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In Wired: Be your own digital DJ

With apologies to Beck,  Eliot Van Buskirk at Wired has an article “Two MP3s and a Microphone” which outlines the basics and provides a rudimentary step-by-step guide of being a digital DJ…



“Instead, I want to address anyone with a bunch of digital music who might like to start “spinning” music at parties, bars, weddings and the like. I use the term “spinning” here instead of “DJ,” as in “spinning records” (laptop hard drives also spin, for the record), because the term “DJ” should only apply to those who have the above-mentioned skills. The techniques mentioned below take so many computer-assisted shortcuts that anyone can get going in a matter of minutes no matter what kind of music they’re into.”


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For fun: Blue Angels over Lake Washington today

There’s something about some high-powered aircraft buzzing a couple of hundred feet over your house, followed by an amazing boom. The Navy’s Blue Angels performed (click for pic) this weekend for Seafair and the show was great. We took our boys to see them live down at the local beach and then saw the show this afternoon on TV.


Just awesome.


(The offical site for the Angels is here.)


Added 080706: You can also find royalty-free, hi-res photos of the Blue Angels on the Navy’s Photo Site… one example of the Blue Angels in formation is here.

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Please, it’s not “Googled” but “run a Google search”

Frank Ahrens of The Washington Post writes today (registration required, also picked up in the Seattle Times) that “Google goes the extra mile and provides a helpful list of appropriate and inappropriate uses of its name.”



“In July, The Washington Post and other media outlets noted that “google” had entered Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary. It was a landmark for the search engine, going from nonentity to common usage in only eight years.


“One would think a company that existed only in the minds of two college dudes a few years ago would be happy that The Post and other media outlets prominently marked the occasion.


“One would, until one got a letter from Google’s trademark lawyer.


“Google, evidently, took offense to a passage in The Post article: “Google, the word, now takes its place alongside the handful of proper nouns that have moved beyond a particular product to become descriptors of an entire sector — generic trademarks.”


It’s difficult to imagine Google employees on the Mountain View campus saying “I ran a Google search to check out that guy from the party.” (This is an excerpt from the letter from Google’s trademark lawyer, sent to The Washington Post.)


I wonder if Google was as diligent when David Sheff of Playboy met with the founders in 2004 or Lesley Stahl’s interview on CBS’ 60 Minutes in 2005? Perhaps Google should also send a letter to their finance group, as the term is also used without rebuke (as included in the above Sheff article) in their own S-1 Registration Statement. 


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How to complain (and get results)

Thanks to the associate who sent the link this morning to the article in today’s Seattle Times, “Firing of an e-mail? Make sure of your aim,” which offers a look at how an email exchange that lacks clarity can raise someone’s ire. (This in response to my blog posting yesterday on emailing Steve Jobs.)


I have seen my share of letters and emails on various issues and problems (even some notes of appreciation), some that are forwarded to me by execs to be routed to the right people in the product groups. I thought about what goes into a good email or snail mail note.


So here are a few tips I thought of this morning while the kids were happily eating their breakfasts and watching mindless cartoons.


Title your email appropriately. If you’re sending an email, make the subject clear and easy to understand, something like “REQUEST: Problem with Contoso Application” or include important info like “Customer Support: Ref#123456” if you have an open service request. 


Keep it to one page, two at most (front and back). I recently received a letter which was five or six pages and it took a while to piece together what the person was asking for in their message. For email, you want the main issue and message in the first couple of paragraphs (We often say at the office that you need to make your message clear in the first “pane” of the mail window, getting the reader’s attention when they open the mail or see the preview.) If you do go longer than one page, use the back of the sheet as it’s easy to lose stapled or paperclipped pages.


Be clear on who you are, what the problem is, why you’re writing and what you want. One snail mail I forwarded on to one product team was a good example: the first paragraph briefly explained about the person writing the note, the second noted the problem, the third listed out the actions to date and the fourth and final paragraph clearly called out what the customer wanted us to do about it.


Include links or pointers to more information. So many people these days detail the issues they’ve run into and the hurdles they’ve run up against to get some help on their blogs and newsgroups, so take a moment and include an online reference. More and more companies these days have people who monitor the Web and popular newsgroups for feedback, often treating these as online, early warning systems. On MSDN and TechNet, the blogs and the feedback they generate are often good coalmine canaries.


Include the best ways for the company to contact you. If you send an email, many will assume that email is the best way. Be sure to include your email address in the body of your message, as it can sometimes be lost when notes are forwarded or printed. And include your address and phone number.


Sending it off: OK, you’ve written the message, now where do you send it? If you’re looking for help on one of Microsoft’s many products that you purchased for your PC, start your search on http://support.microsoft.com/, your first stop on getting the help you need with your Microsoft products. Microsoft provides two support requests submitted online (by email or IM chat) or by phone at no charge (see the support page for detail). See also a previous previous blog entry that includes several links to online assistance.


If that doesn’t work, look on MSDN and TechNet for people from the product teams and I’ve found that most if not all are very responsive and welcome feedback via their blogs and online forums. For instance, there’s the Product Solution Center on our Support Site and Office has the Office Discussion Group to “ask questions, share information, or exchange ideas with others, including experts from around the globe.” Xbox has the Xbox online support center and lists out their Top Troubleshooting Articles. I also like Blake’s “Ultimate List” of Microsoft Software and resources: we could certainly benefit by maintaining such a page.


If you feel like you’ve exhausted all avenues, escalate to your last contact’s manager or look for an appropriate contact via the Web: we list out information for our sales offices worldwide, our corporate headquarters and our executives.


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Gotta problem with your Mac? Email Steve Jobs

In his post this week “When bad customer service turns good,” Ted Lee highlights how when he sent his fairly new Macbook Pro in for service, techs promised it would be back by the end of this week. When that wasn’t happening due to a missing part, this intrepid blogger/customer took matters into his own hands…



“In a fit of desperation, I fired off an email to Apple’s executive team and detailed my problem. I was realistic in my requested, and only asked that they do something to get my laptop back to me by Friday Aug 4. By the close of Wednesday, I hadn’t heard anything and resigned myself to plan B. I was going to have to buy a Macbook to have something during the trip, and when I returned, I would unload it on eBay and take whatever hit in price that I needed to.


“Today I got a call from a man from Apple who identified himself as Steve Job’s personal assistant. Jobs had gotten my email and instructed his assistant to make the necessary calls to get my laptop fixed and returned back to me in time for WWDC. His assistant also mentioned that Steve found my line about “going to WWDC without a laptop is like going to war with a bannana” funny. Ha. I made Steve Jobs laugh today. How about that.”


What I particularly liked about this was that the writer noted that when you’re running into a wall on support, you can usually get the help and assistance you need when you keep a level head, hold back on being nasty to the person on the other end of the line, and make sure to escalate up the food chain when needed. You may not need to contact the chairman’s office in order to get the problem resolved, but it’s nice to know in some cases that the approach works. I know that I’ve had my share of emails and letters sent from execs who were contacted by customers frustrated by one thing or another.


We employ systems internally and through our partners to provide assistance with software bugs and problems with product functionality, feedback loops for collecting suggestions on product features, business issues and other things that come up from time to time. There’s also new systems employed by Windows Vista in the Windows Feedback Platform as an extension of Windows Error Reporting as found in Windows XP.


And yes, even feedback sent to the execs makes it in to these systems, so we can resolve the issue and (hopefully) learn from it.