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daily  Saturday, August 30, 2008

Greenland - Part 3 (The conference)


Fiber Optic Cable The Konference Sarfarissoq took place in Nuuk -- the capital of Greenland -- at the Katuaq cultural center. The conference began with a Greenlandic dinner at the Hotel Hans Egede (the only hotel in Nuuk) and included an A cappella singing performance by a group of natively dressed Inuit men and women. It was quite a treat. The food included Musk Ox, reindeer, shrimp, haddock and many other delicious foods. It was a very nice opportunity to get acquainted with Brian Pedersen, the conference host and CEO of Tele-Post Greenland, and the other speakers and spouses, and of course Anders Laesoe, Santa Claus’s chief helper..

Brian Pedersen kicked off the conference by describing how the Tele-Post vision of a "Global Greenland" continues but the mission is changing from “communication without borders” to "a global Greenland - in the middle of the world". He said the submarine cable would put Greenland on the net in a way that creates Safarissoq -- the name for the part of a stream where the speed accelerates. The result he said will be to strengthen the economy of the country and create new jobs.

Flemming Jensen then took the stage in his tuxedo and began an eloquent speech. It was in Danish and I did not understand a word of it but people began to laugh. At first I thought he was just a good speaker with some added humor but by the time the audience was nearly rolling on the floor in laughter I realized he was something much more. I later found out he is an actor, director, and comedian from Copenhagen. His multiple appearances on stage added a great deal to the conference.

Jesper Refiner had the toughest job at the conference. He was responsible for the overall program including the roles, rules, logistics, flow, support and administration. He did not a marvelous job of coordination and only one person let him down. A translator had been hired to enable non-Danish speaking attendees (like me) to listen through headsets. The headsets were available but due to ideal hunting conditions in the North and labor rules to the left, the translator called in "sick". I believe my wife and I were the only ones of 250 attendees that only understand one language, so although we enjoyed meeting many new friends and speaking with them in English, the conference was 99% in Danish.

Preben Mejer, a founder and distinguished technologist of innovationlab, set the technical stage with a broad view of consumers on the net to 3D printing to intelligent band aids. After lunch, yours truly gave a talk (unfortunately I could not do it in Danish) about "The Future of the Internet". I won't repeat my key messages which can be found throughout this blog. In a short TV interview afterward a reporter asked what impact the emergence of broadband in Greenland would have on the "remote" areas of the country. As she asked the question it came to me that the impact will be that there will be no such thing as "remote". A great idea from any part of Greenland will be shared with the rest of the world and vice versa. Tom Friedman had it right -- the world is flat.

Speaking of broadband, Lars Tofft -- president of Ericsson Denmark -- drilled down on what broadband is all about. He painted a vision of mobile broadband being much faster in the not too distant future than wired broadband is today. This will open up the possibilities that Preben and I had outlined earlier. Like the other presenters, I could not understand the words they said but I could tell from the slides that all the speakers were all on the same page.

Day 2 focused on applications: e-Home, e-Health, e-Ducation, e-Citizen, and e-Trade. The speakers were all superb and then there were buses to take people to local venus such as the hospital to see the applications in action. Søren Duus Østergaard from IBM Denmark did an excellent job of summarizing the day in his blog.

Throughout the conference there were demonstrations in the lobby of the Katuaq cultural center and the public was invited to visit. There were crowds throughout both days right up to the end. There were many school children who visited and they loved seeing and holding the Pleo baby dinosaur. One of the other big draws was 3D printing. It was amazing to see a nice vase "printed" each few hours. The most impressive demo to me was the haptic feedback device. It is a bit hard to describe -- one of those tings you need to "feel" to believe. You move the hand-held cursor over a "rough" object and you can "feel" it in the device you are holding on to. A lady described how she was planning to sell seal skin purses on the web by allowing people to be able to "feel" the texture of the skin on-line. The potential for engineering collaboration is quite evident.

The flight from Nuuk to Keflavik on the way home was uneventful and followed by a 45 minute ride to downtown Reykjavik. Unfortunately it was cold and raining but it was still a nice walk around the harbor and the city. Dinner at Laekjarkrekka was outstanding. I added it as a five-star in the favorites. The flight back to JFK was followed by a short flight to Mt. Pocono and then a half-hour drive back to the lake. It was nice to get back but we have fond memories of new friends and a place we had never before visited.

bullet Greenland - Part 1 (Getting there)
bullet Greenland - Part 2 (A unique place)
bullet Greenland - Part 3 (The Conference)
bullet Printable version of the combined stories
bullet Gallery of pictures from Greenland
bullet Other patrickWeb travel-related stories
bullet patrickWeb Travel Photo Gallery

Favorites, Internet Technology, Mobile, Travels August 30, 2008 04:28 PM

 

daily  Sunday, July 27, 2008

Book Update: July 2008


BooksSo many great books, so little time! I used to say there is no substitute yet for enjoying a hard-cover book. I take it back. Reading on the Kindle is the best. The number of books on Kindle has doubled in the past month to 146,576. I now make it my exclusive source for book reading. Every once in a while I post a list of books I have been reading. They all have reviews at Amazon that are much better than I could write, so I just update my database with summary comments and a rating of how I liked them.

I found the the last handful of books quite extraordinary. Randy Pausch, the professor at Carnegie Mellon University who inspired countless students in the classroom and others worldwide with his work in virtual reality and entertainment systems died on Friday of complications from pancreatic cancer. He was 47. I had first heard about Randy in a Wall Street Journal review of his book, The Last Lecture. It was his way of leaving a legacy for his young children so they would know who their father was and what he was about. The lessons of the book hold a lot of value for all of us. I highly recommend this touching book.

The Last Patriot by Brad Thor is quite a thriller. If you like terrorist plots linked with history -- Thomas Jefferson and Islam in this case -- you will love this one. It is hardly a light book. In fact the gripping intrigue won't let you put it down until you finish it.

On the business front, Here Comes Everybody: The Power of Organizing Without Organizations by Clay Shirky gives many insights about social networking. I had heard Clay speak at Supernova in San Francisco last month. We have been kindred spirits over the past fifteen years.

Man of the People: The Life of John McCain is not one of the books McCain wrote but rather is a biography by Paul Alexander written four years before the current campaign got underway. I found it fascinating. Whatever you may think of his political views, he is quite an extraordinary human being.

A Prisoner of Birth by Jefferey Archer is an imaginative Archer classic. I have enjoyed all of his books but found this probably the best ever. A young man at a bar with his girlfriend and her brother is framed for murdering the brother and goes to prison. The life he lives there and the people he becomes close to are a great story on their own but nothing compared to what happens when he escapes in an identity swap. The new life he then lives focuses on revenge at a very creative level. Great book.

The summer is still young another novel underway -- The Shack by William P. Young. Comments to follow in the next book update.

bullet patrickWeb favorite books

Favorites, People July 27, 2008 03:55 PM

 

daily  Tuesday, July 1, 2008

Supernova 2008 - Part 4


TelevisionThe "Reconstructed media" session was about the future of TV. The panelists were from YouTube, Sevenload, and Current TV. All three see TV -- as we know it -- as a thing of the past. Current.tv is a bottoms up media approach where "you make the news" by voting on, commenting on, or submitting a story. Part of the business model change is being driven by the fact that TV today is very inefficient as an advertising channel. According to one of the speakers, 99% of advertising dollars are wasted because people either don't watch it or watch it but are not in the market for whatever is being advertised.All three are determined to "reconstruct" -- aka blow-up -- the current model of television.

I wrote a story here called "The Future of Advertising" in October 2006. I was pretty negative about TV advertising and now I am even more so. In theory you can just record everything but even then it is annoying to have to fast forward through the ads and sometimes have to backup and replay and then forward again to get what you want. The advertisements are mostly insulting to one's intelligence. There are no insights into anything and they grate on people's nerves. Honestly, I have to say that most of the ads are obnoxious -- as bad as spam. The shotgun blast ads aren't fraudulent but they add no value to our lives. Zero. Do we need broadcast television to tell us the latest interest rate at ditech.com or to be reminded four times per hour that Scottrade is "all about value" or to be constantly told to ask our doctor about this pill or that pill? The bottom line is that most of us don't rely on the TV as a source of ideas for things we need. There may be some people that actually enjoy advertisements. That is ok, but the rest of us want to "opt out".

When it comes to news, sometimes it is hard to get on TV. Odds are that you can flip through a half-dozen cable news channels and find no news. Just ads. TvNewsLies.org claims that CNN = “Contains No News”. After eliminating ads, ads about the news, tabloids, and other chaff, one hour of CNN "Yields Less Than 5 Minutes of News". My preferred news source is news.google.com which I have been using for years. It is ad supported but it is ads that don't get in your face. You can drill deeply into the news and if you don't like one source's point of view you can easily get another. This contrasts with "So and so made a statement today about the oil situation and you won't believe what he said". Parenthetically, and we are not going to tell you what he said until you listen to three minutes of irrelevant advertising. At this point in e-tirement I pretty much know what things I need or want and if I don't know then I know how to find things. Broadcast advertising is dead. They just have not admitted it yet. The next phase will be situational ads where the actors in movies will be extolling products and services. It will likely be transparent and I am not looking forward to it.

Many of the startup companies and large amounts of venture capital are focused on how to "reach" us. Their favorite word is CPM, the cost per thousand advertising page impressions. They truly want to intrude on us. They want us to watch a video clip before we can watch the video clip link we clicked on. Forbes magazine prints "Your statement of benefits" on envelopes. This is designed to make you think the envelope contains health insurance or mutual fund information. It actually includes a subscription statement so that you can get the benefit of paying for their magazine. They can't wait to strike deals with AT&T and Verizon to put ads on our cell phones.

Is there no end? The most optimistic sign lies in social networking. As much as I do not like advertising in my face, I would not mind seeing a link to a book that my friends have read, or learn about interesting places they have been, or wines, or concerts, and other favorites. Advertiser support of social networking has the potential to actually be of value. I hope so, because the tolerance level for traditional TV and Internet advertising is at the limit for many of us. More on social networking coming up.

Conferences, Favorites, Media July 1, 2008 03:19 PM

 

daily  Monday, June 23, 2008

Book Update: 2Q2008


Description of imageSo many great books, so little time! I used to say there is no substitute yet for enjoying a hard-cover book. I take it back. Reading on the Kindle is the best. Now that there are just shy of 50,000 books on Kindle I make it the exclusive source. Every once in a while I post a list of books I have been reading. They all have reviews at Amazon that are much better than I could write, so I just update my database with summary comments and a rating of how I liked them. The last half-dozen or so books have been very large and deep ones. This weekend it was time for an easier read so I put the latest Dean Koontz novel -- Odd Hours -- on the Kindle. Koontz is nothing short of amazing and this latest tale is one of his best. It is hardly a light book. In fact the gripping intrigue won't let you put it down until you finish it.

Favorites June 23, 2008 10:58 AM

 

daily  Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Net Attitude on Kindle


Net Attitude

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Kindle is quite an amazing device (see "Kindlized") and I am irrevocably hooked. In addition to buying a growing number of Kindle books, I now have one for sale. Net Attitude continues as a book but I suspect the Kindle version will have the edge going forward. The patrickWeb blog will also soon be available for the Kindle. Amazon is having growing pains as try to ingest a lot more blogs than they expected. The blogs will be updated daily so that Kindle users will always have the latest postings for all the blogs they subscribe to.

Blogging, Favorites, Gadgets, Net Attitude, patrickWeb June 10, 2008 04:40 PM

 

daily  Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Reflections


Reflection I began to write "reflections" in 1997. Some were about visits to an IBM customer, a university campus, or just to reflect on some issue of the day that struck me at the time. The Reflections were not an attempt to be profound.... just to share. Needless to say, this was a precursor to blogging. Some of the postings in patrickWeb are based on reflections but eventually they will all get edited and moved to the blog for posterity. Here is the list of Reflections from 1997 to 2002.

Blogging, Favorites May 28, 2008 03:01 PM

 

daily  Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Christmas 2007


Christmas TreeThere is much that could be said about the hundreds of miles of driving to see family and then a houseful of family and good times before during and after Christmas. I won't bore readers of the blog about that but there is one thing I would like to share about one special gift I received. It is called Open It!

Some will immediately be thinking of Open IT as in "Open Information Technology". For example, Open IT Works is based on a simple concept borrowed from Open Source, and is about sharing of IT solutions, best practices, projects, and product and vendor reviews. The Open It I received for Christmas has nothing to do with any of that. My Open It is to open things that come packaged in blisters, clamshells, boxes DVD cases, and numerous other things unopenables that are packaged with the vendor in mind -- and with no thought about how the consumer might open the package without injuring oneself. The Open It is made from hardened and plated precision alloy steel, has has honed, angled, and offset jaws, and an ergo-comfortable handle. It has a built in retractable utility knife and an interchangeable Phillips & slotted screwdriver. (You can click here to get a complete product data sheet). If you have ever suffered "wrap rage", suffer no more. It really works. The only catch is that the Open It comes in one of those packages that you need an Open It to open it! Hopefully, I will not become the technical support department for this product like I did for the PepperBall.

Holiday time also allowed me to finish a couple of books. Indian Summer was an excellent history of India, Pakistan, Kashmir, and Bangladesh. The Iranian Time Bomb
is a wake up call to what has been going on for thirty years. Good investigative reporting went into this. It was a special pleasure to finish Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln by Doris Kearns Goodwin. Prepare yourself for 944 pages. I learned many things I did not know about the civil war and about Abraham Lincoln. He was quite the political strategist and a superb manager. A very long read but worth it. Several new books in the read queue for January. The quarterly update on favorites is here.

Favorites, Gadgets, People, Travels December 26, 2007 01:12 PM

 

daily  Sunday, November 4, 2007

Favorites Update: November 4, 2007


FavoritesWe all have our favorites. Me too. Books, web sites, restaurants, plays, movies, orchestras, composers, concerts, hiking and biking trails, places to run, etc. Occasionally I will provide an update from the favorites database. This will probably happen once a month or so. Latest update on a couple of excellent restaurants and Clint Black at the Ridgefield Playhouse is here.

Favorites November 4, 2007 01:55 PM

 


Favorites


FavoritesWe all have our favorites. Me too. Books, web sites, restaurants, plays, movies, orchestras, composers, concerts, hiking and biking trails, places to run, etc. Occasionally I write about these "favorites" even though they are not really recommendations -- in fact some of them I did not even enjoy -- but rather a way of sharing information. I have documented some of the favorites in a database which can be viewed through the links below. When it comes to favorite web pages, I started this list in 1995 and it grew to more than 1,000 "Favorite Places". I call them places because in a sense they really are destinations.

After e-tirement from IBM in 2001 one of my (too many) goals is to "get technical" and make improvements to patrickWeb. I have really enjoyed working on this. The site, started in 1995, has been re-built with what is called a "LAMP" software bundle or "stack". That means it uses Linux, Apache, MySQL, and PHP. All of these are free and open source. I use Adobe Dreamweaver CS3 to build the web pages and MovableType to post the blog entries. I will write some more about the LAMP technologies another time. The thing I am most proud of is converting most all of patrickWeb to being a database driven site. That means that instead of "updating" a web page with new information I update a database and then the web page is constructed to always use the latest information in the database. There are many advantages to this approach including flexibility in what information is presented on a page and how it is sequenced. A good example of this is the Favorites.

Each of the sections -- books, composers, concerts, plays, restaurants -- includes a database retrieval for just the particular category although the favorites database includes records for all of the categories. A blog "Favorites Update" page can include all the records in the database for all categories but only for the last thirty days or for any particular time period. The page is formed using a SQL query. (Structured Query Language -- invented at IBM by Donald D. Chamberlin and Raymond F. Boyce in the early 1970s). Using SQL, a page might contain favorite Cuban restaurants visited in the past year rated better than "3" and concerts that included "Clint Black" between 2002 and 2004 -- or whatever. Very powerful, and fun to create. At some point I plan to build a page on patrickWeb that let's any visitor create there own queries into the favorites database.


Books
Composers
Concerts
Links
Plays
Restaurants

Favorites, IBM, Internet Technology November 4, 2007 11:46 AM

 

daily  Monday, September 10, 2007

Book Update: 3Q2007


Cactus So many great books, so little time! I read a number of blogs to gain information like most of us, but there is no substitute yet for enjoying a hard-cover book. Every once in a while I post a list of books I have been reading. They all have reviews at Amazon that are much better than I could write. So, here is the list of what I have been reading this summer.

The Good Guy by Dean Koontz. He keeps cranking out great novels. This one is a chiller and keeps you on the edge of your chair. It is classic Koontz.

Killing Che: A Novel by Chuck Pfarrer. Certainly a controversial figure. This is a novel but likely close to the real story. Pfarrer has an amazing command of the landscape and the life of the people. He portrays a lifelong struggle that does not turn out well for the star of the book.

Blaze: A Novel by Richard Bachman (Author), Stephen King (foreward). The story is about a life of crime and murder. Hard to imagine that there are people that are treated so badly in their childhood and grow up with no values. Turns out Clayton Blaisdell has develops a soft spot near the end.

Memory: A short story by Stephen King. This is an add-on to Blaze. A very creative and touching story of a wealthy executive who is in a horrible accident and how he deals with it.

Lone Survivor: The Eyewitness Account of Operation Redwing and the Lost Heroes of SEAL Team 10 by Marcus Luttrell. This is a true story by an American heroe. It is one of the best books I have ever read. Luttrell offers a lot of insight into what is going on in Afghanistan and is not bashful about his opinion of the impact that politicians and the media are having on the troops.

Spook Country by William Gibson. I got this new book because I had read Neuromancer some years ago. Spook Country is quite different but equally challenging to imagine. It is about some mysterious shadowy intelligence veterans who take on a small crime family. The details are intricate and you are kept in suspense until the near the end to figure out what the actual crime was.

Related links
bullet Other stories from the "favorites" category of patrickWeb

Favorites September 10, 2007 11:32 AM

 

daily  Sunday, July 1, 2007

Book Update: 2Q2007


Cactus So many great books, so little time! I read a number of blogs to gain information like most of us, but there is no substitute yet for enjoying a hard-cover book. Every once in a while I post a list of books I have been reading. They all have reviews at Amazon that are much better than I could write. So, here is the list of what I have been reading lately.

The End of Oil: On the Edge of a Perilous New World by Paul Roberts. This interesting book contains a history of how America has interacted with oil producing countries over the years and what the various motivations have been. It also makes surprising forecasts about the supply of oil and of the alternatives. It is not a novel to put it mildly -- maybe more like a text book but very informative. Glad I read it.

The Atomic Bazaar: The Rise of the Nuclear Poor by William Langewiesche. This one could keep one awake at night. It describes what is required to build an atom bomb and where it can be found.

The Language of God: A Scientist Presents Evidence for Belief by Francis S. Collins. This is a really good book. Collins is a pioneering medical geneticist who once headed the Human Genome Project. Whether you are a believer, an agnostic, or an atheist, there is something in this book for everyone.

A Thousand Splendid Suns by Khaled Hosseini. This one was every bit as good as his first book, The Kite Runner. Like his first book, it is based on life in Afghanistan. Life for many women in this country is incredibly difficult and keeps you on edge reading about it. The author grew up in Kabul. His writing style is different and a great pleasure to read.

As the summer unfolds I plan to read The Good Guy by Dean Koontz. He keeps cranking out great novels.

Related links
bullet Other stories from the "favorites" category of patrickWeb

Favorites July 1, 2007 07:36 PM

 

daily  Saturday, November 25, 2006

Book Update: 3Q2006


Cactus So many great books, so little time! I read a number of blogs like most of us, but it is still fun to sit back and read a hard-cover book. Every once in a while I post a list of books I have been reading. They all have reviews at Amazon that are much better than I could write. Speaking of blogs I saw that my friend Irving's blog got a well deserved mention in BusinessWeek today. So, here is the list of what I have been reading lately.

Angels & Demons by Dan Brown. Perhaps his best.

A Short History of Nearly Everything -- by Bill Bryson. If you have a curious mind you will love this book.

Benjamin Franklin - An American Life - by Walter Isaacson. This one is a hard read. Interesting but tedious. I still haven't finished it.

Forever Odd -- by Dean Koontz. Koontz has an incredible imagination. I have enjoyed many of his books. This one doesn't dissappoint.

Rediscovering God in America: Reflections on the Role of Faith in Our Nation's History and Future by Newt Gingrich. You either like Newt or you don't. This book is not deep but presents an interesting view of last two hundred years and raises important questions about the years ahead.

Play Piano in a Flash! Play Your Favorite Songs Like a Pro--Whether You've Had Lessons or Not! - by Scott Houston. A friend gave this to me. Interesting approach to the piano. One of these days when I grow up and find the time I am going to learn how to play.

The Husband - by Dean Koontz. One of his best.

The Kite Runner -- by Khaled Hosseini. Awesome book but things in Afghanistran.

The Only King Who Died on the Battlefield: An Historical Novel Based on Truth -- by Faisal Iftikha Mohammed Faisal Iftikhar. I met the author one day in a taxi in Danbury, Connecticut. He was the driver, a student at a local college, and as it turns out a young author.

Understanding Careers: The Metaphors of Working Lives -- by Kerr Inkson. Professor Inkson interviewed me for this book and included some things about my career at IBM.

Related links
bullet Other stories from the "favorites" category of patrickWeb

Favorites November 25, 2006 03:59 PM

 

daily  Friday, June 9, 2006

Book Update: 2Q2006


Cactus So many great books, so little time! This posting is to recommend two books that were extremely interesting and enjoyable. First is Genome by Matt Ridley. After the Computational Biology panel at Demo in February, I asked the panelists what book I could read to learn more about the mapping of the twenty-three pairs of chromosomes that make up the human genome. All three experts recommended Matt Ridley's book. Genome is organized into twenty-two chapters as a convenient way to tell the incredible unfolding story of what we are all about. Each chapter is like a story unto itself describing the characteristics of some of the more important genes that are part of that chromosome. The twenty-third chromosome pair is what we learned in high school -- two large X chromosomes in women and , one X and one small Y in men.

Ridley explains in almost excruciating detail how some of the genes work and the implications of having a particular gene that doesn't work. For example, there is a family of genes called the apolipoprotein genes, or APO genes, that comes in four basic varieties -- A, B, C, and E. If you happen to carry of the E variety genes, your probability of getting Alzheimer's disease is dramatically higher than the population at large. Whether you would actually want to know that you have propensity to get a disease that for which there is no cure or prevention steps is another question. One thing for sure is that by reading Genome you get an appreciation for how much is actually known about genes and how incredibly fast the knowledge base is growing. There is no doubt in my mind that the improvements in medicine over the next ten years will surpass what we have seen in the past 100 years.

Equally intriguing but much more entertaining is Digital Fortress by Dan Brown. To call it a techno-thriller is an understatement. It is riveting and chilling from the first page to the last. I could not put it down. Like The Da Vince Code, you will question how plausible some of the happenings are and you may question the validity of the details of the inner workings of the NSA. The core theme of the book has to do with one of my favorite topics, cryptography. After designing a computer that could break any encryption, the NSA found itself hostage to the technology. Highly recommended read.

Related links
bullet Stories from the "favorites" category of patrickWeb

Favorites June 9, 2006 09:26 AM

 

daily  Sunday, January 15, 2006

Two New Books


BooksTwo new books arrived this week that may be of interest.

Naked Conversation - How Blogs are Changing the Way Businesses Talk with Customers by Robert Scoble and Shel Israel is very timely with all that is going on in the world of blogging. I know Robert from Microsoft. He has been active in evangelizing the potential of blogging and very much practices what he preaches, even when his postings may at times not be consistent with company practices. The book explores how blogging has changed the rules of communication and competition and gives business owners the tools to launch an effective blogging strategy. Robert and Shel interviewed many business leaders including Mark Cuban of the Dallas Mavericks, Bob Lutz from General Motors and Johanthan Schwartz of Sun Microsystems.

Let Go to Grow - Escaping the Commodity Trap by Linda S. Sanford with Dave Taylor is about strategy and management practices. Normally pretty boring stuff, but Linda and Dave have organized the book in a way that makes it flow very nicely. It is all about driving innovation and gaining productivity -- both urgent topics for anyone in a leadership position today. The book explains the concepts of componentization, outsourcing, and off-shoring in a clear but strategic way and then lays out an approach for leveraging the concepts across an enterprise. Practical case studies about Dell, eBay, GE, Procter & Gamble, and Toyota bring it all home. I have known Linda for quite a few years. She has had a number of top-level executive positions in systems, storage, and global sales and is now Senior Vice President of IBM's internal On Demand Transformation and Information Technology initiatives. In addition to being one of IBM's highest-ranking women, she also serves as a member of the Women in Technology International Hall of Fame and the National Association of Engineers. She was named one of the 50 Most Influential Women in Business by Fortune magazine, one of the Top Ten Innovators in the Technology Industry by Information Week, and one of the Ten Most Influential Women in Technology by Working Woman. She is also a nice lady!

Related links
bullet Other patrickWeb book-related stories



Blogging, Favorites, On Demand, People January 15, 2006 02:22 PM

 

daily  Wednesday, July 27, 2005

Books - 3Q 2005


BooksThere are millions of books for sale and thousands of new ones are published every week. The percentage of books that will reach the "Top 10" list rounds to zero. The marketing of books is more art than science -- I got quite an education on this with my own book. If I were doing it over again, I would have written the same book but there is much more that I would have done from a marketing point of view. No complaints -- Net Attitude continues to attract new readers and I always appreciate hearing from them.

Some people read at least one book every day. Maybe some day I will find time to do that. The purpose of this blog entry is to share what I have read in the past few months. Hopefully, someone will find one of them of interest. (read more)

Favorites July 27, 2005 05:30 PM

 

daily  Wednesday, January 19, 2005

Word Craft


On the way to Brazil in October 2004, I read a book called Word Craft by Alex Frankel . The subject of the book is "naming", topic I have always been interested in. Frankel did a good job of getting behind the scenes at some of the top consulting companies that focus exclusively on coining brand names. A winning name often makes the difference between success or failure of a product. Frankel says it is not unheard of for large companies to spend as much as half a million dollars to come up with the perfect name. Wordcraft describes the entire process including marketing campaigns and public relations activities that surround a product name. Some of the examples he discusses include FedEx, BlackBerry, Accenture, Viagra, and IBM's e-business. The book is a quick and interesting read.

Related links
bullet patrickWeb booklist

Favorites January 19, 2005 02:53 PM

 

daily  Thursday, August 26, 2004

In The News


The In The News section of patrickWeb has been updated this morning.

Favorites August 26, 2004 09:39 AM

 

daily  Tuesday, June 1, 2004

Books - 1Q 2004


BooksThere are millions of books for sale and thousands of new ones are published every week. The percentage of books that will reach the "Top 10" list rounds to zero. The marketing of books is more art than science and got an education with my own book. If I were doing it over again, I would have written the same book but there is much more that I would have done from a marketing point of view. No complaints -- Net Attitude continues to attract new readers and I always appreciate hearing from them.

Some people read at least one book every day. Maybe some day I will find time to do that. The purpose of this blog entry is to share what I have read in the past few months. Hopefully, someone will find one of them of interest. (read more)

Favorites June 1, 2004 09:57 PM

 

daily  Sunday, December 21, 2003

Google On Over To Net Attitude


My book, Net Attitude, has been for sale on Amazon since it was published and there is a link to purchase it directly from the book image on the patrickWeb homepage. (the commissions from Amazon are modest and I contribute them to charity). The new news is that there is now an interesting way to not only get to Amazon to buy the book but also to find and read part of the book content through Google's new book searching site. Here is a link to the Google beta test. (read more)

Favorites December 21, 2003 01:53 PM

 

daily  Thursday, November 6, 2003

Auberge Maxime


French dinnerOccasionally I share information about a book, play, concert, or restaurant that I experienced. These "favorites" are not really recommendations but rather a way of sharing information. One night recently I met a person at a business meeting and he told me that he had been in Alexandria, Virginia and had dinner at a Nuevo Latino restaurant that he had found in the restaurants section of patrickWeb. He and his family had thoroughly enjoyed it -- and I was happy that the link had been valuable. Tonight was special, and the occasion was celebrated at Auberge Maxime  in North Salem, Westchester County, New York. The cuisine and service were superb. Jean Le Bris offers a friendly smile and good recommendations. This one I can highly recommend.   (read more)

Favorites November 6, 2003 10:38 PM

 

daily  Saturday, October 18, 2003

The Face


The Face by Dean KoontzDean Koontz has written more than forty novels and many have been #1 bestsellers. In addition to being prolific, he is incredibly creative and imaginative. HIs most recent novel, The Face, is incredibly imaginative, exciting, and at times gripping. It is about a deranged professor who is seeking anarchy. Part of his plan is to kidnap and torture the son of a famous movie star. The intricacies of the plot would be hard to imagine, but not for Dean Koontz. One of the characters in the story gets killed but then disappears from the morgue and reappears in various scenarios. (read more)

Favorites October 18, 2003 05:40 PM

 

daily  Sunday, October 5, 2003

Favorite Places


LinksIn 1995, when I first launched patrickWeb (then it was ibm.com/patrick), one of my goals was to share links to web sites I had found interesting. There was no Google back then and most people did not know about Yahoo!. Whenever I ran into an a site I thought would be of interest to my friends and colleagues I would add to a list which I called my "favorite places". Initially it was "my top ten links". Then it became my "my top 50". When the list got to 100 I decided it was time to reorganize the approach. Using Lotus Domino made it very easy to create categories and sub-categories. I was able to easily add a new link and put it in multiple categories if appropriate. I recently considered eliminating the "favorite places" section of patrickWeb but nostalgia took over.  (read more)

Favorites October 5, 2003 01:42 PM

 

daily  Monday, September 1, 2003

Recent Books


Path Of The Assassin by Brad ThorThis summer has been a busy one with many projects and activities so the book list didn't get much longer. Here are two recent reads.

 
Path Of The Assassin Brad Thor Thrilling at times but not quite the depth of Tom Clancy or Dean Koontz. The interesting part was that much of the book sounded similar to what we read in the news about various parts of the Middle East, terrorist plots, etc.
Dreamweaver MX: PHP Web Development Gareth Downes-Powell, Tim Green, Bruno Mairlot It can never be simple enough but this book does a great job of explaining what MX, PHP, and MySQL are and how they work together. A comprehensive example makes it all real.

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Favorites September 1, 2003 10:45 AM


daily  Friday, July 18, 2003

Conferences


Conferences

July 17, 2003

On Saturday I will be heading to Singapore to participate in the IBM Forum 2003. IBM has invited strategic business decision makers and operational decision makers such as the CIO and IT managers. I'll be giving a talk there next week. Being on-line is critical but being in-person at conferences is important too. In 1992 I went to the Agenda conference for the first time and have not missed it since then. Conferences are a way to keep in touch with industry colleagues and key industry trends. There are many good conferences but the ones that I have attended regularly for more than ten years include Agenda, Demo, and PC Forum. There have been many others that have provided great value including Vortex and Telecosm. Sometimes I speak at these conferences; sometimes I just listen. One of the newer conferences is Pop!Tech. Every autumn, in the seaside village of Camden, Maine, more than thirty of the world's most intriguing visionaries, innovators, leaders, scientists, intellectuals and artists come together to present their views about the future.


Favorites July 18, 2003 08:04 AM

 

daily  Sunday, June 1, 2003

High School Hub


Of all the many web sites I have seen over the years, one of the most consistently valuable and interesting to me has been The Scout Report. I have read it religiously every Saturday morning. The Report outlines web sites that the Scout team has found interesting and useful. I have used their site as one of the major inputs to the patrickWeb Favorite Places section. One of the links in the current edition of the Scout Report is to the High School Hub. The High School Hub should be a big help to high-school students looking for online resources ranging from school subjects to reference works. Topical links include the daily news quiz provided by the New York Times and the "Today in History" feature provided by the Library of Congress's American Memory project. The Homework Help section may turn out to be the most popular link. It is organized by subject and each contains several dozen links to features like an online table of chemical elements and famous American trials. For pastimes and diversions, the site has word puzzles and a typing challenge. I have added a link to High School Hub in the High School Students section in the Education area of patrickWeb. (read more)


Favorites June 1, 2003 09:35 PM

 

daily  Sunday, April 6, 2003

Books, Plays, and Restaurants Update



Harley-Davidson Rolling Sculpture - A Pictorial Celebration Of The First 95 Years by Doug Mitchel. Nobody but a Harley rider would be interested in this book. It is a very nice chronology showing how the bikes have evolved. Great photography.


This weekend marked the twentieth year in a row that a group of longtime friends have gone to New York City to a broadway play and dinner. The play this year was Hairspray and it was really outstanding. Dinner followed at Chez Napoleon -- yes, a French restaurant. (more)

Favorites April 6, 2003 01:31 PM

 

daily  Monday, March 24, 2003

Discover the visionary behind Big Blue


I am at PC Forum sitting next to Kevin Maney from USA Today. Kevin has a new book coming out next month called "The Maverick And His Machine". The book is a biography of Thomas Watson, Sr. and explores what was behind the making of IBM. It is being promoted as a way to "discover the visionary behind Big Blue". Knowing Kevin, and what an excellent writer he is, I suspect this is going to be a really good book. You can pre-order it here.


 

Favorites March 24, 2003 11:31 AM

 

daily  Monday, February 24, 2003

Z Tejas


I happened to be in Scottsdale for the annual Demo Conference and on the last night before heading home I had dinner with some friends and family at Z Tejas Grille in Tempe, Arizona (20 W. 6th Street - +1 480 377-1170). This was a very unique restaurant that I would highly recommend -- and have added to my restaurant list. The food seemed to me like a blend of Mexican, Southwest, and Japanese. It was really tasty. They have twelve restaurants in seven states. I suspect they are highly profitable.

Favorites February 24, 2003 09:25 PM

 

daily  Tuesday, February 11, 2003

Favorites


We all have our favorites and I am no different. I have been keeping a list of books, concerts, plays, and restaurants here at patrickWeb for a number of years. The lists are growing and I can't say that each and every item remains an absolute favorite. However, the feedback I have received convinces me not to prune it. At a social event recently, a gentleman came up to me and thanked me for the reference to Caf� Salsa in Alexandria, Virginia. He happened to be there on business and stopped in for lunch. He said it was outstanding! I appreciated knowing that the list was valuable to him. Today in New York was incredibly cold but the board meeting at Knovel Corporation was productive and lunch at Tavern On The Green was exquisite. It now joins the restaurants list -- even though they need to work on their e-business implementation.


Favorites February 11, 2003 09:42 PM

 

daily  Wednesday, September 11, 2002

Book of Ki: Co-ordinating Mind and Body in Daily Life


Just finished reading Book of Ki: Co-ordinating Mind and Body in Daily Life by Koichi Tohei. This was a remarkable book written by a remarkable man. It provided excellent insight about Eastern medicine and philosophy and added practical examples that were easy to relate to. If you are looking for something a bit different than a Clancy novel and want to learn what Qi is all about, I highly recommend this book. Thanks to Chris Smolyk for telling me about it. (also see "Books I have Enjoyed")

Favorites September 11, 2002 09:44 AM

 

daily  Thursday, August 22, 2002

Red Rabbit


You either like Tom Clancy's books or you don't and I am one who does. I have read every single one. You have to love a guy who really embraces technology; or at least he seems to. Clancy's latest book, Red Rabbit, is classic Clancy. It is loaded with intrigue and suspense and even a touch of reality. I really enjoyed it -- 618 pages that I couldn't put down until it was finished. It is now added to my list of favorite books.

Favorites August 22, 2002 08:55 AM

 

daily  Friday, August 9, 2002

Tai Chi


I am getting convinced that chi qigong and tai chi are the natural way to achieve strength and health. Just finished a second book on the topic called Step by Step Tai Chi. The other book is my favorite books list.

Favorites August 9, 2002 11:58 AM

 

daily  Monday, August 5, 2002

Finished A Couple Of Books



Just finished a couple of books and added them to my book list on the site. The Biker Code - Wisdom For The Ride by Stuart Miller and Geoggrey Moss is a ten minute read with pictures and quotes from motorcycle riders. A lot of interesting perspective -- from the heart and from the road. The Healing Promise of Qi - Creating Extraordinary Wellness Through Qigong and Tai Chi Roger Jahnke, O.M.D. was very tedious reading (303 pages). Comprehensive but highly repetitive. Like reading an encylopedia but good way to gain total perspective on the subject. I am now reading another book on Tai Chi which looks much more practical.

Favorites August 5, 2002 12:55 PM

 

daily  Sunday, January 20, 2002

Snowshoes and outer space


It was a cold and windy day this past November in the Pocono Mountains of Pennsylvania where I spent the day. I couldn't resist a motorcycle ride though -- the Widder heated electric gloves and vest kept most of me warm. Just two months later and it was back at the Lake but this time with snowshoes.

Then it was back in front of the fireplace to finish reading Lou Dobbs' new book, Space : The Next Business Frontier. I suspect many of us think of space as being mostly about government related programs like NASA or possibly the global positioning system (GPS), or perhaps directTV. Lou makes the point in his book that space is about a lot more than that. The focus of his book is that space is more and more about "space business". In addition to a lot of interesting information about space shuttles and satellite launches, he talks about the hundreds of corporate players -- including "some of the world's largest organizations" -- which are already generating billions of dollars in revenue. He convinced me that space is headed toward becoming a new business revolution.

Meanwhile, Vint Cerf at WorldCom has been talkking about new possibilities to expand the potential of the Internet into outer space. Recently he began working with NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory on a new project to develop an interplanetary communications system based on a special set of protocols that would carry transmissions between planets. See Vint's Interplanetary Internet page for a paper he wrote about this and some excellent links.

Favorites January 20, 2002 04:23 PM