Welcome to my weblog.
This is currently the most active part of my personal website; hopefully you'll find it useful and/or interesting. You can view an index of my signature blog posts. Below are the 10 most recent entries; you can use the navigation bar on the side to browse other entries by date or category.
Staff evaluations: giving feedback, building strong teams
A lot of my time in the last few weeks has been consumed by working on staff evaluations at Summersault. It's at times tedious and exhausting, but really rewarding in the end, I think. I just posted some more about how we do it on the Summersault Blog:
"If you read my previous post about 10 Reasons to Work at Summersault, you may have noted Reason #5: In-depth performance reviews provide you with concrete professional goals and feedback on your successes. As we wrap up our Fall review cycle for staff here, I thought I’d say a little more about just what that process involves."
Continue reading Staff evaluations: giving feedback, building strong teams.
Is eating locally produced food a bad idea?
In yesterday's Palladium-Item, editorial board member and local blogger Matthew Hisrich proposed that eating locally, and other kinds of localized consumption behaviors, might be ineffective, or even bad for us:
[W]here does this drive for relocalizing come from? Perhaps it has to do with a vague sense of ethical rightness more than anything scientifically verifiable. University of Virginia psychologist Jonathan Haidt classifies such efforts as attempts to attain (and potentially guilt others into) a sense of moral purity. "Food," he says, "is becoming extremely moralized these days."
The problem, of course, is that purity is hard to come by in a world as complex as ours, and simplistic answers often have consequences that their proponents do not intend. Consumers should think twice before jumping on the localvore bandwagon.
I'm all for thinking twice before jumping on any sort of wagon, but I think Mr. Hisrich's logic is flawed in a number of places. Read on for my point-by-point analysis of his column:
4 reasons to start using Gravatars right now
I've said before that to truly participate in public life, we must do so as ourselves, with our identities revealed. Online discussions are now a part of the public sphere, and when used well, can bring people together in ways that complement and enhance real-world community.
A related trend I'm appreciating is the increasing number of tools available to help make online conversations more personalized. A particular tool I'd like to encourage you to start using right now is that of a Gravatar - a "globally recognized avatar" - which displays an image of your choosing (sometimes a photo of you) next to your contributions to online conversations.
Here are 4 reasons why you should:
Can the President of the U.S. use e-mail?
The Times has a nice little article today about why Barack Obama will probably have to give up the use of his Blackberry - and e-mail altogether - when he becomes President:
As his team prepares a final judgment on whether he can keep using e-mail, perhaps even in a read-only fashion, several authorities in presidential communication said they believed it was highly unlikely that he would be able to do so.
Diana Owen, who leads the American Studies program at Georgetown University, said presidents were not advised to use e-mail because of security risks and fear that messages could be intercepted.
“They could come up with some bulletproof way of protecting his e-mail and digital correspondence, but anything can be hacked,” said Ms. Owen, who has studied how presidents communicate in the Internet era. “The nature of the president’s job is that others can use e-mail for him.”
Surely there's some middle ground to keep a President as tech-savvy as Barack Obama from being forced off of e-mail altogether? I mean, this is the guy who announced his VP pick by SMS text message, for crying out loud.
Here are some scenarios to explore:
Links, and what I'm thinking about
I haven't had the chance to blog lately, but here are some bits and pieces to chew on. First, some links:
- Friday's episode of On the Media was excellent as usual, but did an especially good job of covering the strange way the 11 PM Eastern network television calling of the election works, cognitive dissonance around the world about electing Barack Obama, and difference between real grassroots organizing and just another marketing campaign. Great stuff.
- Clearing Up Basic Misunderstandings - some interesting post-mortem thoughts on the McCain/Palin ticket from Alan Pavlik.
- Last political links, I promise: What the silence in Grant Park said - yes. The one where she makes her post-election political statement - nicely put. Got to admire the geeks who were behind the flood of website traffic leading up to and on election day.
- Whitewater Valley Artists Consortium - I think I'd known these folks had a group, but just now found their website. Glad they're here!
- Drama Prairie Dog - can't stop watching it!
Some topics I'm thinking about, and may eventually blog about:
The Most Important Part
The most important words spoken last night, I think:
This victory alone is not the change we seek. It is only the chance for us to make that change. And that cannot happen if we go back to the way things were.
It can't happen without you, without a new spirit of service, a new spirit of sacrifice.
So let us summon a new spirit of patriotism, of responsibility, where each of us resolves to pitch in and work harder and look after not only ourselves but each other.
Congratulations to President-elect Obama, and to all of the people who put themselves into the political spotlight during this campaign to seek change in their communities at all levels. May the integrity and dreams of a better world that got you this far continue to ground you in the years to come.
Buy Local press conference - at the mall?
It's not April first yet, so I couldn't really stop my jaw from dropping to the ground on this one: The Richmond-Wayne County Chamber of Commerce and the City of Richmond will be holding a press conference tomorrow afternoon to promote buying local - to be held at the mall, which is predominantly occupied by chain stores.
It seems like QUITE an unfortunate juxtaposition to me to have this kind of announcement in that kind of setting.
Malls like the Richmond Square Mall certainly provide great shopping opportunities, but tend to be populated by businesses that are not locally owned and that give less back to the local economy and community over the long run than businesses that are locally owned. In most "buy local" campaigns across the country, one of the primary goals is to get shoppers to expand their notion of shopping opportunities beyond "the mall" to once again consider what small business districts and downtowns have to offer.
If Richmond residents think that buying local just means going to a shop within city limits, the potential impact of the buy-local message is diluted as their dollars leave the community for corporate headquarters elsewhere.
I asked the Chamber and Mayor's office to reconsider the venue - feel free to do the same if you're so inclined.
Flash Mobs
Flash mobs are large groups of people who assemble suddenly in a public place to perform an unexpected action, and then quickly disperse. For example, here's a mob hitting New York City:
Flash mobs are interesting to me for a few reasons:
Undo
You may have noticed that I was playing around with the Twitter Tools plugin for Wordpress, and that it was generating these weekly digests of my Twitter posts on Fridays. I'm not going to do that anymore, but you can always follow me on Twitter directly or with your favorite blog/RSS feed reader/twitter tool or by looking in the sidebar of the blog front page.
I'm removing Google ads from my blog. I'm tired of them, and they're not earning their keep.
You can now subscribe to the comments of a specific post such that you receive an e-mail message when new comments are posted. Look for the checkbox right where you submit your comment.
As always, feedback is welcome, drop me a line.
Twitter Weekly Updates for 2008-10-31
- "I thought that I heard you laughing, I thought that I heard you sing, I think I thought I saw you try, but that was just a dream." #
- Important lesson from the movie Atonement: always encrypt sensitive communications, especially love letters delivered by young children. #
- Oh no, the U.S. military has realized that the Internet is a communications tool for vegetarians: http://tinyurl.com/5jmxcj #
- @DougMasson Great! They had a verifiable paper trail in place this year, right? in reply to DougMasson #
- I'm considering going rogue, everybody's doing it. #
- Three movies I suggest you avoid: "Noise" (too weird) "Queensized" (too cheesy) and "Silver City" (what the heck WAS that?) #
- Hi, I'm ____ and I'll be your dedicated Dell sales rep until I'm replaced right after you place an order and my email address stops working. #
- Congratulations on convincing yourself that today's stock market gains mean that everything is going to be okay. #
- @jlharter Yes, who are those folks and what brought them here? And wait, who are you?
in reply to jlharter # - @hodgman If you have to ask, maybe you already know the answer? Unless you're being melodramatic for effect, in which case, carry on sir. in reply to hodgman #
- If dogs take over the world, and chose a king, I hope they don't just go by size, b/c I bet there are some Chihuahuas with some good ideas. #
- Today I pressed some areas on a screen and a machine told me I voted. I asked it to give me a paper trail, and it was silent. Machine wins. #
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