Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Jim Collins at Educause09


Jim Collins, author of Good to Great gave the keynote address at Educause 09 in Denver. The video of his presentation wasn't made available on the educause site, but he does have a number of videos on his site if you're interested. Here's an educause podcast featuring some highlights. The following are just some of the notables that he covered that i was able to scribble down:

Good is the enemy of great.
Don't study the successful, study the contrast.
What's the difference there?
Greatness is a function of conscious choice and discipline.
It's an interesting study like studying train wrecks
How do the great fall?
Why do some great lose it, while others do not?

The Five Stages of Decline
1 Hubris born of success --- the moment you think you're great, you're not
2 Undisciplined pursuit of more --- great ones fail because they reach too far
3 Denial of risk and peril --- Stockdale Paradox the optimists didn't make it
4 Grasping for salvation --- think fly wheel, not silver bullet
5 Capitulation to irrelevance or death --- can't come back from here

It is those who are consistently disciplined who are most open to change.

The signature of mediocrity is chronic inconsistency.

Stop spending your energy on being interesting, work on being interested.

Be rigorous in getting the right people on the bus, not ruthless.

The right people ...
... don't have to be managed
... don't have a job, they have responsibilities
... do what they say
... window mirror maturity, credit through window, blame themselves
... bring passion

Ten To Do Items
1) Do your diagnostics on your team, free tool at jimcollins.com
2) How many key seats do we have on our minibus? what are plans to get to 100%
3) Build a personal board of directors, people you admire for their character
4) Get young people in your face, we may be cultivating a level 5 generation
5) Turn off electornic gadgets, create pockets of quietude. You cannot have disciplined thought with e-mail/phone/twitter.. THINK
6) Can you question your questions to statements ratio? The number of questions you ask compared to the number of statements you make. Great leaders don't have all the answers, they have experts who they ask questions. Can you double your ratio in a year?
7) Start your "stop doing" list, work is infinite, time is finite.
8) Suspend titles, articulate responsibilities "i am the one person ultimately responsible for x,y,z"
9) Discover waterline risks and take them away, risks below waterline can sink you.
10) Set BHAGs (Big Hairy Audacious Goals), Peter Drucker was asked which book are you most proud of? His response, "the next one i'm about to write"

We aren't imprisoned by mistakes, cards we're dealt, staggering defeats, we are freed by our choices.

Creating and Enabling Web Mashups

On November 3rd, I attended Raymond Yee's seminar on Creating and Enabling Web Mashups. Raymond wrote this book on mashups, which is available online. He also maintains this blog.

Here are some notes and links from my talk last week at Lightning Talks.

What is a mashup?

A mashup, in the words of the Wikipedia, is a web site or web application “that seamlessly combines content from more than one source into an integrated experience.”


Here are some sample mashups:
- Spell with Flickr
- FlickrSudoku
- Housing Maps
- Chicago Crime Statistics


Advice for getting started
- Look at what other people have done to see what is possible.
- Don't rely on the screen scraping capabilities of data sources like dapper or yahoo pipes, these will create fragile mashups which break easily.
- Instead choose API, a good directory is programmableweb
- Choose popular API, ensures a better chance of it being supported.

Other links
Yahoo Pipes
YQL Yahoo Query Language
Google Code Playground

Monday, November 16, 2009

In praise of Wubi

Running Windows 7 on my laptop has been a mostly positive experience. Definitely a better OS than Vista, however it starts like a slow-running truck and a lot of times i need is a sports car. I don't completely understand the Windows Experience Index, but perhaps my 5.1 rating on a scale of 1.0 to 7.9 should be telling me something about what i should expect from it.



Last week, midway my connection flight to Educause09 I decided to crack it open and catch up on my various newsfeeds. I powered up and waited, and waited and waited. All the while watching other laptop users in the cabin type away. BTW, most of these were on XP and apparently very happy.

Within minutes of logging in, waiting for all the various start-up processes to engage, and opening up Chrome, the flight attendant chimed in, "Just to let you know, the Captain has begun our descent into Memphis International, the use of all electronic equipment is prohibited at this time." :( There had to be a better way.

What i wanted was Ubuntu on my laptop.

Running a VM within Win7 was pointless.
A dual boot was what i needed but i didn't really want to roll the dice adding a new partition to my drive.
Hanselman often sings the praises of VHDs which might be the ticket for running multiple Win7 instances or WinServers but for Ubuntu it seemed as though the simple answer coming back from the forums was Wubi.

Wubi installs Ubuntu into a folder (c:\ubuntu\disks\root.disk to be specific) on your Windows partition. It then modifies the boot loader to recognize this folder. So booting to Ubuntu is just the same as with any other dual boot, but there is no need to create a new partition.



Installation is fast and painless. Booting into Ubuntu is fast. Connecting to wireless is more painless. Shutting down is even faster, which was a complaint that i had with both Vista and now Windows 7. When in Ubuntu you can reference your Windows partition via the /host and /media directories so you can reach anything on the drive.

If you're interested in Ubuntu but aren't ready yet to take the plunge, give Wubi a try.

For more reading, here's a forum post reviewing Wubi.

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