Fast Company: How Google Searches Itself. Mayer, an intense, fast-talking product manager, scribbles rapidly as the engineers race to explain and defend the new ideas that they’ve posted to an internal Web site. By the end of the hour-long meeting, six, seven, or sometimes even eight new ideas are fleshed out enough to take to the next level of development. [Tomalak’s Realm]
General
Brothers in Arms These mist
Brothers in Arms
These mist covered mountains
Are a home now for me
But my home is the lowlands
And always will be
Some day you’ll return to
Your valleys and your farms
And you’ll no longer burn
To be brothers in arm
Through these fields of destruction
Baptism of fire
I’ve watched all your suffering
As the battles raged higher
And though they did hurt me so bad
In the fear and alarm
You did not desert me
My brothers in arms
There’s so many different worlds
So many different suns
And we have just one world
But we live in different ones
Now the sun’s gone to hell
And the moon’s riding high
Let me bid you farewell
Every man has to die
But it’s written in the starlight
And every line on your palm
We’re fools to make war
On our brothers in arms
John Robb. Getting answers to
John Robb. Getting answers to tough questions via a K-Log [klogs] [John Robb’s Radio Weblog]
How to build an RSS
How to build an RSS digital dashboard using Manila and Radio (a low tech approach). The concept is simple. In addition to getting new posts from news sites and other weblogs, RSS feeds can contain data from corporate systems. Sales data, financial data, supply data, data from partner systems, etc. Using this method, employees could get up to the minute data from multiple applications on a single webpage — a personal digital dashboard.
So, for example, I could be a sales manager at a Fortune 500 company. I want to track information available to me from multiple corporate applications, and I don’t want to run the client software for each app on my desktop. I only want the data. So, in order to offer employees better access to data, the IT department is convinced to spend a couple of days to create granular RSS feeds for the main corporate apps (CRM, ERP, financial, etc.). Here is what the feed could look like:
Sale: Customer name: Proctor and Gamble, Date: June 12, 2002, Amount: $2.3 m, Made by: Tom Durst, E-mail: tdurst@widget.com, K-Log: http://tdurst.widget.com , Product: Widget XYZ
Using Radio I merely subscribe to the feeds I want to monitor form a list on the Intranet (using the news subscription page). Every hour I get all the latest data from each of the apps. Further, I can take any of this data, add an annotation/comment/POV, and publish it to my K-Log. Sweet. I could also create published views of this data using the Multi-author tool for Radio (this tool lets me select the feeds I want to group and publish them to category specific weblog).
Manila works in a similar fashion. I can publish feeds I want to subscribe to using a simple macro. Using Manila, create a new page for your site (a story), place the macro below in the “source view” of the editing box. Here is the macro:
{viewRssBox
(“http://www.nanotechnews.com/nano/rdf“,
boxTitle:”Nanotech News”, align:”center”, width:200,
frameColor:”#000000″, titleBarTextColor:”#ADD8E6″,
titleBarColor:”#FFFFFF”, boxFillColor:”#FFFFFF”, timeZone:”PST”,
hspace:0, vspace:0, maxItems:20)}
Note: replace the URL for the RSS feed I have in the above with the feed you want to monitor, change the name, and presto. You now have a page on your site with the data from the RSS feed. In fact, using Manila you could build a complete portal of aggregated newsfeeds without much technical knowledge.
If I was really motivated, I could use Radio’s outliner to build a directory of aggregated feeds.
Digital dashboards should be something anybody can create, customize, and control. Don’t let your IT department launch into a multi-million $$ universal application portal when a simple approach like this could be accomplished in days for short dollars. [John Robb’s Radio Weblog]
Best Practices for Freelance Business
Best Practices for Freelance Business – Part 1. You may have a staff of one — but as Chris shows, the best practices of big corporations can also translate to freelance success… [SitePoint]
Coffee. Please..
Coffee. Please..
Ugh. 9am phone calls from
Ugh. 9am phone calls from your boss that wake you up usually suck.