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Randy Pausch tonite on ABC News (April 9)

I’m off sick today and catching up on mail, whilst the kids are home for spring break.  Mayhem ensues.  


The other day I posted at the top of the things-I’ve-read list the article on “Lessons from Randy Pausch” in Parade, a not-so-trivial piece in the often pop and trivial Sunday paper magazine.  As a follow up, ABC News has a special on tonite, Wednesday, at 10:00PM ET



Professor Randy Pausch’s inspiring last lecture at Carnegie Mellon about living life to the fullest struck a chord with people all over the country. Seven months later, Pausch talks about his battle with cancer, his family and how that last lecture changed his life. Click here to read more.


This from Pausch’s website at CMU…



“I am flattered and embarassed by all the recent attention to my “Last Lecture.” I am told that, including abridged versions, over six million people have viewed the lecture online. The lecture really was for my kids, but if others are finding value in it, that is wonderful. But rest assured; I’m hardly unique. Send your kids to Carnegie Mellon and the other professors here will teach them valuable life lessons long after I’m gone.”


See also Randy Pausch‘s Home Page 


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ZD eSeminar for SMBs on Migrating to Vista

Maybe this is more appropriate for TechNet and the IT Pro community, but here’s an interesting upcoming eSeminars with Aaron Goldberg.  Aaron was at the research firm IDC for many years 15 years, most recently as SVP of Desktop Computing Group.

The eSeminar is Migrating Your SMB to Vista – The Top Things to Know Before You Start

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Windows Vista has created a huge amount of emotional commentary, focusing on a lot of topics, but not nearly enough on what it means to your Small or Medium Sized business. This eSeminar will focus on the real issues that you need to be aware of as you plan your migration. First to identify what the real benefits are for your organization, the top concerns that you need to plan for in terms of making sure it goes smoothly, and what tools and resources are there for you.

[Disclosure: The eSeminar is sponsored by Toshiba Corporation]

Apr 17, 2008
4:00 p.m. Eastern / 1:00 p.m. Pacific
Duration: 60 minutes

Ziff Davis Enterprise – eSeminars

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Lessons from Randy Pausch, and what I’ve read this past week or so

As we get ready for a week off for spring break, I thought it would be good to lead off the with the reading section with this article. Randy Pausch has a piece in today’s weekly Parade, The Lessons I’m Leaving Behind.  It’s adapted from his book The Last Lecture, written with Wall Street Journal reporter Jeffrey Zaslow, and scheduled for release this week.

“At many colleges, professors are asked to give a “last lecture.” In this talk, they ruminate on what matters most to them. As they speak, audiences mull the same question: What wisdom would you impart to the world if you knew it was your last chance?

“Last year, I agreed to give a last lecture at Carnegie Mellon University, where I’m a professor in the computer science department. A few weeks later, I learned that I had only months to live—I was dying of pancreatic cancer.

“I knew I could cancel. I have three young children, I’m married to Jai, the woman of my dreams, and there were so many things to be done. But by speaking, I knew I could put myself in a bottle that would one day wash up on the beach for my children, Dylan, Logan and Chloe. Here’s what I want to share.”

Here are the seven things that matter most to Pausch:

  • Always Have Fun
  • Dream Big — Give yourself permission to dream. Fuel your kids’ dreams too. Once in a while, that might even mean letting them stay up past their bedtimes.
  • Ask for What You Want — More often than you’d suspect, the answer you’ll get is, “Sure.”
  • Dare To Take a Risk — Experience is what you get when you don’t get what you wanted. And it can be the most valuable thing you have to offer.
  • Look for the Best In Everybody
  • Make Time for What Matters — Time is all you have. And you may find one day that you have less than you think.
  • Let Kids Be Themselves

See this link to the article on Parade.

And now, on to the reading list, and then excuse me whilst I go play Guitar Hero II with my boys, after a full weekend of hanging out with them.  CJ, our 7-yr-old, has mastered all songs on Easy and is just finishing Kansas’ Wayward Son.  Have a good week.

Microsoft Finally Makes Things Right — “Three weeks ago I told the tragic tale of Nathaniel, a passionate gamer whose custom Xbox 360 got “cleaned” during an extended stay at the Microsoft repair center… Today brings the final chapter to his story…”

What Makes Customer Satisfaction Research Useful? (IndustryWeek) — Marian Singer, of FiveTwelve Group Ltd. says that “the issue is not whether or not you are getting information about customer satisfaction; it is whether or not you are using information about customer satisfaction to act differently.”

Comcast customer service guru at your service – Inside Bay Area — Rick Germano is SVP of Comcast’s customer operations. In a recent interview with Mercury News Columnist Vindu Goel, Germano discussed Comcast’s efforts to improve every aspect of customer service, from repair and installation visits to billing.

Apple Software Update Includes Safari (John’s Blog – john.jubjubs.net) — Whoops.  “The problem here is that it lists Safari for getting an update — and has the “Install” box checked by default — even if you haven’t ever installed Safari on your PC.”

Help us Neelie! Please, help us! Safari via Apple Software Update (Jesper’s Blog) — Apple has decided to distribute its web browser, Safari, if you installed QuickTime (with no additional options) you will be presented with the dialog noted on Jesper’s Blog.

In 24/7 Web world, some writers blog till they drop (Seattle Times / New York Times) — They work long hours, often to exhaustion. Many are paid by the piece — not garments, but blog posts. This is the digital-era sweatshop. You may know it by a different name: home. MATT RICHTEL The New York Times

Microsoft gives Yahoo a deadline, threatens hostile takeover | Seattle Times Newspaper — Benjamin J. Romano, technology reporter at the Seattle Times, writes today that “Microsoft Chief Executive Steve Ballmer issued an ultimatum to Yahoo’s board of directors on Saturday morning: Agree to our “generous” acquisition proposal within three weeks

U.S. Health Agency Forbids Sensitive Data On Apple MacBooks — Security — InformationWeek — Employees who store medical records on laptops must use systems that run either on Microsoft’s Windows operating system or Linux. By Paul McDougall InformationWeek, April 4, 2008 11:38 AM

Apple patches 11 QuickTime flaws | Zero Day | ZDNet.com — Apple pushed out the latest version of QuickTime and patched 11 vulnerabilities in its third security update of 2008.

Alltop, all the top stories — You can think of an Alltop site as Guy Kawasaki’s new “dashboard,” “table of contents,” or even a “digital magazine rack” of the Internet. To be clear, Alltop sites are starting points — they are not destinations per se… saved by 1457 other people

Public face of Windows Vista leaves Microsoft (Betanews) — By Nate Mook, BetaNews, April 3, 2008 — Nick White left MS… sad. BetaNews calls Nick “the man who became the public face for Windows Vista — and often bore the brunt of criticism directed at the OS — through blog posts and community events has resigned.

Comcast swaps HD quality for quantity (BetaNews) — By Jacqueline Emigh, BetaNews, April 2, 2008 — To carve out room for more HD channels, Comcast has now made the decision to sacrifice on the side of quality. But will customers, already hesitant to pay extra for HD content packages, accept this compromise?

Aztec math code is cracked (Los Angeles Times / Seattle Times) — By Alan Zarembo, Los Angeles Times — “It has long been a mystery of Aztec arithmetic: What is three arms plus five bones? Now researchers know: Five hearts.”

Microsoft Announces Extended Availability of Windows XP Home for ULCPCs — Here’s a Q&A with Michael Dix, General Manager of Windows Client Product Management — April 3, 2008 – Today Microsoft announced the worldwide extension of the availability of Windows XP Home for an emerging, new class of mobile personal computers commonly known as ultra-low-cost PCs, or ULCPCs.  Also see Windows XP to get reprieve for low-cost laptops on Yahoo! News

Ars Book Review: “Here Comes Everybody” by Clay Shirky: Shirky contends that the really big impacts are still to come, as these technologies spread to our less geeky relatives, friends, and neighbors.

Windows Mobile 6.1 Phones – Reviews by PC Magazine — Looking to upgrade your Windows Mobile smartphone? These six handsets are the first ones to sport Microsoft’s new and improved mobile OS. by Sascha Segan, April 2, 2008

Mobile Media Mavens – Reviews by PC Magazine — Tired of carrying a dedicated digital music player? Want to watch TV and movies on your phone? These are the handsets to get. by Jamie Lendino

The Strategy of the Fighter Pilot | Fast Company — By: Keith H. Hammonds, Business is a dogfight. Your job as a leader: Outmaneuver the competition, respond decisively to fast-changing conditions, and defeat your rivals. That’s why the OODA loop, the brainchild of “40 Second” Boyd… saved by 25 other people

Microsoft vs. Apple: Who patches zero-days faster? (computerworld) — Apple’s teasing commercials that imply its software is safer than Microsoft’s may not quite match the facts, according to new research revealed at the Black Hat conference on Thursday by researchers from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology…

Experiencing the goodness that is Windows Mobile 6.1 (The Windows Experience Blog) — Brandon covers the upgrades to Windows Mobile 6.1 – he has “had the pleasure of running around with Windows Mobile 6.1 on my Samsung BlackJack II for the last few weeks and would like to share some notable improvements and new features…”

Panoramic Stitches from Around the Pacific Northwest (The Windows Experience Blog) — Brandon loves panoramic stitching. He did a little roadtrip and created several super panoramic stitches (Grand Coulee Dam, Dry Falls, Seattle, etc). Check it out.

Substance Abuse: Debunking a bogus claim about Clinton’s legislative record (Newsweek.com) — Jess Henig of Newsweek (Apr 1, 2008) looks at “a misleading e-mail has been making the rounds, alleging that Clinton has fewer legislative accomplishments than Obama, and that they are less substantive.

Lawmaker seeks end to daylight savings (Herald Tribune Florida) — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Published Sunday, March 30, 2008 at 4:30 a.m. — TALLAHASSEE — One Florida lawmaker wants to end the annual rites of springing forward and falling back. State Sen. Bill Posey wants the state to stop using daylight-saving time.

Home Server Hacks: Add a 500 or 750 GB Hard Drive to your Windows Home Server — Microsoft MVP Donavon West asks: “Want more backup and shared storage capacity for your WHS? It’s quick, easy and relatively inexpensive to add a 500 or 750 GB hard drive to your HP EX470/475 Home Server.”

BetaNews | How big is your ‘environmental footprint?’ asks Xerox — by Michael Hatamoto, BetaNews March 26, 2008, 3:57 PM Xerox has created new “Sustainability Calculator” software that allows customer businesses to evaluate the impact of their printers, copiers, and other devices from any manufacturer…

Wowio : Download Copyrighted eBooks for Free. Legally. | MakeUseOf.com — If you’re comfortable with reading books on a monitor or mobile phone, this site might be for you. Wowio lets you legally download copyrighted ebooks from leading publishers for free. These include works of classic literature, varirty of college textbooks and more.

BetaNews | How does the US really rank in broadband access? — By Jacqueline Emigh, BetaNews, March 24, 2008 — In numbers that differ markedly from those cited by the US government and other sources, the European Commission is reporting that eight European countries all have higher household broadband deployment…

Hidden Value In Customer Calls — Customer Call Centers — InformationWeek — Companies are using call-center apps to learn more about customers By Rick Whiting InformationWeek August 12, 2002 12:00 AM (From the August 12, 2002 issue)

Unintended Consequences of Overlooking the Obvious with Technology

Comcast accuses FCC of impotence | The Register — Comcast has told the chairman of US Federal Communications Commission that he has no legal right to prevent the company from busting BitTorrents.

A Conversation with Michael Gerber (businessweek) — March 24, 2008 — The small business guru and best-selling author argues that anyone can become an entrepreneur.

Microsoft’s Ultimate Extras overhyped, users underwhelmed — By TODD BISHOP, P-I REPORTER — A Microsoft plan to reward some of its most enthusiastic Windows users has instead frustrated them by falling short of its promise. The company acknowledges the problem, says it ran into unexpected complications and vows to

Smoothing the Way for Web Video — Live streaming video still has its fair share of hiccups, but the industry is working to ensure the supply of bandwidth keeps up with demand by Peter Burrows

Miro – Reviews and free Miro downloads at Download.com — You can subscribe to channels of Internet video, download videos, and watch them full screen, one after the other, all in one application. Internet video becomes Internet TV.

How Apple Got Everything Right By Doing Everything Wrong — Wired, By Leander Kahney 03.18.08 — “Jobs’ fabled attitude toward parking reflects his approach to business: For him, the regular rules do not apply. Everybody is familiar with Google’s famous catchphrase, “Don’t be evil.” It has become a shorthand mission statement for Silicon Valley, encompassing a variety of ideals that — proponents say — are good for business and good for the world: Embrace open platforms. Trust decisions to the wisdom of crowds. Treat your employees like gods. It’s ironic, then, that one of the Valley’s most successful companies ignored all of these tenets.”

Corporate employee blogs: Lawsuits waiting to happen? | Tech news blog – CNET News.com

Customer Experience Management Conference – Mar 27-28, 2008 — At The Conference Board’s 2008 Customer Experience Management Conference, industry leaders will reveal how they have created customer centric organizations that deliver results.

(Current to end of March.)

Tags: misc, articles, what I read, Randy Pausch.

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Sometimes the the best service is no service, but better self-service

A link to Sun? Are you kidding?  Nope, not when it’s a reference to Guy Kawasaki and his interview with Bill Price, as they talk about the customer self-service experience…

There are a few people that immediately come to mind when you think of evangelism and customer service.  Guy Kawasaki is one of those folks, and in a special blog he has running on Sun’s site, Guy Kawasaki on Innovations, Guy recently spoke with Bill Price, Amazon.com’s first Global VP of Customer Service.

Guy’s regular digital stomping ground includes http://www.guykawasaki.com/ among others, and includes a reference to the interview with Price here.  Guy has a new web service, alltop.com — you must check out this new Internet “digital magazine rack” — and the company behind it, Nononina (what is this, some reference to the robot on the old Japanese anime Ulysses 31?), which is also behind another Guy site, truemors.com.

In short, Guy is just freakin’ everywhere, as always. 😉

Now, back to our regular programme.

Guy asked, “Why is “the best service is no service”?

Customers don’t want to call their bank or email their online retailer if something’s confusing or if there’s an error–instead, everything should work perfectly in the first place… We need to reduce the rate of contacts by eliminating dumb contacts entirely, offering engaging self-service and being proactive, delivering great customer experiences when things do break down, and only then to deliver great customer experiences.”

And which were Price’s selections when asked what web sites are “good examples of self-service”?

“Alaska Airlines, Amazon, CheckFree, Citibank Card, eBay, First Direct, USAA, and Zappos are all doing a fine job in web-based self-service–what we like to call “engaging self-service” This requires that (a) customers don’t have to call or email or open a chat session to finish their order or ask about something; and (b) the companies listens to the customer’s requests and, if possible, eliminates the needs entirely.”

Read also his steps that a company can take to fix service problems in the full interview in the Sun blog, Guy Kawasaki on Innovation.

Tags: Guy Kawasaki, Customer Service, Bill Price.

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There’s is a connection between end-of-the-week meetings, Ego and Dr. Oz (what a collection)

Sometimes I dread the last meeting of the work week, the one that comes between you and the mad dash home to kick off the weekend.  But sometimes, the meeting is worth the investment.

That last meeting of the week, the one you accept as your calendar has been full all week with meetings, reviews, PowerPoint decks, Excel spreadsheets, Outlook email and more email… I must admit that I often block the last part of my day on the last work day of the week just to get through the balance of the mail I receive.  Sometimes meetings are scheduled and there’s no chance to decline, and on top of that, you may not relish the topic… more so when it has to do with legal, finance, corporate strategy, compliance… or all the above on those rare “perfect storm” occasions. 

But yesterday’s last-meeting-of-the-week was an exception, and the discussion on topics that of real importance was worth going overtime.  (When you have school age children, my advice to be mindful of how and when you do this… a school night is not a good time to do this when you’ve kids to get off to bed.)

A follow up to our positive discussion was a note on willingness to help, partner, and ego… and the need to keep ego in check.  (My thought is that ego runs deep at many levels, and it inspires me to see that we have people in senior leadership who keep theirs in check.)  I was reminded that the book…

“… “A New Earth” by Eckhart Tolle… talks about being ego-less (and several other good things)…  I am on chapter 6 and I like it a lot.  You may find it interesting in case you get a chance to read.”

Thanks for the recommendation.

I do, on occasion, get a spare moment here and there to read, having just finished “The Five Dysfunctions of a Team” by Patrick M. Lencioni – a good read (thanks, Carol).  I’ve read Death by Meeting and The Five Temptations of a CEO, and the Five Dysfunctions is not to be missed.  What is it about the number five that has Lencioni so enthralled? 😉

As for ego, the link was appreciated.  I’m not one to lean towards the ideals that Eckhart Tolle traditionally writes, but I found excerpts of a couple of “New Earth” classes run thus far on Oprah.com were time well spent.  (Yes, there are some men in this world that watch Oprah, as you can see for yourself here, as Dr. Oz Takes Over The Oprah Winfrey Show.)  I’ve not made the time or had the inclination to participate live in the online classes, but the recordings are available here available here on Oprah.com.

Not available in Windows Media Format, but the QuickTime files are viewable on PCs and Macs with Apple’s player.  And contrary to popular belief, you don’t have to install Safari as many have noted in the blogoshpere recently (but you do have to click ‘no’ quite often… 😉  including this post by Martin LaMonica

“A lot of people appear to be bent out of shape about Apple using its auto-update service to distribute the Safari Web browser on Windows. The CEO of Mozilla, which makes the rival Firefox browser, calls it bad business.

“In a blog on Friday, Mozilla CEO John Lilly criticized Apple’s practice, uncovered this week, of offering iTunes and QuickTime users Safari 3.1 on Windows through the Apple Software Update pop-up. “

(Whatever your media and browser preference, enjoy the QuickTime file downloads of the videos.)

So next time you’re considering declining that 4:00PM Friday meeting, think again.  As quoted in Forrest Gump, “You never know what you’re gonna get.”

One additional note: although Lencioni’s Amazon blog doesn’t have a recent, there is this excerpt from a post made over the Christmas holidays last year…

“Now, any one of these things [that you’d like to give your employees… that will outlast any cookie basket or gift certificate or desk accessory you can order on-line] would make a nice management gift, but together they become the most important quality any person yearns for in their jobs: fulfillment. Without them, employees cannot help but become miserable.

“By beginning the process—and it is certainly a process—of removing anonymity, irrelevance and immeasurement from the work lives of your employees, you will be giving your people a gift that will last far beyond this wonderful season, and that will impact their families and friends in profound, life-changing ways.”

Download the A New Earth Web Classes

Tags: Oprah, New Earth, whack, How to, ego, misc, articles, what I read.