http://betaboston.com/news/2014/07/09/re-inventing-the-wheel-why-not-many-do/
Examples of how the patent system around the world is stuffed, and stuff that shouldn’t get through, gets through all the time.
http://betaboston.com/news/2014/07/09/re-inventing-the-wheel-why-not-many-do/
Examples of how the patent system around the world is stuffed, and stuff that shouldn’t get through, gets through all the time.
People are discussing whether the concept of “work-life balance” is disappearing. It is noted that the phrasing points to a dichotomy: more of one will mean less of other other. So far so good. I could agree with something more broad and that doesn’t look like a set of scales.
In further discussion, it is then pointed out that for some, work and life is blended – that’s where they lose me. Indeed, many people have essentially sacrificed their non-work time to work. They check and reply to emails, take phone calls from their boss, and more. I reckon that’s daft.
I believe it’s actually very disrespectful for a company (managers) to work in that way. It’s also unwise, as they’ll be straining their employees which ultimately hurts everybody as well as business.
“Work is a rubber ball. If you drop it, it will bounce back.
The other four balls– family, health, friends, integrity– are made of glass. If you drop one of these, it will be irrevocably scuffed, nicked, perhaps even shattered.”
It is not often I agree with real-estate salesman!
The analogy is interesting – it makes it look like a juggling act, and that’s often what it feels like. Pretty good!
I think we can agree that finding (or creating!) a new job is easier than restoring damaged health or recovering messed up family life. They’re all hard (some would say impossible), but there are degrees.
If you really had to choose to drop one of these aspects to save others, which would you pick? (and why)
What the blazes is that, a live webinar?
Webinar… an atrocious word in itself, means an online/web seminar.
As seminar is a fairly informal form of an academic lecture, and generally contains a component of interactivity – either there is an opportunity for questions at the end of presentations, or later in the hallway.
In context, so far so good. You can do that online. Fine.
So why do companies now need to put the adjective “live” in front… what does that mean?
What would a great ad for a university of technology be? An ad, that itself, solves a problem through technology. This is exactly what the University of Engineering and Technology of Peru and their ad agency Mayo DraftFCB have done – the first billboard in the world to make drinking water out of “thin air” [with 98% humidity].
http://www.businessinsider.com.au/larry-page-the-untold-story-2014-4
Larry Page and Google aren’t Upstartas. But they, like Steve Jobs of Apple, are still interesting and we can learn from some of their bold visions and actions.