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Showing posts from January, 2013

Multitasking Considered Less Harmful?

As you know if you're close to me or follow my twitter stream, I'm reading Graham Wallas' Art of Thought . I was reading through his chapter on  Stages of Control , and was struck by this: The Incubation stage covers two different things, of which the first is the negative fact that during Incubation we do not voluntarily or consciously think on a particular problem, and the second is the positive fact that a series of unconscious and involuntary mental events may take place during that period. [...] the period of abstention may be spent either in conscious mental work on other problems, or in a relaxation from all conscious mental work. The first kind of Incubation economizes time, and is therefore often the better. We can often get more result in the same time by beginning several problems in succession, and voluntarily leaving them unfinished while we turn to others, than by finishing our work on each problem at one sitting. When so much of the writing resonates de...

Continual Improvement In A Flash - edits underway

Last month I released the first copy of  Continual Improvement In A Flash , and you have all been very kind in providing feedback and corrections. Thank you for your purchases and your interest in the work. This weekend I hope to make all the edits you've suggested and release a new copy. Since it is a leanpub book, anyone who has a copy is entitled to all updated copies; watch your email for details. Again, thanks for your support and encouragement.

A Personal Note on the Passing of my Father

I usually don't put anything deeply personal on this blog, but today I make an exception. For three years after his massive stroke, my dad was severely handicapped and struggled with his reduced mental and physical capacities, recurrent illnesses and infections, and the inability to eat or drink except through an abdominal tube. As a strong, stubborn, self-reliant man whose habit was to dig in and work hard instead of receiving aid, it was a difficult time for him. Around 2am today (16 Jan 2013) he found peace. It is best to remember the beefy guy with the Amish-style beard who always had projects, cared so much for the wild animals that frequented his property, just couldn't stop working, couldn't stop learning, and taught himself anything he wanted to know.  His fascination with the natural world and many technologies was entirely out of line with the background and opportunities he was allowed as a young man. We can also remember his stubbornness, frustrations, ...

Continual Improvement Book for Scrum Masters: first public release.

I've pulled the trigger on my first release of the scrum master book. You can pop over to  the leanpub page  and grab a sample, or even buy the book for $USD12.00.  If you buy it, the future versions (when the price goes up) will be yours also. It's a subscription deal. I don't know what to expect in the way of response, but I'm hoping to get feedback on what parts provided value and which parts the book could do without. Thanks for staying with me while I got the first version ready for initial release.

Home IT Suggestions?

I put up a note in facebook and g+ about how I want my home IT reworked. I've bought a new router that will help me with getting my wifi (used by family for non-work stuff including ROKU and other streaming video) separated from my work networking (netbook, macbook pro, printer, etc). I probably will have to run some cat5 through external walls to get this done, unless I can come up with some smarter solution. Helpful recommendations are appreciated. I already have one wifi printer for family use. I want to get a wifi laser printer because ink is expensive. I might even try a color laser, but I don't know how those are with consumables. I know that monochrome laser is dead cheap to run. I use darned few non-web apps. Almost all my mail, docs, notes, etc are in the cloud via google or EverNote or the like. This is necessary because we use linux, mac, and android devices around here. Everything has to be accessible. But the fact that this is even possible, or that ...