to our “past” account, and digs past experiences. And what do you have in your past? Bad experiences related to speaking in public. Probably some insult, and humiliation too. So, the brain comes back and reminds you how you failed when you tried to participate in elocution competition in your college, when you tried giving a presentation to your colleagues, or when you tried to address a customer gathering blah blah blah.

Guess what’s going to happen now! Exactly. You are going to fail again.

Let’s consider this variation in the earlier situation. Instead of asking the “teller” (brain) what your “account balance” (past experiences) is, you “deposit” your “words” that form your “account balance”: you strongly convey the message that you are going to do great this time. How do you do that? By speaking. If possible, speaking aloud. You say, “This is going to be a great talk. I am going to enjoy it. All the audience is going to like my talk. I am a master at public speaking”.

Let’s see what happens when you say these things aloud (to yourself).

When you say it aloud, who is going to hear it first? Yourself. So, your ears take the message to your brain. What does brain do? It tries to deposit the message. And there will be a conflict, for sure. Because, it does not LOGICALLY match with your previous experiences, your subconscious probably refuges to register it.

Then what do you do? You say it again and again and again until the mind is forced to take it. You will face some initial hiccups, but with practice, you will overcome the fear of public speaking. What did you do? You are essentially “programming” your brain with your words!! (I can draw a parallel between this, and the ancient Hindu philosophy of “Tathastu Devata” – the Gods who supposedly grant your wishes instantly! We were never allowed to say bad words/wishes while we were kids. We were told all those wishes are instantly granted by Tathastu Devata, so better speak and ask for good ones!!)

If you expand, I can see that the same applies to so many other things in life – achieving your dreams and goals, having positive changes in the way you live, and improving the quality of life altogether etcetera. I heard many, many, many real life examples of the power of spoken word. To conclude, I believe in the following. This is no jumbling of words; this is something I personally learnt from one of my billionaire associates.

“Speak what you want. Don't speak what you already have that you don't want. Speak what you want, even if you don't have it, as if you already have it”

I practice it very religiously. You try!

Tuesday, August 30, 2005

Attrition

Looking at IT industry in Bangalore, one would say that the employee attrition rate is crazy.  You see so many people switching jobs every now and then, causing serious concerns for the management.  Large organizations maintain bench (or beach – additional resources than required) to solve part of the problem (of course, not solely to address this problem alone).  But can this additional cost be avoided?  Can we build that trust between employer and employee?  Can we avoid conflicts and arrive at an agreeable resolution with in the industry? 

 

I remember sometime back, when the situation was worse in the BPO industry, organizations signed *treaties* not to poach people from neighbors.  Of course, it was of very little effect as practical implementation of the same was very hard.  Employee turn over is definitely the symptom.  What is the cause?

 

Now, is a lack of employee turnover cause for celebration? 

 

I read an article recently which questioned lack of employee turn over.  And I found interesting answers too.  It is true that when people asked what they like about their jobs, they give politically correct answers – which *you* want to hear.  But some reasons could be:

 

  • Business is down and other companies are not hiring.
  • Your employees have skills so specific that there are few companies that require them.
  • The current pay level has reached a point that other companies would be hard pressed to meet it.
  • The compensation is level throughout the industry, making it impossible to switch jobs for more pay.

 

This is very interesting argument.  I think it’s more painful for the employer to have people around – who want desperately to move on, but can’t – for whatever reasons.  While all of us can discuss the reasons, I agree with Tana that it’s not those *reasons* we need to look at, but the *people*.  How can we address this?

The Magic of Making Mistakes

A good article by Robert Kiyosaki, the author of “Rich Dad Poor Dad”.  What I like about his approach is that I am able to draw parallels between his ideas and, not surprisingly, agile development.

 

Just read the article and ask yourself a question:  don’t you do similar things in agile?

 

(from http://www.richdad.com/pages/article_mistakes.asp)  

 

My real dad came from the world of academics, a world where mistakes are perceived as bad and to be avoided. My rich dad came from the streets. To him, mistakes were opportunities to learn something new, something he did not know before.

Street Smart Versus School Smart
My rich dad was very successful financially for many reasons. At the top of the list was his attitude towards making mistakes. Like most of us, he hated making them, yet he was not afraid of making them.

Each time he made a mistake, instead of being depressed, he often seemed happier, wiser, more determined, and often richer from the experience. He would say to his son and me, "Mistakes are how we learn. Every time I make a mistake, I always learn something about myself, I learn something new, and I often meet new people I would never have met."

As I watched my real dad struggle financially and professionally, my rich dad said, "To be successful in the real world of business, you have to be school smart as well as street smart. In school, you're given the lesson first. On the street, you're given the mistake first and then it's up to you to find the lesson. Since most people have not been taught how to make mistakes and learn from them, they either avoid mistakes altogether, which is a bigger mistake, or they make a mistake but fail to find the lesson from the mistake. That is why you see so many people making the same mistake over and over again." Rich Dad said, "I am so rich because I've made more financial mistakes than most people. Each time I made a mistake, I learned something new. In the business world, that something new is often called 'experience.' But experience is not enough. If a person truly learns from a mistake, his or her life changes forever, and what that person gains instead of experience is 'wisdom.'"

The Art of Making a Mistake
Rich Dad taught us the art of making a mistake and gaining wisdom from it. "The first thing that happens after you make a mistake is that you become upset. At this point of upset, you find out who you really are," he said, going on to describe the cast of characters who are brought to center stage when upsets from mistakes occur:
1. The Liar. "I didn't do that."
2. The Blamer. "It's your fault, not mine."
3. The Justifier. "Well, I don't have a good education so that is why I don't get ahead."
4. The Quitter. "I told you that it would never work."
5. The Denier. "No, there is nothing wrong. Things are fine."

Rich Dad said, "If you want to learn and gain wisdom from this priceless mistake, you have to let 'The Responsible You' eventually take control of your thinking."

Mental Attitude Quiz
1. What are your attitudes to risk, making mistakes, and learning?
2. What are the attitudes of the people around you to risk, making mistakes, and learning?
3. Are there still some financial, professional, or business upsets that remain unresolved?
4. Are you still angry with some one else in regards to money?
5. And if you are upset with someone else or yourself, what lesson can you learn and be grateful for being courageous enough to have taken a risk and maybe learned something?

Agile Mumbai Rocks

*Cool*

 

That’s the four letter word  I use to describe Mumbai Conference. 

 

The conference attracted interested minds in the Mumbai region to look at this *new* thing called as agile.  Though the turn out was not as expected, I still think it’s a great beginning.  We started creating awareness in users.

 

Great things happened over last few days.  Certainly I would post all the details in multiple posts.  This post, I dedicate to the great team work that made this conference such a hit.

 

I reached Mumbai on Friday, one day before the conference starts, just to offer my hand in arrangements.  As I witnessed, the success of the conference can be attributed to few people: Naresh Jain, Dhaval Dalal and the SP College enthusiastic students.  There may be many others who are involved, but I saw these guys live on the floor.  In spite of their busy schedules, and other commitments, these guys dedicated almost a whole week to this event, mostly working 12-14 hours a day.  I appreciate these boys from the bottom of my heart.

 

User conferences like this can *only* be successful if they are run by committed souls like these.  If you need a yard stick to measure the success of the event, talk to people who came from Chandigarh and New Delhi.  They are so fired up that we are asked to conduct similar events in their cities too.

 

I would also like to appreciate numerous other users and organizations, who contributed in various ways to see this conference as a successful event.  Great job guys, Keep it Up!!

 

Agile is here to stay.

 

(read more about it on my blog: http://nandury.blogspot.com/)

Thursday, August 25, 2005

Enough space to bury myself :-)

What do you do with 1 terabyte storage on your hard disk?

 

Dump all the movies in the world?!!

 

Hitachi came up with world’s first Terabyte DVD recorder which can hold up to 128 hours of high definition television recording.  I started thinking of possible things we can do with that space (in the home user segment)…

 

  • Record entire series of saus-bahu soaps
  • Put ALL mp3s ever available in the world
  • Pictures (can you make it up in you life?)
  • Start home-video production and dump all those videos
  • Movie editing and stuff (Movie DJ?)
  • Anything else!!!

 

Wednesday, August 24, 2005

Hiring Blues

I am currently in the last phase of hectic hiring activity.  It is so sad to see so many young people, with absolutely no idea of what they want to do in future.  Not just that, even their attitude troubles me a lot.  I have seen very few people who check credentials of the company before they come to meet us.  98% come into the interview room without any idea what we do.  All they need is a JOB.  It does not matter whoever gives it to them.  "Gimme My Job!!" attitude.  I feel sorry for these guys.  They are coming here to earn a good fortune of their life time, at least for the next few years, and they don't care. 
Usually that's my first question, and people answer -- "Sorry, I didn't have time.  I was too busy with my project". 
Dude! you did not come here to hang out with your friends.  You have come here to make an important move in your career.  Don't you think you should be a bit more careful, do some homework before you show up?

Tuesday, August 23, 2005

Shortcomings in GDS Outlook Plug-in

After a couple of searches using the Google outlook plug-in, I realized its not that great.  Sure, it brings to you ALL the information in the mails (related to your search), but it has the following shortcomings:

1.  It has no clue if the content is deleted or moved to other places.  It displays the content, though.

2.  It does not allow to give search criteria, its just a vanilla search

3.  And the interface is not great too.

blah blah blah …

Hope it improves in future

 

Monday, August 22, 2005

Cool GDS v2

Just installed Google Desktop v2.0. (http://desktop.google.com/index.html)

 

I think it’s cool.  I liked the Side Bar idea.  Of course, there have been many applications till now that served as side bars with various applications embedded in.  But I liked this one because it has active content in it.  It has an RSS feed reader, a quick TODO pad, a scratch pad etc.  Of course, I can’t use the weather bar, as it still does not show me Bangalore weather.  Or the news bars, as the news is mostly related to the western world.

 

The best thing I liked about it is the Outlook search bar plug-in.  All these days, I have just been using GDS to search my mails.  I realized Outlook built in search is such a time wasting effort.  I found it most of the times to act dumb, and miss the content I am looking for.  It never happened with the GDS.  It picked up exactly what I was looking for, and that too at a lightening speed.  That’s the primary purpose I use GDS for.  And I felt so happy to see the latest version to come up with a special plug-in for outlook.  I hope the experience gets better.

Staganography

I came across a new word today – Steganography. I wondered what it means, and started looking for more information. And this is what I learnt.

“”Steganography is the art and science of writing hidden messages in such a way that no one apart from the intended recipient knows of the existence of the message; this is in contrast to cryptography, where the existence of the message itself is not disguised, but the meaning is obscured. The name comes from Johannes Trithemius's Steganographia: a treatise on cryptography and steganography disguised as a book on black magic, and is Greek ("στεγανογραφία") for "hidden writing." -- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steganography

Steganography has a very ancient origin. I read a story of a message tattooed on a slave’s shaved head, covered by his hair re-growth, and exposed by re-shaving. It was also used by various secret agents, during and post-World War.

I realized there is a great benefit of Steganography in the modern times. This technique can be used to watermark the images – unknowingly. You would not be able to see the watermark unless you run the image through a program. You know the origin of the picture. It can be applied to pictures posted on the internet etc.

I came across another, rather, abuse of this technique.

Flickr is a great photo-blogging site. A pro account gives you unlimited data storage. But all you can store is pictures. Nothing else. People started experimenting with the steganographic techniques to store all kinds of data, under the cover of a jpg file in their flickr accounts. As data storage does not have any limit, it can work as a ‘virtual online backup’. Of course, people would notice the abnormal size of the pictures etc, but I leant that currently the website does not restrict uploading such files. What happens if everyone wants to use these sites as virtual backup sites? Do the websites know about it? Are they willingly allowing it initially so that they can become popular?

Leaving these questions for the websites, I think steganography is a great idea. I think Dan Brown’s “The Da Vinci Code”’s anagrams can be termed as steganographic too. Fun.


Wonderful story on pipline income

I have always been interested in domains that allow people to strech their abilities to reach their financial freedom. I have been reading the likes of "Rich Dad Poor Dad" series (by Robert Kiyosaki) a bit seriously. I realized how powerful the message is in those books, but only for the people who looked for it. I came across a great story on building a pipline income vs bucket income. I tried linking the presentation I have, and could not find a way to do it on blogger. Please bear with me while I figure out how to do it. I just cant resist publishing this post even before I figured out how to export files and put them on blog. Sure, the content is so cool.

PipelineParable

Saturday, August 20, 2005

Blog Writing Style

Some nice tips that I liked....

by Molly Holzschlag and Darren Barefoot

· Content

o Blogs lend themselves to quick writing and shorter posts

o Understand the blogging environment by reading for a while before you write

o Companies don't blog - people blog. Passionate ones make the best bloggers.

o Blogging is about telling a story, and extending that story into a conversation

o Having a voice and a personality is critical. Boring or bored people aren't engaging.

o Blogging is an act of courage, because you are putting things out in the public that never were before

o Define the audience, offer public feedback mechanisms and listen to them

o Cite other blogs, you can't do this enough

· Editing

o Edit your materials before you post, but don't let your own editing censor your voice

o Resisting the temptation to push "Publish" too soon can be helpful

o Corrections are best handled with strikethrough text on the error. "Update:" at the end of the post works well too

o Editing too many times can irritate people because subscribers to your web feed see it as a new post each time you update

o Don't excerpt email discussions unless you have the person's approval

Bottom line: be transparent, be authentic, tell your story

Love

Love is such a beautiful feeling. Love makes things happen. When you are in love, you see a different world -- where you dont find the usual flaws, and everything around you is so elegant. You start appreciating the GOD's creation. It happened to me and I am still living it. I dont think I can express how it is to be in love or being loved-- it is beyond expression. One has to live it to understand it.

I read some where ...
I feel you...
in every stone
in every leaf of every tree
you've ever grown [that you ever might have grown]
I feel you...
in every thing
in every river that might flow
in every seed you might have sown
I feel you...
in every vein
in every beating of my heart
each breath I take [in every breath i'll ever take]
I feel you...
anyway...
in every tear that i might shed
in every word i've never said
What a beautiful thing it is to be in love, and being loved!!

GOD, when Love is the definete cure for all the challenges we have in world, why didn't you "install" a "love-OS (operating system)" in every human being?

Friday, August 19, 2005

Quick tip for driving traffic to your blog

I really liked this idea.  It’s again about collaborating.  Cathleen Moore shared a quick tip from the Blog Business Summit (posted at http://weblog.infoworld.com/techwatch/archives/003764.html

)

“One gem of wisdom (among many) shared is that bloggers should be active blog discussion participants. Driving traffic to your blog often occurs as a result of contributing to someone else's blog.  The process of finding what to write about can lead you to other blog sites that you can contribute to, and that is the one of the biggest drivers of traffic to your own blog.  Being involved in other people's blogs is the best way to drive traffic to your own blog.  Spend time on someone else's blog; add comments.   According to Scoble, it's all about getting on the radar screen of other influential bloggers.  "When I am in the comments of other people's blogs, they see it and appreciate what you have to say. You are on their radar screen," he said.”

Isn’t this a smart (wonderful) way of give-n-take?  You contribute first, and others follow you.  It boils down to the same principles of community collaboration.  Of course you do have the “selfish” motive behind the idea, but who doesn’t want to be famous? :p

Thursday, August 18, 2005

The Little Things

I usually get spam mails (jokes and stuff) from friends that go to trash can with lightening speed.  But this one, made me think.  I really liked this approach to POSITIVE thinking.  See if you like it.

 

 

The 'L I T T L E' Things

 

As you might know, the head of a company survived 9/11 because his son started kindergarten.

Another fellow was alive because it was his turn to bring donuts.

One woman was late because her alarm clock didn't go off in time.

One was late because of being stuck on the NJ Turnpike because of an auto accident.

One of them missed his bus.

One spilled food on her clothes and had to take time to change.

One's car wouldn't start.

One went back to answer the telephone.

One had a child that dawdled and didn't get ready as soon as he should have.

One couldn't get a taxi.

 

The one that struck me was

 

The man who put on a new pair of shoes that morning, took the various means to get to work

But before he got there, he developed a blister on his foot.

He stopped at a drugstore!

To buy a Band-Aid.

That is why he is alive today.

 

Now when I am

 

Stuck in traffic,

Miss an elevator,

Turn back to answer a ringing telephone...

All the little things that annoy me.

 

I think to myself, this is exactly where God wants me to be at this very moment..

 

Next time your morning seems to be going wrong,

The children are slow getting dressed

You can't seem to find the car keys,

You hit every traffic light,

Don't get mad or frustrated;

 

God is at work watching over you.

May God continue to bless you with all those annoying little things

And may you remember their possible purpose.

IE and Fire Fox

Images on websites were displayed distortedly ever since I started using my brand new Dell D610 Lattitude. I thought it was a problem with the OS. And I started looking for help in this direction. But after installing Fire Fox, I realized it's do with the browser settings. I still can't figure out what was wrong with my IE as it was up-to-date, latest version, with all possible upgrades. Not only the image was distorted, also they lay out of the site were screwed up for certain sites.

I have enclosed screen shots of both the browser windows. Anyone knows what's wrong?

Image with Internet Explorer. You can see image distortion, and even the lay out is screwed up.

Image with Fire Fox. Perfect.

Collaboration Rules

I read an interesting article, Collaboration Rules in Harvard Business Review that draws parellel between collaboration techniques of open-source software development and Toyota production. Philip Evan and Bob Wolf authored the article, and they brought up very interesting similarities found in collaborative efforts, irrespective of their domain.

Building vibrant human networks has always been my dream. A network that is self-organized, completely sold-out to do something that they have passion in, and enjoy success as a group. I agree with the authors that three things are critical factors of success for these groups;
a) a common work descipline,
b) widespread granular communication and
c) leaders-by-example as connectors.

What strikes me the most in the article is the level of trust these teams share. It is surprising for me to learn that when a fire broke out in the factory of a supplier of components (of Toyota), they trusted their rival suppliers with critical blue prints (to make sure Toyota does not suffer because of the accident). And yes, this is the same kind of trust shared by open-source community, too.

What if we, in the regular software development industry, can build the same amount of trust in our teams? Wouldn't that radically improve productivity of the individuals and the teams? Shouldn't that be THE natural way to build the teams? How do we achieve this?

Wednesday, August 17, 2005

Let's try something new

I have always been the greatest fan of Microsoft Internet Explorer. Though I heard rants from geeks about its performance, it never gave me problems. I was fine with it. Though I used other browsers like opera and mozilla, that was for a very very short time. IE dragged me back into it's lap. And I felt OK.

Things have changed. Technology has improved. New tools arrived. Enthusiam for experimentation never died, and with all my recent assignments, it is headed for a smooth-north-bound-cruise :-) And I installed FireFox.

My first reaction, "Cool". First of all, I liked the real estate of the browser window (compared to the ever-crowded-IE). Google search integration is just great, I think. It not only saves space (I don't need to have a 'seperate google search bar' that used to clutter the browser), but also so convenient as it points to other search engines as well.

I liked the live book mark feature too. Of late, I have become an ardant fan of RSS feeds. I tried different ways of synchronizing the content, and finally settled with the Outlook plugin -- attensa (this also used to show on the IE toolbar -- too many buttons there). Adding RSS feeds now is so easy in Firefox. Great.

I think now I am going to continue with this newbie for the fore-seeable future :-)