Friday, February 29, 2008

Parents Stop Video Game Porn and Violence

The video game Grand Theft Auto has been controversial since it came on the scene in 1997. The series has capitalized on the extreme graphic violence that can be perpetrated by players as they commit robberies, "pimp" women and participate in organized crime assassinations.

Parents must stop the destruction caused by video game pornography and violence.  By educating our children, you make an impact on how they view the violence that is thrust upon them every day. We can help them make healthy choices when it comes to how they want to spend their money and thereby have an impact on this violent video game machine.

Issue

As parents, how can we stand by and let something that is so violent become a part of our daily lives while it make millions of dollars by exploiting the minds of our children? Conservative media expert Ted Baehr cites that children will consume "63,000 hours of music, movies, television, iPods, and all of that by the time they're seventeen." (watch video)

The Problem
This is not the old make believe "Cops and Robbers" or "Cowboys and Indians". It is a buy in to a level of violence that was never imagined before. Grand Theft Auto is pure, unadulterated criminal indoctrination. Violent games affect children in different ways, depending on what stage they are in developmentally. As parents, we are responsible for seeing that we help our children make the right choices. "Children don't want to be manipulated. They want to be responsible. Help them to do that," says Baehr.

Educate Yourself, Set Your Children up to Succeed
Baehr has created a five-step process parents can follow to help educate their children on the ways of the media, which all parents should watch prior to letting their children select their own media. It can be seen at along with several of Baehr's other videos at iQuestions.com, a new online video based website.

Monday, February 25, 2008

Companies Without Domain Names

I am always seeing owners of small-to-medium sized companies with email addresses such as johndoe@AOL.com, johndoe@triad.rr.com, johndoe@gmail.com or johndoe@yahoo.com.

These work – they allow you to send and receive email! But do they express the company identity that you've worked so hard to build. Some of the people I'm talking about have multi-colored business cards, logos printed on the face of their buildings and signage on their vehicles. But they use a generic email address that in no way identifies who you are to the receiver until the email is actually opened.

My clients have often heard me say that "having an email address like username@AOL.com is worse than having no business email at all". I truly believe that and believe that any business seriously interested in doing business electronically should invest the very small number of dollars required to have a corporate identity.

You note that I am NOT saying that everybody needs a web site – because I don't think that a web site is necessary for every business. In fact, I think a web site may actually be a liability for some businesses and/or types of business. It's a rare instance, however when I would not recommend that a company invest in a domain name and email services that use that domain name.

Monday, February 11, 2008

Managing Server Based Email

I'm seeing more and more instances where email boxes are near, at or beyond quotas set in Microsoft Exchange. This is a serious problem because

  1. Users quit sending and receiving email when their size limits are reached
  2. Excessively large mailboxes cause a real performance issue for the Exchange server
  3. It's just not a good practice to keep them there.

With MS Exchange mail servers, almost all users choose MS Outlook as their default mail client. With Outlook, users have a number of alternatives to keeping all their email in their server-side INBOX

  1. God forbid – read the email, process it and delete the thing
  2. Set archive limits to something reasonable – maybe no more than a week on the server before being archived to a folder on the local machine
  3. Copy read emails to a personal folder on the local machine
  4. Create a local .PST file on the local machine into which read emails are copied
  5. Move them to a private folder somewhere on the local machine or on the network.

There are options – options that are often overlooked; but overlooking these options can create real problems for your email system and your network.

Friday, February 08, 2008

Is Newer Necessarily Better?

Until a few years ago, I believed that people should surpass being leading edge – opting instead to be bleeding edge. It was almost comic around the office. Within 15 minutes after a vendor released a product version or fix, all you'd see of John was rear end and elbows until the version or fix was installed.

It's common knowledge that age changes a lot of things. More often than not, it causes us to slow down. It should make us wiser because we've benefitted from a lot of observations and mistakes over years of work. Age should make us more cautious because we neither have the energy nor can we afford – you know all you young bumpkins are watching us and waiting for us to make a fatal mistake – to make mistakes we took in stride twenty years ago.

Several good friends and a few very good clients have recently asked me about my philosophy when it comes to applying vendor supplied maintenance; and when they should migrate to newer and better product versions and desktops. In that regard, I have a few guidelines – a started to say rules but I think guideline is better because it leaves room for exceptions.

  • I have Automatic Update activated on all my personal Windows desktops; but on none of my JFSI business desktops. I used to have it active across the board, and doing it the way I'm now doing it introduces a risk that I'll miss automatically installing a critical security patch. But I'll cover that in a second.
  • I set things this way because I've twice or thrice been burned by bad fixes that cost time and/or money to back off. Plus, activating automatic update eliminates you having the option of applying fixes or not. Thank God for System Restore points. A bad fix applied to one of the systems at home is a nuisance, but it's rarely a crisis.
  • What about new product versions? I considered myself to be on Office 2003 Power User. In fact, several people asked me to rate myself and I gave myself an 85% score when I came to using products in the Office 2003 Suite. After a year on Office 2007 I'd rate myself maybe at 60-65%, and that's pretty darned generous. I find it cumbersome, clumsy, non-intuitive and a real impediment to performance. Why? Only because I was so darned comfortable with the previous versions and change of the magnitude introduced by Office's ribbons is hard to cope with.

Vista is yet another story. I have a couple of Vista based machines; and I'm getting used to it. You'll note I did not say I LIKE it; but I'm finding it more tolerable, just as I'm finding Office 2007 more tolerable. I rue the day, however, when Bill and company decide that XP will no longer be available on PCs being installed in small to medium sized businesses along side other XP machines. I predict something only slightly short of a major revolution when that occurs.

So to net things out….

  • I now TEST updates before just taking the vendor's word that they're necessary UNLESS the vendor can show real reason. If it is truly a MAJOR security breach and the vendor can prove the fix damages nothing else, great; but I've adopted a more "guilty until proven innocent" attitude with respect to updates.
  • I generally run one level behind or at least wait a few weeks after a major update so that others can find the bugs. It just allows me to sleep better at night.


 


 

 

Thursday, February 07, 2008

Why people hate Vista

A confluence of sensible concerns and emotional reactions help explain why Microsoft's newest OS has riled customers


posted here with permission of Galen Gruman


February 05, 2008

You rarely hear about a new OS causing people to panic. But IT consultant Scott Pam says that's exactly what his small-business clients are doing when they install Windows Vista on new PCs and run smack into compatibility or usability roadblocks.

Pam's clients are not alone: Since InfoWorld launched its petition drive on Jan. 14 to ask Microsoft to continue selling new XP licenses indefinitely alongside its Vista licenses, more than 75,000 people have signed on. And hundreds of people have commented — many with ferocious, sometimes unprintable passion. "Right now I have a laptop with crap Vista and I'm going to downgrade to XP because Vista sucks," reads one such comment.

Where does all the vitriol come from?

[
Get the big picture on Windows XP's impending demise, from user reactions to licensing implications — and sign InfoWorld's "Save XP" petition ]

IT managers and analysts suggest a range of reasons, some based on irrational fears and others based on rational reactions to disruptive changes.

Emotional effects
"When we first deployed Vista, people told us it sucks, that it's not as good as XP," recalled Sumeeth Evans, IT director at Collegiate Housing Services, an 80-person college facilities management firm. A month later, he surveyed the staff to see if their views had changed, and they had: "They said it was very good, that they were getting used to it. We asked what was different, and they said they originally didn't like Vista because it was a change. That's human nature."

Microsoft's overzealous schedule in replacing XP with Vista has exacerbated resistance to change, said Michael Silver, a research vice president at Gartner. The company had originally planned to discontinue XP sales on Dec. 31, 2007, just 11 months after Vista was made available to consumers and 14 months after it was made available to enterprises. The date for new license sales to end is now June 30.

In practice, XP's consumer availability ended for many users even sooner — just six months after Vista's release — since storefront retailers Best Buy and Circuit City and most computer manufacturers' Web sites stopped selling XP-equipped computers in July 2007. Typically, Microsoft has given customers two years to make such a transition, Silver noted.

Burton Group executive strategist Ken Anderson suggested that the strong emotional identification with XP represented a fundamental shift in how people, including IT staff, now think of operating systems. They have become a familiar extension of what we do and how we work, thus not something want to change often. "When technology becomes part of you, you don't want people to mess with it," he said.

Anderson likened the reaction to XP's impending demise to what happened in the 1980s when Coca-Cola replaced its classic Coke formula with New Coke, causing massive protests by customers who had no reason to change what they drank. The protests forced the company to bring back what we now call Coke Classic. "XP has come to the point of being Coke Classic," he said, with Vista playing the role of New Coke.

The further the better
The Englewood (N.J.) Hospital Medical Center switched to Vista shortly after its enterprise release, since it had been in Microsoft's early adopter program. Most users — mainly nurses and other medical staff — didn't really notice the upgrade and had few complaints, noted Gary Wilhelm, the business and systems financial manager (a combination of CTO and CFO) at the 2,500-employee facility. That's because they don't really use the OS, but instead work directly in familiar applications that load when they sign in using their ID.

Capacitor manufacturer Kemet saw a similar ho-hum reaction from most of its staff, says Jeff Padgett, the global infrastructure manager. And for the same reason: Users have little direct interaction with the OS. But the staff did push back on Office 2007, whose ribbon interface is a departure from the previous versions. They rebelled to the degree that Padgett has delayed Office 2007 deployment and may not install it at all.

Back at the Englewood hospital, Wilhelm did hear anti-Vista grumbling from people in the administration department, who work more closely with the OS itself for file management and so on. And at Kemet, another group of hands-on users complained about the switch to Vista, noted Padgett: "The people who suffered the most were engineers and IT people."

The phenomenon of hands-on users being the most resistant explains why so many small-business users and consultants have reacted so strongly against Vista, noted Gartner's Silver.

Conversely, those enamored of the latest technology tend to be Vista enthusiasts, said David Fritzke, IT director at the YMCA Milwaukee, which has been adding Vista to its workforce as it buys new computers. "Some users bought Vista for home and then wanted it more quickly at work than we had initially planned to deploy it," he said. Fritzke also found that younger users adapted to Vista more easily.

In search of ROI
Users' personal reactions, positive or negative, ultimately impact the bottom line and help drive the business decision of whether to roll out Vista across an organization.

It's all about basic cost-benefit analysis, says Gartner's Silver. In most businesses, Vista offers few compelling advantages for users while introducing challenges. The cost of change is too high for the perceived benefit. For example, users often complain about Vista's constant nagging about possible system threats, about applications that no longer run, or about files that appear to be "lost" because they've been moved to new places by the OS, Silver said.

"It's really hard to convince someone to go to a product that's not quite as stable or as capable as what they're already using," Silver noted — and so they get frustrated and angry. While IT managers and analysts appreciate some under-the-hood changes in Vista, these improvements don't have an immediate, obvious benefit for users. "Vista's benefits are not about the users," concurred Collegiate Housing Services' Evans.

Upgrades from Microsoft's past have also colored expectations, Silver said. Users tend to remember the straightforward transition from Windows 2000 to XP, even though technically it was a "minor" upgrade, he said. (Silver also noted that until XP Service Pack 2, XP had its own share of compatibility and security flaws that annoyed users, something that most forgot with SP2's release.)

And while the path from Windows 95 and 98 to Windows XP was rockier, the benefits were clear enough at each stage for most customers to make the upgrade investment gladly, Silver said.

Some users have decided to skip Vista altogether and instead wait for Windows 7 , whose release date has been reported as anywhere between 2009 and 2011 "Why shoot yourself in the foot twice? Windows 7 will be out next year; I'll wait till then," said one InfoWorld reader. If Windows 7 arrives sooner rather than later — or if a miraculous Vista service pack addresses all the major objections in one swoop — then the uproar over upgrading to Vista will quickly fade into the hazy past of other Windows upgrade snafus.



Wednesday, February 06, 2008

Notes From A Political Junkie

Those of you who know me likely know that I am a self-avowed political junkie. While I have long resisted the temptation to run for office myself, I during every election select a candidate or two to work for, donate whatever computer resources and time I have available and put in some serious effort to get him or her elected. I'm not sure why I'm this way; but I suspect it's largely because I grew up in a household with a father who was like me – sleepless on election night(s) watching returns trickle in and glued to the TV during political party conventions.

By now I'm sure you've said what many have long known – this guy's a real nut! But for me, I don't know whether it's in the genes, the bones or just stuck back in the back corner of a brain that's short circuited in its political core.

Well – Super Tuesday is over! Thank goodness! It happened that Super Tuesday coincided with another important day – FAT TUESDAY – the day when Christians and heathens alike gorge themselves on pancakes and all things they should not eat supposedly before the beginning of Lent. I heard absolutely no mention of Fat Tuesday yesterday – in fact, I heard very little about Mardi Gras. It took back seat to the election.

What did I think about yesterday? I thought it was GREAT! Having what was essentially a national referendum / primary is a great idea. Why not make it a true one next time and have all 50 primaries on the same day?

What did I think of the results? My guy is ahead so it's goodness from my perspective. I'm not sure about what's going to happen in the opposition party; but they can fight it out amongst themselves. One thing is for sure, this election cycle will not be dull; it's going to be hard fought and interesting till the end.

The most important step to thrive in any economy

Posted with permission of Terry Brock


 

Unless you've been living on Neptune, you know that many are talking about a slow-down in the economy, "tough times ahead" and some even using the R-word -- recession. We have seen these come and go for centuries. How do we deal with this one and what can you do in your business to thrive -- no matter what happens?

It is not a mystery. You'll be able to survive and thrive if you apply basic principles of success. The laws of success don't change based on what the Federal Reserve does to the money supply. The laws of success don't change because of tax laws. And, as much as politicians this year would like us to believe they can control it all, the laws of success don't change based on what political actions.

The key to thriving anywhere at anytime is really quite simple. It is not easy, but it is something that those less successful will shrug off saying "Oh, that is no big deal." However, those that are successful hear it, pay attention and take appropriate actions.

The most important step to thrive in any economy is to make yourself indispensable to people who can help you. In business, this means that you become the "must-have" provider of solutions, products and services that simply can't be eliminated by those wonderful people who pay your bills. Whether you call them customers, clients, member or some other term, you can survive if you strengthen that umbilical chord between you and your buyers.

But how do we do that in today's world? I've talked about these steps before but with the current economic situation it makes even more sense to accentuate these and share these principles with others.

Here are some tactics your and your people can implement to make yourself indispensable:

Study What They Need

Too many businesses run into problems with "We think..." marketing. Those unsuccessful people are often well-meaning. They sit in a conference room, come up with brilliant (at least they think they are brilliant) ideas on how to market and sell to buyers. Successful people ask the right questions of real buyers. They listen to the answers buyers give them. Successful people also develop a sort of "sixth sense" to "listen between the lines" and hear what buyers are saying---even when they are not saying it.

Study The Macro Environment

Learn what is going on that is affecting not only your business but also the business of your customers. What challenges are they facing in the economy? What trends are likely to affect them? Successful people understand how economic trends affect their own buyers and businesses.

Work Harder In Hard Times

It takes hard work to get ahead. That means going the extra mile and helping clients who are also going through harder times. This will help you become a better person. Friedrich Nietzsche said, "That which does not kill me makes me stronger." Kick yourself in the butt! Get moving and don't tolerate anything less than excellence in your own personal behavior. By "work harder" I mean study more, learn valuable skills the market wants, provide value for clients where they consider it value.

Look For New Markets

Sometimes, the difficult times provide a wonderful opportunity to see new options that we wouldn't consider otherwise. Think globally. With technologies today you can deal with customers in other countries much easier than ever. Find those areas and industries that aren't going through the hard times you might be experiencing.

Challenging times open lots of opportunities for other ventures and options. Unsuccessful people complain and blame. Successful people see what is happening, prepare to take advantage of the situation and thrive on it by becoming indispensable to others. Become the "go to" person for those wonderful buyers.

In doing this, you'll be successful no matter what the economy does.