TED Talk on Autism: The world needs all kinds of minds
June 18, 2011 Leave a comment
Temple Grandin at TED this year, posted on YouTube: “The world needs all kinds of minds”:
Original Post: March 24, 2010
michael coates, a pragmatic evangelist
June 18, 2011 Leave a comment
Temple Grandin at TED this year, posted on YouTube: “The world needs all kinds of minds”:
Original Post: March 24, 2010
June 18, 2011 Leave a comment
.. which manifests itself as puns and re-wording, mostly.
On re-wording, I’ll grab the part of the word that tickles me the most and re-describe the meaning of the previous sentence .. to the joy / annoyance of my listener.
To stay sharp, I follow the Word of the Day RSS feed from Wordsmith.org .. this weeks’ theme was a special treat for me: Forgotten Positives .. positive versions of words commonly expressed in the negative .. you’ll get the idea:
Like these? Want more? Sign up for A Word A Day RSS feed, or subscribe to A Word A Day email newsletter.
Original Post: May 8, 2009
June 16, 2011 Leave a comment
I’m certain that I am. Even Chuck Norris knows about this site!
For months, my kids have been peppering me with tidbits like:
.. I though they were just being clever .. knight puns, anyone?
There’s a site with lots more. Some favorites from The Man Himself:
And my two favorites (du jour, anyway):
Get the Facts at Chuck Norris Facts.
Original Post: August 12, 2008
June 16, 2011 Leave a comment
I was looking for the calorie count of six chocolate M&Ms on the Web tonight. I had the pleasure of being redirected to Calorie Count on About.com .. who (after registration) promptly told me:
Yes: according to About.com, I am slightly overweight. That said, 149 pounds is my goal weight? Have you seen my NSFW picture (50th birthday photo shoot)?
I would be heroin chique at 149. Really. What are you folks selling?
Even more fun: you have an interesting article on your site: "Skinniest Models Banned from Catwalk".
Mixed messages, much?
Original Post: December 30, 2008; updated June 15, 2011
June 16, 2011 Leave a comment
By "we", I mean all of "we": the media, bloggers, individuals who write to the media and bloggers; anyone who tells (or re-tells) a tale.
I find myself in a quiet room today, where I can hear the news channel on the telly. The repetition got me to thinking:
Should the new job of media include the condensation and aggregation all this information into something that can actually be consumed? Is media up to the task?
Is "reporting" enough? Should we plead for more analysis .. or should we plead for silence?
Seems like everyone is trying too hard.
Original Post: December 3, 2008
June 13, 2011 Leave a comment
Thanks again (and again) to Jeannine Harsh for discovering Marrakech for the MIX08 team this past year. This is a follow-on post to “My Hedonistic-Healthy Birthday (HHB) Weekend” .. the restaurant and the experience deserve the extra attention.
Note that I love off-Strip stuff in Vegas; I drive like a local and am always ready for a new adventure, so please send me your suggestions.
Marrakech is only slightly off the beaten track .. less than a mile from the Westin Casuarina, and about a mile from The Strip. It is well worth the walk over.
The Marrakech Web Site says:
Dine on delicious Moroccan food served in the unique Moroccan manner enhanced by beautiful belly dancers. Stay as long as you wish, there is no rush here.
Service begins with washing each persons hands with lightly scented rose water. It successfully sets the stage for the highly anticipated, extravagant six-course meal offered by Marrakech.
And it does. But their brevity (a necessity in the modern Web) modestly understates the experience. Some pre-course details:
The courses (cobbled together with their site descriptions and my personal experience:
The scampi is followed with Harira Soup: a lentil-and-rice soup with lemon and other spices.
| Then comes Salade Marrakech: hummus, tomatoes, cucumber, olives and peppers. Incredible. |
| Candle-lit Filet Mignon Shish-Kebob. Tender and delicious. |
If you know how I eat .. I’m finished by now (in fact, I was finished after the salad). However, they kept showing up with food:
| The main course is a Royal Cous Cous platter served with Cornish Game Hen in a traditional raisin-vegetable sauce. This was a real treat (and I was happy to have a fork at this point). |
Marrakech makes an impression. Don’t miss a visit the next time you’re in Vegas!
Original Post: November 1, 2008
June 13, 2011 1 Comment
Those close to me and read this blog heard me discuss the possibility of a gala event in Las Vegas, tentatively titled “Michael’s Hedonistic-Healthy Fiftieth Birthday Weekend”.
Yeah: I am about as effective at product names as is Microsoft.
:: runrunrunrunrun ::
I admit, I had lofty plans. A number of guys, a few stand-up broads, a-la the Rat Pack:
However, the lofty plans of mice and men can, well, deflate in the face of reality, schedules and real life. So, in short, the guy trip unraveled, the stand-up broads sat down; you get the drift.
In the end, I realized that I just didn’t want to be responsible for anyone’s good time but my own. Selfish? Yeah. I earned it .. for this one weekend, I get to play.
So, I set my own agenda. Here’s what I wanted to do:
Lofty agenda. Here’s what I did:
All in all, a wonderful trip and the ideal way for me to have spent my mid-life-point birthday.
Original Post: November 1, 2008
June 13, 2011 Leave a comment
If you’ve heard me speak, you know I give a quick example (a diatribe, really) about how the new three little words strikes fear into everyone’s hearts. Those words?
“On the Web“.
I mean pictures, videos, messages of, and about you, on the web. Scary? You bet!
For the record, the old TLW used to be “I love you”. 😛
All that said, here’s some new scary words for you .. far more than three words, though. This came in last week via USPS:
We are writing to let you know that computer tapes containing some of your personal information were lost while being transported to an off-site storage facility by our archive services vendor.
Now, that’s scary. Let’s discuss:
Then:
While we have no reason to believe that this information has been accessed or used inappropriately, we deeply regret that this incident occurred and we wanted to explain the precautionary steps we have taken to help protect you.
Umm:
Then comes some background into the kind of information that was lost; in this case, stockholder information for publicly-traded companies. They didn’t specify which companies, however, I’ve only worked for one publicly-traded company, and that was Microsoft.
Next (this was in bold, by the way):
Please note that while the timing of this notice was affected by our forensic investigation into the nature and scope of this incident, based on information received to date, we have no reason to believe your information has been or will be improperly accessed or misused as a result of this incident.
This is fun now:
“Unbreakable” is a great film in which Samuel L. Jackson plays a physically-challenged cynic. He tells Bruce Willis that when someone has an offer that’s too good to be true it will follow with an ask for a credit card number.
Surprise, surprise. No free lunch, in other words.
Back to my letter. This vendor (yes; it’s from a vendor) doesn’t ask for a CC number .. in fact, they offer a two-year subscription to their usually-for-pay, identity-theft-protection and credit-notification service as a means to repay for their mishandling of my records.
This suddenly raised the question with me: Was my data ever actually lost, or is this just a come-on for their service? I’m a pragmatist, not a cynic .. but I can’t help to think something could be fishy here.
Further, what if their Terms of Service (which, nobody reads anyway) includes an indemnity clause that prevents further action against them if I accept the service. This was one ToS I read very, very carefully. Candidly: the cynic in me was (almost) disappointed that it didn’t. Would have made for a far more interesting post.
Did I sign up? Yes. I did sign up for the free service. Why? Well:
I’ll let you know how it goes.
Original Post: September 28, 2008
June 13, 2011 Leave a comment
.. that you must wear to truly enjoy? I’m thinking:
.. what are you wearing for dinner tonight? 😛
Original Post: August 11, 2008
June 13, 2011 Leave a comment
Long live the newspaper!
Nope .. not like me at all. This is me:
The bulk of the time (even by an overly-optimistic 80/20 rule), the newspaper is irrelevant to me.
So, where is the value of the daily rag? Is it:
Besides hotels, who is buying enough newspapers to keep the industry alive?
In short, no one. Like all businesses facing the power of the Web, newspapers have to adapt, or become extinct.
One way to keep a profitable bottom line is to reduce staff .. but you need to reduce the right staff. With automation, you probably don’t need as many printers, but you need enough folks to run the machinery. This leaves assistants, sales people, managers, editorial staff and reporters .. the latter two being the most critical to maintain content quality.
I’m afraid to ask which groups the newspapers have cut .. there is a site called Newspaper Death Watch with all the latest stats (update to the 2008 version of this post).
As to evolution, the blogosphere is full of “me too” types. Now, I raise my hand: guilty as charged for a 1/3 of my content. Many bloggers just read news and other blogs and then post their opinions about them. In my defense, I post the link either as a supporting story, or I’ll make a glib comment and expect the reader to make the connections that are relevant to them.
However, the “me too” folks need something with which to start, and that something is a news story, captured by a reporter, edited by an editor and published in one form or another. Our news consumption would suffer greatly if we cannot retain / replace the news generated by the newspaper industry.
So .. the problem is not editorial or in content generation, it appears to be in deployment. Can the newspapers afford to race to an all-online model before they run out of dough?
SearchEngineLand posts a detailed commentary of the newspapers’ plight in “Can Newspapers Be Saved?” (2008 reference).
What do you think?
Original Post: August 18, 2008