Wednesday, December 2, 2009
Best New Application for Building your Personal Brand - Magntize
In minutes, I set up a site that's attractive, easily navigated and personal. The result? It's all about me (my skills, contact information, photo, blog feed, twitter feed, links to sites), here: http://appswhisperer.com.
It's a needed solution to a problem most of us have, and it's free. What's not to like?
Thursday, October 29, 2009
Adventures in PC Repair
The problem progressed until the PC would stay up and running for only an hour, before shutting down. So, I ran through all the usual troubleshooting tricks:
- chkdsk
- defrag
- update MS Windows
- antivirus/spam/malware scan
- full backup
- reinstall MS Windows XP OS
Ok, I thought, this is a problem I can fix. I opened the laptop, and 47 miniature phillips-head screws later, removed the culprit - the heatsink fan. With a model number in hand, I found a (refurbished) replacement part online. I could tell it was refurbished because, when it arrived, it was dusty and cobwebby. But, no matter, I was assured by the vendor that this was a functioning fan.
So, another hour and something less than 47 miniature phillips-head screws later, I had reassembled the laptop enough that I could plug it in and test the fan, but without the pesky cover, keyboard and bezel in place (I needed to see that it worked).
It didn't. The fan, I mean. But the laptop happily booted up. Then shut down.
A scientist by training, I propose a theory, test it, refine, rinse and repeat until a solution is found. That said, the problem could only be heat-related.
What to do? Move the test lab to the kitchen, where I had access to a butter knife and two packages of frozen peas.
I placed the butter knife under the fan (under the printed circuit board) and against the metal heat sink, while balancing the handle between the bags of frozen peas.
Voila! The laptop happily booted up, I was able to connect to the wireless network and I had a functioning laptop again. The PC continues to work, so long as I keep the peas and butter knife configuration - without that, it's more of an art piece than anything else.
Friday, October 2, 2009
Upcoming posts
- Adventures in PC repair
- "I don't want to die in a car with you"
- Thoughtful articles:
- NY Times: Understanding the Anxious Mind
- Caring for Your Introvert - Applications I can't live without:
- Gimp (open source photo capture/editor)
- threadsy
- twitter
- facebook
- hulu
Thursday, September 24, 2009
This is What Technical Writers Do
Tuesday, August 11, 2009
Everything is a Project
Don't believe me? Consider something you need to do:
- Bake a cake
- Buy a computer
- Build a website, marketing program, API, CMS, HRIS, UX, SOA, etc.
- Break it down into manageable parts
- Do each bit in a reasonable time
- Ask for help if you get stuck
- Time marches on
- Resources are people [, tools or $$$]
- Work hard, play hard
Thursday, August 6, 2009
Book Review: Julie & Julia
Monday, July 27, 2009
Living vicariously through others' Twitter lives...
Saturday, July 11, 2009
Speak Truth to Power
So, have the conversation. A calm, thoughtful, fierce conversation. Be honest with yourself. Use this format:
Then take a breath, and wait. As long as it takes, just wait, calmly and unemotionally, wait for your feedback to sink in. What *should* happen is that the person hears you, your feedback, and is open to making adjustments going forward. You might be pleasantly surprised, and motivated to have these kinds of open discussions with other people in your life.
That said, be prepared for a verbal blow up...if it goes badly, you really need to move on - this is a toxic environment and cannot be saved...run away!
Friday, June 12, 2009
STC Kerfuffle!
It’s an active group; daily posts might be from newbies wanting career advice, other posts ask for references about the best tools to use, sometimes we have those trivial “how do I say it?” conversations, dotting i’s and crossing t’s, which can be fun, too. And the members are great – they mentor very well and collaborate to answer any question, solve problems or recommend resources.
And yet…all hell broke loose this week, when the listserv admin suggested that, to improve communications and possibly save money for the funding-challenged STC, we move the listserv to a social networking site, like Ning. The flurry of opposing messages was astounding – the change-averse gnomes spoke out, saying that such a move could not be successful, because:
- It’s not email
- Access is restricted from work
- Social networking is not professional
- Takes too much time and effort
- It’s yet another account to manage, another thing to learn
- Too trendy, no privacy
Tuesday, April 14, 2009
Illusion and Control
As a geek and a fan of sci fi, I often amuse myself by drawing parallels between real life situations and my favorite TV shows...remember the pilot episode of Star Trek (the one with not-James Kirk)?
The situation:
Let's say that you spend a lot of time managing your staff, telling them how to get work done, making them do the work over because it isn't the way you wanted it and getting frustrated at how impossible the situation is...it never gets better, and you're overworked, having to handle the load. It's a shame that they can't benefit from your experience and wisdom - how ungrateful they are!
Sound familiar? The hard truth is that you are a micromanager. Really. The good news is, you can't help it - it's how you're wired, and nobody blames you...(well, I don't, anyway).
A solution:
Eventually, this behavior is brought to your attention (by a friend, Human Resources, whatever), and being such an evolved and emotionally mature person, you accept this feedback and decide to take action.
As a newly self-aware person, you understand that, while it's OK to believe that folks are doing it all wrong, it's not OK to share this insight. You learn that, while you cannot change what you believe, you can change your behavior.
With this new understanding, you back off, and let your folks figure out what works for them. Your new plan of operation:
- set achievable goals and deadlines for staffers
- ask for (and listen to) feedback
- remove roadblocks to support staff efficiency
Moral of the story:
Whether you are a manager or supervisor, if you have the ability to affect the work life of anyone in your organization, it is important to remember that, like the Talosians in Star Trek: The Cage, it is important to maintain the illusion of control.
Not a Star Trek fan? Here's the non-geek Moral of the story:
Give your staffers control (or the illusion of control) over things that affect how they work. Do they need...better status updates...fewer meetings...blue pens?
Ask them what they need to be effective - gather their requirements. They'll usually tell you things you never expect to hear. Things that cost you little, and reap big benefits.
Thursday, April 9, 2009
Change is Good...right?
- check in often to keep everyone in the loop
- a whiteboard mock-up is more reassuring than a multiple-page email
- be comfortable saying, "...I/we don't know yet..."
- listen and accept all forms of feedback (good, bad or otherwise)
Tuesday, March 10, 2009
Why do we need tech writers?
http://blogs.siliconvalley.com/gmsv/2009/03/odds-are-shell-have-a-full-dance-card-at-the-laureates-ball.html
Elsewhere in the wide world of science:
* This is almost as embarrassing as KFC misplacing the specs for its 11 secret herbs and spices. The U.S. National Nuclear Security Administration needs to refurbish the aging warheads on Trident missiles to make sure they remain safe and reliable, but the program has been set back a year, at an additional cost of $69 million, because http://www.sundayherald.com/news/heraldnews/display.var.2494129.0.0.php the agency has lost track of the recipe for a key ingredient, a mysterious but very hazardous material codenamed Fogbank. The secret sauce is thought to be a foamy, explosive solvent cleaning agent (hey, I could use one of those sometimes) that plays a key role between the fission and fusion stages of a thermonuclear bomb. Unfortunately, the last batch was made some 20 years ago, and in the interim, not only was the sole production facility torn down, but, according to a GAO report, “NNSA had lost knowledge of how to manufacture the material because it had kept few records of the process when the material was made in the 1980s, and almost all staff with expertise on production had retired or left the agency.”
Doh! A new production facility has been built but work on recreating the recipe continues.
Saturday, January 31, 2009
Meeting expectations and understanding requirements
Tuesday, January 6, 2009
Perpetual ambiguity and a tourist on the roundabout
Don't get me wrong, in my own little world, ambiguity happens - it's part of the creative process, and for me, it serves as a necessary transition between starting a project and choosing a course of action. It's how I evaluate options, put a plan together and get work done.
That's not to say the plan won't change, it's just that, with ambiguity tamed, clarity reigns, and in this period I'm most effective: I analyze, prioritize, design, prototype, test and do it again, until the goal is met. When circumstances change, new goal(s) are defined and we get to start the process again, building on what we've learned and becoming more efficient.
I count on my organization to set achievable goals, to define:
- what we're doing
- why it's needed
- when it's needed
- who's the audience
That's not so much to ask, is it?
When an organization insists that ambiguity is the norm, I get a bad feeling...no good can come from perpetual ambiguity.
Without clear goals, ambiguity in the workplace is the time between decisions...sort of like a roundabout on the way to a completed project. And who wants to be the tourist on the roundabout?