• Better meetings

    Here’s an amazing resource for leading good meetings.

    Meetings aims or purposes should be at the top of every agenda. These are the key decisions that must be made or actions that must occur at the meeting. If you aren’t clear on aims and purposes, don’t meet.

    All so you can avoid this :o).


  • Death and music

    The New York Times profiles Frank Minyard, a 76-year old New Orleans coroner known for marching in funeral processions wearing a white suit and plays jazz the trumpet.

    At 76, on the brink of a retirement that was supposed to combine oyster dinners at his favorite restaurants with a simple life on his cattle farm on the north shore of Lake Pontchartrain, Dr. Minyard has found himself living in an R.V. on the grounds of a temporary federal morgue in St. Gabriel, a small town just outside Baton Rouge, grappling with the still-increasing death toll, the bewildering red tape and the urgent calls of bereaved families.

    In the kind of twist that might strike New Orleanians as perfectly natural, their coroner began his medical career as an obstetrician. Before that, he was a tall, blue-eyed pretty boy: a lifeguard in the summers and, once, second runner-up in a Mr. New Orleans bodybuilding contest. During medical school, he said, he spent his summers in New York City giving “nightlife tours.”

    By the late 1960’s, Dr. Minyard had a successful practice, a family, a tennis court and a swimming pool, beside which he was sitting one day when he heard Peggy Lee singing, “Is that all there is?”

    “Prior to that I was very selfish, like most young doctors and lawyers and dentists,” said Dr. Minyard, who gave up his private medical practice soon after he became coroner. “I was just trying to get the Cadillac and the country club membership.”

    However inexpert his playing, Dr. Minyard became devoted to jazz, and soon he was sitting in with the venerated Olympia Brass Band and hiring musicians as morgue assistants to help them make ends meet. In his first year as coroner, he was arrested while playing in the French Quarter to protest a crackdown on street musicians.


  • Quote

    Increasingly, people seem to view complexity as sophistication, which is baffling – the incomprehensible should cause suspicion rather than admiration.
    Niklaus Wirth


  • Suicide PowerPoint Presentation

    Once again The Onion nails it, in this storysatire of an office worker who commits suicide and leaves a PowerPoint presentation rather than a note for his co-workers:

    Butler broke his presentation into four categories: Assessment Of Current Situation, Apologies & Farewells, Will & Funeral Arrangements, and Final Thoughts.

    According to Williams+Kennedy president Bradford Williams, finalgoodbye.ppt was “clear, concise, and persuasive.”

    Did I mention that all our work is a PowerPoint Free Zone?


  • Art, chickens and sharks

    Yesterday I visited Marketenderiet, a seriously hip meeting- and event venue in Copenhagen. On one of the walls, I saw this wonderful painting of a chicken with a shark fin strapped on it’s back.

    Which immediately reminded me of the corresponding cast iron sculpture I saw at the Danish National Art Museum a while back. That just HAS to be the same artist.

    Great art! And it made me laugh :o)


  • Open source fun

    Does it matter whether IT people have fun at work? Autrijus Tang thinks it does, so when he set up the Pugs Open Source project, he had an explicit goal: Optimize for fun. The results are clear: More people get involved in the project, their work is of a high standard and they’re more creative.

    Of course, this should come as no surprise. As any cognitive science expert will tell you, fun is a great way to focus the mind. Developers that aren’t enjoying themselves will slow down, write buggy code, make poor decisions, and eventually leave the project (even one that pays). Conversely, rampant fun will bring coders in droves, and give them a passion for their work that shows in quality, quantity, and goodwill. It’s a pretty good bet that optimizing for fun will produce a better product than almost any other method.

    Here are the main thoughts of Autrijus on the subject (translated from geek-speak – sometimes it pays, having been a geek myself):
    * Make fun your primary goal
    * Embrace anarchy
    * Avoid deadlocks
    * Cast responsibility far and wide
    * Working code is more fun than mere ideas
    * Build a rich, supportive community
    * Excitement and learning are infectious

    Damn, that guy’s good!

    Read the whole article here.


  • You have time

    What a weird and wonderful idea: A daily planner spanning not one year but 82 years – the average life expectancy of people in the western world. Look how thick that thing is! So what exactly is it you don’t have time for?

    Via Kottke who went to a design conference and saw a presentation by Stefan Sagmeister on happines and design, which included the following excellent life advice:
    * everything i do always comes back to me
    * trying to look good limits my life
    * everybody thinks they are right
    * money does not make me happy
    * thinking life will be better in the future is stupid. i have to live now
    * complaining is silly. act or forget
    * having guts always works out for me


  • Worldblu Forum

    Traci Fenton of Worldblu wrote to remind us all that:

    We’re now about six weeks away from the launch of THE WORLDBLU FORUM in Washington, DC, October 26-29th!

    The theme
    Rewriting the Rules of Business for a Democratic Age

    The big idea
    Organizational democracy and freedom-centered leadership and what it means to YOU

    The take-aways
    HOW organizational democracy can recharge your company
    WHY freedom-centered leadership matters
    WHAT tools and skills you need to outsmart your competition and get in front of the business shift

    The speakers
    Everyone from CEOs to best-selling authors, technology gurus to high-stake revolutionaries, former prime ministers to movie producers (see list)

    The audience
    Dynamic thought-leaders from around the world

    The setting
    Washington, DC?s only five-star hotel, the stunning Mandarin Oriental. Situated in the heart of Washington DC?s monuments and museums, the hotel offers breathtaking views overlooking the Potomac Tidal Basin, Jefferson Memorial and Washington Monument. This urban resort features elegantly hip guest rooms, a 10,400-square-foot spa and fitness facility with indoor pool, and the award-winning CityZen and Caf? MoZU restaurant. (I just had lunch at Caf? MoZU last week; it was outstanding.)

    The updated program
    http://worldblu.com/forum/program.html Nutritious and delicious!

    You can register here
    http://worldblu.com/forum/registration.html

    Thanks to everyone for spreading the word. The response has been fantastic and I can?t wait to see you all in October!

    I’m going. Are you going? If you’re going from Denmark, we’re organizing a trip to make it real easy for you.


  • The paradox of hedonism

    Hedonism is the pursuit of pleasure. The paradox of hedonism is that, pursuing pleasure or happiness for it’s own sake doesn’t seem to make people happy while pursuing worthwhile goals outside of yourself seems to bring about happiness and pleasure as a side effect.

    Interesting, huh?



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