Friday, February 26, 2010

Passion is the secret but does it translate?

I'm in a unique situation where I don't have to work [1]. Ok, maybe at some point I need to do something so I can justify a couch for our little freecycle decorated apartment and I wouldn't mind upgrading our wine from two buck chuck to something in the $5 range. But I'm making a conscious choice to dig deep in my search to find something I can be passionate about and I want to take full advantage of this opportunity.
If you ask anyone who knows me or has met me in person, they will tell you that I am passionate. If asked to describe me in a single word I bet 95% would say passionate even without a picklist. Yet I think passion is very difficult to recognize in today's hectic real-time 140 character world. The subtle nuances of emotion visible during a face-to-face conversation are hard to detect through the web, especially if they've already scrolled off the bottom of the page or get stuck at the bottom of the inbox. Energy, excitement and passion seem to get lost in the digital conversion to 0s,1s and ABCs.
The last time I wrote a resume and interviewed for a job was 20 years ago and I'm struggling with ways to show my passion in this digital age. Bits and words fly before our eyes in record quantities, how do you make them stand out?

Friday, January 29, 2010

World Traveling Sailors: The Most Bizarre Social Media Example?

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The other day I was invited to take part in a brainstorming session as the "social media expert" (notice the quotes). I was introduced by my friend as a past colleague who had just finished a 6 year, around the world, sailing adventure and no one laughed.. but I'm sure more than one team member was wondering how the two were related. If you take a newbie with a full inbox, an already overloaded schedule and stick them in front of the social media firehose I guarantee you will create a skeptic. I used social media throughout my trip to make life easier and free up valuable time and resources, not just because somebody told me I should.
A little background.. I'm an electrical engineer who switched to software after I realized the incredible leverage I could gain by developing it. I could create a library of components for CAE tools, typing them in by hand, or I could write an awk script with some csh pipes to accomplish the same result adding re-usability, creating flexibility, and increasing efficiency. I was hooked and I never turned back. My experience ranges from customer support to developer to VP of engineering services all within start-up or advanced development organizations where customer interaction is critical. As part of my reintegration I've spent a lot of time evaluating the tools and data flows used with social media, then it hit me.. it's really NOT new to me!

Thursday, January 7, 2010

The Social Organization: Achieving Swing

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The management lessons are particularly applicable for the networked world. Yes, skill is critical - you can't win without it. Strategy is also critical so that you all know what the goal is and how you're all going to get there. But ego, in-fighting, and people that want to win at all costs? That kills swing.
It is better to agree and execute a sup-optimal decision collectively than to have a team of rockstars that all want to convince people to do it their way - even if each one of them is a genius.  That reality has huge implications on hiring, performance management, and leadership. It changes our ideas about what it means to be competitive. However, swing is so powerful that it can overcome strength and natural advantages.
Swing is an amazing feeling that really can't be described to someone who hasn't experienced it. Everything just clicks and effort/energy seems to be transferred without friction. Crew is an amazingly competitive sport. You push yourself to the limit, compete against each other for seats in the boat, and then get together as a seamless team to do battle. I still remember those cold early morning workouts and all the powerful lessons they taught me.

Thursday, November 26, 2009

Two days of Google Goodness: Geo + Wave Hackathons


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New York Geo Hackathon Friday Nov 20th
I've been using Google's geo products and APIs for a large portion of our Sailing Trip, so when I read about the NYC Geo hackathon and that it was on the same continent, I had to go!! It was a long day starting with a 4am wake up to drive to the 5:45 train from Providence to NYC (luckily I had Google maps to help).
Although I didn't really learn anything new about the APIs, I had a great time talking with the other developers. You have to realize that I've been living in a virtual "geek vacuum" for the past six years. All of my interactions have been through online forums, my sailing friends typically glaze over at "click the Start Menu". I selectively demoed my sailing blog with integrated geoblogs, blurbbits and automatic interactive maps. I was actually a little bit surprised about how much I knew about the various Google products and APIs. I found myself helping others with their issues/projects..
I even got to talk in detail with one of the developer advocates from Google, Roman Nurik. I realized it's a lot more fun to brainstorm when you get to bounce ideas off other people.

Sunday, October 18, 2009

Friendfeed please don't go away..


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This started out as a "simple" comment to Robert Scoble's post The second life of friendfeed.
I still use friendfeed to "play around" with ideas about how I want to interact with the web, as both a content consumer and provider. Nothing I've found (yet) can replace friendfeed's functionality, easy to explain "common interface" (WRT to twitter/feeds) and the simplicity/flexibility of their embedded pages and widgets.
Before the Facebook merger and the mass exodus, Friendfeed revolutionized the way I interacted with the web. I looked at the comments of the people I respected before I visited the site/page that was being discussed. For me, real-time search has nothing to do with friendfeed's value (I actually use FF paused). I love the focused search capabilities (title, user, # of comments and groups/lists). Come on how cool is that ..as long as you actually have content/comments to search?

Saturday, September 12, 2009

It's ALL New to Me

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We've been out there.. way out there. For six years we traveled to remote corners of the globe on our sailboat. For you landlubbers, the changes in technology and the web have been gradual and maybe even unnoticeable. For me they are completely obvious and sometimes dramatic, like when you revisit the town you grew up in or see an old friend or young child and realize how much they've changed.