Friday, October 11, 2013

The Secret of Facebook security...

The secret of Facebook privacy is to not post things you want hide from others, don't post pictures that you don't want everyone to see, and don't post information you do not want to be publicly viewable. 

That makes it so easy.  If you are worried about keeping things from one group and only showing others you might be living multiple lives for different people. Not healthy. 

Remember Facebook is an activity, not a lifestyle. 

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Try again and drive it home

Iron sharpens iron, but also consider hammer on thumb brings focus to nail.

Mistakes and errors can happen (your new sore thumb), but that setback can bring new focus to the thing you are aiming for (the nail).

Try again and drive it home.

Saturday, September 21, 2013

So what are the new skills? #1



So what are the new skills?  #1
When applying for a job, future employers are looking for some type of descriptive of what are your skills.  The same is true when going to school, acting as a volunteer or other task.  So besides your perceptive skills of various types, what are your computer skills?  How are you when it comes to technology? In general, what are your tech skills?

Around twenty years ago the term “computer literate” became a term that was used to describe if you could sit down at a computer and do something with it.  At the turn of the millennium, the PC explosion was on its rise and in the work place as well as home computers became the central tool to operate to perform many or most job functions.  Being computer literate became a much bigger term and a much more important skill in the work place.

Enter in 2013 and technology is infused into everything.  Apps are everywhere, and the modern smart phone has more power than a late 1980’s Packard Bell does.  Computer literate has been out run by the need to be tech savvy.  No longer does computer skills count as a bonus as everyone from pre-school toddler to the elderly us computers like previous generations used to use the radio and television. Computer skills are just assumed these days.

Back when, in the 1990’s, being able to be fluent in DOS, able to install software in Windows 3. 1, and able to work with software applications such as Lotus 1-2-3, Word Perfect, and Netscape was  considered pretty lofty and you were probably the local guru.  If you could attach and setup a SCSI scanner and work with editing pictures, you were in the top 90%.  

Today working with spreadsheets, word processors, and using the internet are given skills.  Plug and play that works along with USB has replace the need to be a hardware guru.  Editing pictures, five year olds can crop pictures and use editors.  

So what are the new skills?  We will explore that. First enjoy Kim Komando explain what a computer is and what it can do.  We have come a long way baby.  




Saturday, September 7, 2013

Making something ... making yourself....

Lately I have had several conversations with people where we were discussing how so and so has really made something out of themselves. These were all folks who had less than desirable circumstances or simply have really worked harder than everyone else around them. They have made something out of themselves.

The Occasional Guru would like to point out that successful people make themselves... they make themselves do a whole lot of things that take them past average and beyond the norm.

It may not always be pleasant, popular, or fun, but do you make yourself do the necessary to be extraordinary?

Cheers if you do.

Sunday, September 1, 2013

Programmers - We Are the Misunderstood



Programmers are a misunderstood lot.  In a non-tech company, a few folks in Information Technology who are the “programmers” or “developers” usually are at their desks looking at screens with ear buds in and generally are looking not very productive.  Who are these folks and what do they do?    

We are the misunderstood.  Most of the time we can really make a difference if others not perceive our profession and skill in certain ways.  I write this blog for many reasons but mostly so that we can, all do a bit better in home, work, and life.  We need to get more quality work done and at the same time point less fingers in general.  

Here are a couple of thoughts from a person who has put his ten thousand hours in at least over in software development and systems design. 
·         Excellent software is excellent to the core, data, and code.  It takes exponentially more time to write excellent software. It is also exponentially more difficult to develop excellent software. If you want excellence, expect it to take time.  And usually more time than is ever allowed.
·         A top-notch senior level programmer will have a higher bar for quality and excellence most every other person in the company, and that especially includes their managers most of the time.
·         If you badger programmers for status updates and bother them because you want something, you can expect less than excellent back from the programmer. You are killing their ability for excellence.
·         The majority of business requirements for software is good.  The majority of programming specifications by non-programmers (technical does not count as programmer) are rubbish.  I have never received a single programming spec that worked from inception to development to implementation except for one.  That was last week.  I might frame it and put it next to my diploma.  It is rarer than Bigfoot swimming in Loch Ness.  

We the programmers are miss understood. We want to deliver excellence and the best software possible.  However, this is a team world we live in.  It is also a competitive world that is starving for excellence.  Be on team excellence.

-          Mike

Saturday, January 26, 2013

Sharpen that saw: How to Spot the Five-Tool Superstar

Highly recommended from the Guru:

How to Spot the Five-Tool Superstar

I meet so many smart and talented folks who learn one or two tools and their motive of operation (found by actions speaking louder than resume words) is to milk them out and wail them around for a career.  Frankly in my book, those days are over. Happy job hunting.

Please read and apply twice daily.  And keep that saw sharp.

Mike

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Sunday, January 13, 2013

Distruption - A Tad More Sage Career Advice

Disruption - Knowing what it is and what it does provides a tad bit of career advice at knowing what is sometimes called "help" or "ideas" is often disruption.  Having that good idea that is a real time saver or a better way to do something my seem like good input and both a boost for your future boon and for the betterment for all involved.

Now what makes this sage career advice is knowing that in most locations in a career path disruptions are not welcome.  Oh no they are not. It might be the million dollar fix, but in the workplace which is still factory method minded that it is keep quite, do more, and don't buck the system.  After all those above you know all and see all.

Now with a smirk we know that great ideas can come from anywhere and even the simplest suggestion can be a winner.  Genius knows no boundaries.  But ideas are disruptions and can pull the stop cord on a forward moving train.  Is that what you want to be remembered for?  I thought so.

If you have an idea, and it is a good one, then it can sprout, and grow roots or wings waiting until the time when a disruption is best accepted and handled.  It might take some time and patience, but you probably have not been hired to be disruptive, but to be productive. But in the right time and place, that hiccup that you introduce to improve life and humanity for all in your workplace world will forge a revolution, or maybe just a improvement.

Sage career advice, be productive first, disruptive later.  Its all good.

- Mike

Thursday, January 3, 2013

Google+ and Facebook, etc.... Remember two things...

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887324731304578193781852024980.html?mod=WSJ_hpp_LEFTTopStories

Hey kids, remember two things....

1. If you post, email, or do anything online, it's public.  If you don't want it public.  Don't post it.

2. Social Networking is business first, and always first.  Then it's social networking.

- Mike