Here’s an idea that most people – perhaps with the exception of Mitt Romney – might immediately discard as bad. Try and think of the many reasons why the “car-side dog sack” in the old newspaper clipping below is a bad idea. I’ll give you one: ol’ poochie’s going to get smacked in the head when the driver’s door opens:
Month: March 2009
I wrote this article for the blogs Canadian Developer Connection and Global Nerdy, but I thought that it might be interesting to people outside the tech industry. It’s about a particular webcast in an ongoing series by Microsoft called Ignite Your Career. If you’re interested in catching the webcast, it takes place this Tuesday at 12:00 noon Eastern, runs for an hour and costs nothing.
This Week’s Topic
This week’s topic for Ignite Your Career – our webcast series featuring experts from the Canadian tech industry and aimed at supporting your career development – is one that’s on a lot of people’s minds: How to Establish and Maintain a Healthy Work/Life Balance. Here’s the abstract:
With mobile technologies and our always-on culture, it’s imperative to establish and maintain a balance between work and life. If your only time to manage change in your environment is after hours, how can you maintain a healthy balance without burning out? How do you manage change so that you can develop your career and spend time with loved ones? This panel discussion will connect you to individuals who strive to establish and maintain this balance.
This webcast’s panelists are:
Mack Male
Mack is a software developer, entrepreneur, and social media guy. During the day he works for Questionmark Computing. Most of the rest of the time, he’s keeping up-to-date on the latest trends and technologies, and loves sharing what he learns with others. Mack is particularly passionate about his hometown, Edmonton, and does his best to expose everything it has to offer.
Cameron McKay
Cameron works for McKesson Canada, one of the largest Healthcare companies in the world as the Team Leader of the Infrastructure and Support Services Group in Toronto. An expert in Virtualization and Green IT, Cameron enjoys sharing his knowledge with the IT community through speaking engagements, blogs, and webcasts.
Paul Gossen
After 30 years as a successful serial entrepreneur and business leadership innovator Paul Gossen is well known for his credibility and high impact results in corporate coaching, team productivity and organizational transformation
Mark Blevis
Mark Blevis is an energetic public speaker, social media strategist, community leader, independent media producer and self-proclaimed Content Paleontologist. He is considered a thought-leader on social media and its potential and is regularly interviewed on radio and television.
Catching This Webcast
This webcast will first be broadcast this Tuesday, March 17th at 12:00 p.m. Eastern time (9:00 a.m. Pacific) and will be an hour long. It costs nothing to catch an Ignite Your Career webcast – all you have to do is register online with your Windows Live ID (which is also free).
Ignite Your Career is about maximizing your potential at work and helping you come up with a career plan in these difficult economic times. It’s not tied to any technology or vendor, so no matter what platform or tools you work with, we’re sure that you’ll find this webcast series informative and helpful.
Previous Ignite Your Career Webcasts
In case your missed the other two webcasts in this series, worry not – we’ve got them archived! Once again, they’re free to listen to – all you have to do is register online with your Windows Live ID.
The webcasts we’ve had so far in this series are:
- Industry Insights and Trends
The nature of technology is one of continual change; a fact of life for professionals in the ICT industry. As a result, you need to be on top of what is happening in the industry in order to position yourself and your organization to benefit from these trends. This panel discussion will arm you with the information you need from experts in the ICT industry in order to stay on top of your game.
Speakers: Joel Semeniuk, Jeff Kempiners, Jay Payette and Paul Swinwood. - Discovering Your Trusted Resources
Building a set of information sources and connecting with the community at-large are critical to your success in the ICT industry. This session brings successful community, technology, and information leaders together to share their experiences in discovering these resources. Our experts will help you learn how to identify credible sources and find the right tools, links and techniques to keep you up to date in a world of constant change.
Speakers: Michael J. Sikorsky, Richard Campbell, and John Bristowe.
[Creative Commons photo by "Cpt. Spock".]
Bus Shelter Ad of the Day
This article originally appeared in the Coffee and Code blog.
We’re Not Slackers, We’re Coffee Achievers
In response to John Bristowe’s announcement of the first Calgary Coffee and Code, we got this comment from a reader named Cameron:
How do all of you people have the day off. 9am to 4pm on a weekday? Gen-Y is in full effect.
Gen Y? Technically, we’re Gen Xers, since we were both born between 1960 and 1980. If I’m not mistaken, John is a “Nintendo Wave” Xer, since he was born in the 70s and I’m an “Atari Wave” Xer, having been born in 1967.
In response to Cameron’s comment, I couldn’t resist doctoring a graphic from the website for the animated series Slacker Cats:
(Come to think of, they sort of look like us. The hair colour’s the same.)
But seriously: John and I (as well as a number of other people in Microsoft Canada’s Developer & Platform Evangelism team) are officially classified by Microsoft as mobile workers. All the computers assigned to us are laptops, our internet and mobile phones are subsidized and our workplaces are wherever we happen to be working at the time: our home offices, Microsoft or on the road. It’s not for everyone, but if you have the discipline to handle the freedom, it can be a pretty nice way to work.
Coffee and Code was created to make us more accessible and give Microsoft a more human “face” by taking advantage of our flexible working arrangements. By working out of places like cafes, we’re making it quite easy for you to find us and join us in a conversation about whatever interests you, whether it’s Microsoft tools and technologies, the state of the industry or any other topic. It also makes for the perfect setting for us to help build local tech communities by gathering developers, IT pros, architects and other techies together. And finally, we’re patronizing “third place” businesses – those essential social places that are neither home nor the office – that are vital to the general community.
If a Coffee and Code attracts a large enough crowd, I find that I don’t get much programming, writing or administrative work done. That’s okay, because I’m getting another kind of work done: talking with local software developers, answering their questions, making note of their needs and suggestions and exchanging ideas. In short, I’m making connections with them, and that’s a major pillar of the Developer Evangelist position. If I’m not doing that, I’m not doing my job.
Where We’ll Be
If you’re in Calgary, you’ll want to head to Kawa Espresso Bar, where John Bristowe will be hosting the event from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.. You’ll find more details about his Coffee and Code event in this entry.
If you’re in Toronto, your Coffee and Code event will be hosted by Yours Truly at the spacious upstairs “Red Velvet Lounge” of the Starbucks at Yonge and Davisville from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.. You’ll find more details about it in this entry.
Since both events overlap perfectly, both locations are wifi equipped and both John and I have laptops with integrated cameras, I’m going to try videoconferencing with him, making this another Coffee and Code first. If you’re in eithe rof our neighbourhoods, please drop by!
Next to Motivational Wolf, Tony Robbins is a lightweight!
These have been floating about the next for the past couple of days and I thought I’d share them here. First is Schultz City, which gives Peanuts the Frank Miller treatment. Click the comic to see it at full size:
And here’s Presidential Trouble, which answers the question “What if The Watchmen" did a Hostess Fruit Pies ad?” The answer: nothing very pretty. Click the comic to see it at full size:
Michael Steele’s Cool Problem
Michael Steele – he’s the de jure Chairman of the Republican National Committee; Rush Limbaugh is the de facto one – has a challenging mission: to restore America’s Republican Party to power. His plan is to make it cool, or in his own words, use “off the hook” PR and by applying the party’s principles “to urban-suburban hip-hop settings”.
GQ recently interviewed him, and when the topic of conversation turned to music, he competently dropped some old-school rap and hip-hop names in that “I’m still cool! I keep up with the times!” way that some parents do:
Who do you listen to?
I actually listen to a cross section, because I like to hear what the medium is saying, what the voice is.But do you have a favorite?
P. Diddy I enjoy quite a bit.Do you want to rethink that?
[laughs] I guess I’m sorta old-school that way. Remember, I came of age with the DJ and all this other stuff, so I’m also loving Grandmaster Flash, and that’s not hip-hop, but… Um, you know, I like Chuck D. And I always thought Snoop Dogg was–he just reminded me of the fellas back home. So I’ve always thoroughly enjoyed him.
Strangely enough, it’s when he starts talking about Frank Sinatra and company that he fumbles. You have to keep in mind that being a fan of Sinatra is a Republican cliche so well known that it was featured in The Preppy Handbook and Family Ties’ Young Republican character, Alex P. Keaton, was written as a Sinatra fan:
Who else?
I like Sinatra. I like old-school. You know, Bing Crosby, Sinatra, Dean Martin. Love Dean Martin. He was one of these guys who just didn’t give an F. He just didn’t. Life was a party, and you either want to party or you don’t. But yeah, I like those. I’m a big Pack Rat. I love the Pack Rats from the 1950s–Dean Martin, Sammy Davis Jr., Frank Sinatra, those guys.You mean the Rat Pack.
The Rat Pack, yeah.
Dude. Even the most casual Sinatra listeners (such as Yours Truly) know that.
For someone claiming to be a follower of classic rock music, an equivalent mistake would be to refer to The Beatles as “The Four Fabs” or Mick and Keith as “The Glamour Twins”.
This was summed up best by Talking Points Memo’s Eric Kleefeld, who made the following observation:
So Steele doesn’t just sound like a middle-aged man trying to talk to his kids and failing to sound cool. He’s also trying to talk to his parents and failing to sound cool.