Sunday, June 14, 2009
Tuesday, June 2, 2009
Favorite Tweet Yet....
""I am somewhat disappointed that my 15 minutes of fame stem from running into a tree whilst tweeting..."
From: Man Twitters and is attacked by tree
From: Man Twitters and is attacked by tree
Saturday, May 2, 2009
Why Crowd Sourcing Blows in Stock Picking
Friday, March 27, 2009
The Quick Click
I have been a manager at Internet-related companies since 1995. In that time, our companies have always had some form of Internet access available to employees.
As a manager, I have learned there are at least three main ways for colleagues to hide surfing somewhere you shouldn't on company time. The first is the most obvious - obstructing the screen, either with something - work papers, a coffee cup or, if all else fails, themselves. The second most popular way is the distractor, who when confronted with personal things on their screen, deflects all eyes elsewhere. "Hey, is that guy holding a bow and arrow?!? No?"
The best way is the old quick click - minimizing the screen or flipping to another to avoid detection. If executed well, it is almost undetectable. Except you have to move your hand.
I have had more than one employee over the years who every time I walked into their office/cube, they felt the need to quick click.
I am a trusting guy, but if you have to stop doing something personal every time i walk past you, pretty soon I think I will begin to believe you aren't doing much at work.... And I suspect that is a slippery slope.
So, don't quick click every time. Sometimes, just leave the page up as it is. It is less suspicious, than the quick click, I promise! (or you could quit surfing so much at work and just work more!)
As a manager, I have learned there are at least three main ways for colleagues to hide surfing somewhere you shouldn't on company time. The first is the most obvious - obstructing the screen, either with something - work papers, a coffee cup or, if all else fails, themselves. The second most popular way is the distractor, who when confronted with personal things on their screen, deflects all eyes elsewhere. "Hey, is that guy holding a bow and arrow?!? No?"
The best way is the old quick click - minimizing the screen or flipping to another to avoid detection. If executed well, it is almost undetectable. Except you have to move your hand.
I have had more than one employee over the years who every time I walked into their office/cube, they felt the need to quick click.
I am a trusting guy, but if you have to stop doing something personal every time i walk past you, pretty soon I think I will begin to believe you aren't doing much at work.... And I suspect that is a slippery slope.
So, don't quick click every time. Sometimes, just leave the page up as it is. It is less suspicious, than the quick click, I promise! (or you could quit surfing so much at work and just work more!)
Sunday, February 1, 2009
Superbowl Fun
Monday, January 26, 2009
My Toyota is more "American" than your Ford?
I was raised to "buy American." (I'm from Arkansas, so when I say it, its "Uh-mare-i-can" but....) Chevy trucks, Levi jeans, McDonald's burgers. No Honda's in our driveway!
Except now, in the modern global economy, deciding what is American and what isn't has gotten harder. Much harder.
Case in point - my current car - a Toyota Sequoia vs. my previous car, a Ford Expedtion.
Most people would say Ford is the American car, Toyota isn't. You would be wrong. Sort of. Maybe.
According to the NHTSA (in this report), my Sequoia is 80% of the "content" was made in the US/Canada and it is assembled in the US/Canada (According to AOL, they are assembled in Princeton, Indiana). My Expo was made in the US, too, but with only 70% of the content from the US.
So is my Toyota more American because of its content? Or less because of the HQ? Interesting questions!
A great article in the WSJ goes into some detail on this topic...
Except now, in the modern global economy, deciding what is American and what isn't has gotten harder. Much harder.
Case in point - my current car - a Toyota Sequoia vs. my previous car, a Ford Expedtion.
Most people would say Ford is the American car, Toyota isn't. You would be wrong. Sort of. Maybe.
According to the NHTSA (in this report), my Sequoia is 80% of the "content" was made in the US/Canada and it is assembled in the US/Canada (According to AOL, they are assembled in Princeton, Indiana). My Expo was made in the US, too, but with only 70% of the content from the US.
So is my Toyota more American because of its content? Or less because of the HQ? Interesting questions!
A great article in the WSJ goes into some detail on this topic...
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