Friday, February 29, 2008

Essays About The Elevator Pitch

The elevator pitch is a key skill to have, to people's eyes from wandering...

As a result, I have started putting down in words everything that I have learned about what makes an elevator pitch effective. This includes a primer entitled Elevator Pitch 101 as well as a number of related essays...

Essays About The Elevator Pitch

Monday, February 25, 2008

Read email with a dance pad

 

Explanation

We’ve created applications that can be controlled using a dance pad instead of the keyboard or mouse. We have StepMail which allows you to read, delete and flag your email and StepPhoto which allows you to organize your photos. Using these applications is fun, helps reduce RSI, and gets you up out of your chair.

http://research.microsoft.com/vibe/projects/stepUI.aspx

Everyone wants a new PC

Sorry to hear my P5E board doesn't support DDR3 RAM... but who cares about geekspeak... it's still a smoking fast system.

I managed to run out of 2GB of memory with Flight Simulator X though... what a pig.

Apparently building a new PC and creating a video qualifies for a reward.  I should have taped my experience... 6 hours of cursing, dropped screws, band-aids, and XP still took 45 minutes to install (same as my old PC).

It’s finally done! The “Max Builds a PC series” wraps up with the build process from start to finish. I had a lot of fun throughout this entire series starting with debating and choosing the parts with all of you all the way to the time I spent in the studio putting it all together. My only regret is that I have to give this 5.9 rated PC away rather than keeping it for myself……… Oh yes, you read that right: this got a 5.9 rating from Windows Vista’s experience rating system!

Page 3 - Max Builds a PC: The Final How-To Video and WINNER! | Posts | Channel 8

I'll probably cough up $50 for another 2GB of RAM.  Glad I got the 8800 GT... if you're buying a new PC for anything but email & web surfing, get a good video card.

Thursday, February 21, 2008

Why i like my new computer

I recently upgraded to a more powerful "beast" of a computer to play the latest Flight Simulator X and for checking my email (and maybe some work too).  I'm a bit rough at assembling systems (the last one I built was in '99) but I managed to figure out how to put the pieces together without bending too much, and in only 8-10 tries.  With no smoke, and only a few reversed cables, I think my warranty is still good.

I'm still trying to figure out why I need to deal with standoffs, motherboard mounting screws, and those stupid connectors for power switches, reset buttons, and LEDs.  There has got to be an easier way.  This stuff has been the same since the 80s.

The other thing that killed me were the rebate forms.  I kept asking myself why I'm wasting a half-hour of my life filling out an $8 rebate form and going to the different web sites for registration.

One thing I liked, since I don't have front-facing audio jacks...  this stuff is magic.

image

Another thing I liked... the Asus Nvidia 8800 GT...  this is the real beast.

image

I did have to upgrade the motherboard BIOS and video card drivers from Nvidia to get the system stable.

Now I can see cars driving in FSX... for the price of a couple of hours of real flying time. 

Now if I can only figure out how to stop an uncontrolled helicopter spin.

http://www.canadacomputers.com/

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

BBC NEWS | Technology | Brain control headset for gamers


Well, looks like my wiimote just became obsolete.  Worst $45 I ever spent.

A neuro-headset which interprets the interaction of neurons in the brain will go on sale later this year.
"It picks up electrical activity from the brain and sends wireless signals to a computer," said Tan Le, president of US/Australian firm Emotiv.
"It allows the user to manipulate a game or virtual environment naturally and intuitively," she added.

BBC NEWS | Technology | Brain control headset for gamers

Actually, it seems to use a similar technology, a gyroscope, to detect movement and facial expressions.  The one difference?

"Communication between human and machine has always been limited to conscious interaction, with non-conscious communication -- expression, intuition, perception -- reserved solely for the human realm. At Emotiv, we believe that future communication between human and machine will not be limited to the conscious communication that exists today. Users will demand that non-conscious communication play a much more significant role."

http://tinyurl.com/2ad9ur

Though the thing looks a bit like an 80's headset with tentacles, it still sounds incredible.

The 80s is probably where they got their design idea...

"I honestly believe that the next big leap in immersive technology will be very much like Brainstorm." - Douglas Trumbull, Brainstorm

But why gaming?  Why not just turning off the lights in your house, or changing the channel on the TV, or programming your Tivo?

More info on the Brain-Computer Interface (BCI) technology.

It looks like controlling a computer with your brain has been around since the mid-90's.  From Wikipedia:

"in experiments beginning in the mid-1990s, Niels Birbaumer of the University of Tübingen in Germany used EEG recordings of slow cortical potential to give paralysed patients limited control over a computer cursor."

Of course, it took months of training to write 100 characters an hour, so it didn't work very well.

Looks like my light switch idea was already tested with good results, albeit in the virtual world.

"In 2000, for example, research by Jessica Bayliss at the University of Rochester showed that volunteers wearing virtual reality helmets could control elements in a virtual world using their P300 EEG readings, including turning lights on and off and bringing a mock-up car to a stop."

Who's behind this latest innovation?  I'm guessing the Fraunhofer Society, the killers of the physical music media and inventors of MP3 have something to do with it.

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Neatorama » Blog Archive » The Evolution of Tech Companies’ Logos

 

You’ve seen these tech logos everywhere, but have you ever wondered how they came to be? Did you know that Apple’s original logo was Isaac Newton under an apple tree? Or that Nokia’s original logo was a fish?

Let’s take a look at the origin of tech companies’ logos and how they evolved over time

Neatorama » Blog Archive » The Evolution of Tech Companies’ Logos

Saturday, February 16, 2008

Yahoo eats its creative brains?


Design and Innovation are really similar and complementary terms.  Design is "to conceive or fashion in the mind; to invent" while innovation is to improve on a design, or invention, probably through more design.  It is an iterative process that happens in waves.

Kind of like job cuts.  During times of stress, the first ones to go are R&D.  The last person to go is the one who turns off the lights at night and makes the coffee in the morning.

Interesting times are in store for Yahoo after axing 1,000 employees.  Someone else did some cold ballpark estimates for the effect the cuts will have on YHOO's stock price & EPS.  Apparently the more people they cut, the more operating profit they will have?  Sounds a bit flaky and unsustainable to me.  Are they going to have the board of directors installing more memory in the servers at Yahoo, or are they just going to outsource everything to Amazon S3?

The entire Yahoo Design Innovation Team, aka yHaus, has been axed en masse, Portfolio.com has confirmed with one of the team's former members.

"Yahoo Design Innovation team has been shut down completely," wrote Doug Fritz, a former full-time staffer for the team, in an email.

Confirmed: Yahoo Design Innovation Team Axed - News Blog - Daily Brief - Portfolio.com

No word on whether they were measuring innovation vs. profit at Yahoo, or the social aspects cutting 1,000 jobs will have on corporate culture.  Perhaps this is a poison pill designed to stop any hostile takeover?

One designer posted some really interesting data visualization videos around FAA flight data here.  Like living organisms, the planes graphically pour in and out of the US.

Here is a list of a few of web sites of the former Yahoo design innovation team for further inspiration.

http://www.aaronkoblin.com/
http://www.ghost-hack.com/
http://www.bigpixel.com/
http://www.practicalist.com/
http://www.dougfritz.com/
http://jennylc.com/
http://danielmassey.net/
http://recombine.net/
http://interactive.usc.edu/members/adm/

Innovation is quite similar to the creation of life.  It is a drastically changing event that impacts everyone around it.  Sometimes innovation may even shorten life.

Speaking of life and living, one of my friends sent me photos of their unborn son.  This feels to me like looking into a crystal ball and being able to see a life before it sees the world.  Incredible stuff...

Like watching the creation of life, being able to watch what is happening in the brain is as incredible.  It is still a very mysterious part of our anatomy, though every day technology turns into a Rosetta Stone for translation and decoding of our thoughts and actions into meaning.

One technology that captures my interest is brain single-photon-emission computed tomography (SPECT) 3D imaging.  This technology gives psychiatrists and scientists the ability to compare the brains of various subjects and view incredible 3D visualizations of the inner workings of the brain.  Picture a cure for brain-related disorders, and perhaps even better-tasting food.

Cardiac MRI provides the ability to look into the inner workings of the heart.  Picture longer lives and a healthier brain.

However, with all of the advances in science, there does not yet exist a tool to visualize the soul or even prove that it exists, though fetal imaging gets pretty close to seeing a mother and father's soul combined into a living being.

What does this all have to do with Yahoo cutting its innovation teams?  Perhaps it leaves them to go on to more important work than just building a better web site, search engine, or social network, like getting rid of lost baggage or delays at airports, or inventing a way to visualize the soul.

Just my $0.02.

Thursday, February 14, 2008

Innovation in Canada

I am a member of a task group studying innovation within our company.  This seems to be a prevailing topic as the focus moves from monetizing physical assets (capital goods, real estate, hardware, software) to monetizing innovative ideas (think green, cost reductions and efficiencies, patents, best of breed designs) and ensuring that we keep up with the increasingly fast-moving R&D train of the world, and all of those building cranes.

Canada does have a way to go, though we do have RIMM and our Canadian Space Agency... and CATA.

Canada’s lack of innovation, a 14th place ranking or a D Grade in Innovation, among the 17 OECD nations, is leading to mediocre socio-economic performance compared to other developed countries (Conference Board of Canada)

Source: CATAAlliance Executive Dashboard, February, 2008

Is D a pass? 


Some of the focuses of CATA, the Canadian Advanced Technology Alliance, include:

  • Building a brand for Canada (isn't this Tim Hortons?)
  • Creating an Industrial Strategy for Canada (outsourcing and a higher CAD?)
  • Attracting, retaining and training best talent (George Romero is moving to Toronto)
  • Public Safety and National Security with an eye on protecting privacy(unlike the US, where the GOP walked out of the House today because they couldn't get their NSA bill passed)

The membership has a noticeable slant towards manufacturers, which is probably because Canada has a large amount of them. 

So what is OECD and how do they have the authority to rate our innovative spirit? It's the Organization for Economic Co-Operation and Development.  Since this was written, there are now 30 nations on the list, so maybe Canada's been bumped a bit higher (or lower..)


In the US, a government task group has been created from top executives in the largest corporations to figure out how to quantify and measure innovation.  This committee, aptly and verbosely titled Measuring Innovation in the 21st Century Economic Advisory Committee (MI21cEaC would make a good strong password) has Steve Ballmer of Microsoft as one of its members.  Other companies with representatives include Wal-Mart, 3M, and IBM.

Oddly enough, Steve Jobs or anyone else from Apple isn't represented.

So why is everyone caring so much about innovation today?

"Innovation is a key determinant of economic growth and improvements in living standards over the long run. "

Sounds important.  So how do we measure innovation in an IT consulting organization?  In the "real world" outside the business, patents and R&D expenditures are used as proxies to measure innovation.  One KPI used is R&D / GDP (%).  SInce we don't have GDP in our organization, perhaps R&D spend / Total Revenue is a good KPI?  For measuring expenses perhaps, but innovation has got to be much more than figuring out how much money is being thrown at a problem.

Inside the business, there should be many ways to measure innovation.  Of course, before you can measure you must define.  The problem with the term "innovation" is that it has many possible connotations.  Invention is the creation of an idea.  So is innovation?  No.  Innovation, from what I understand is an idea that significantly improves on a previous idea (invention) or combines multiple ideas in a unique way, and demonstrates it to others in a repeatable fashion.

For things like this I look to Wikipedia, possibly the most revolutionary innovation since the printed word.  Since we're trying to relate this to business & government, I will go with this example.

In economics, business and government policy,- something new - must be substantially different, not an insignificant change. In economics the change must increase value, customer value, or producer value. Innovations are intended to make someone better off, and the succession of many innovations grows the whole economy.

To simply even further, you need to define what "value" is from an economic sense.

Value is...

"the amount (of money or goods or services) that is considered to be a fair equivalent for something else; "he tried to estimate the value of the produce at normal prices" - Free Dictionary

Sounds like apples to oranges... each of them could be priced matched and both are fruits, but some people like apples and some people like oranges.  Maybe Total Economic Value provides a better defnition?

"TEV is composed by use values, option values and non-use components. There is not in the literature a single standard categorization nor terminology. Often Total Value is reported as the sum of use value and non-use values or passive values"

Ouch.  Maybe not.

How do you increase value through innovation? 

Change the world.

Simpify. 

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Livestation Beta Opens Up


I just got approved for the Livestation trial.  I'm a bit underwhelmed, since I have 1 channel (Al Jazeera) and a couple radio stations.

The quality is good, but for now I'll stick with Joost.

European Livestation users will have access to the BBC, Bloomberg, Al Jazeera, France 24 in French and English, Euronews, Canal+, Sky News and two BBC Radio stations with the new beta test unveiled today. US users will just get Al Jazeera, France 24 and BBC Radio for now, but Berlucchi was quick to remind me that this is still a technical trial to prove that the technology is working and that there is actually a demand for such an offering.

Livestation | NewTeeVee: Livestation Opens Up Beta Test, Focuses on News | Download the free Livestation player

Friday, February 08, 2008