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Robert: Part three

March 20th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Uncategorized

Following on from my last few posts I’m trying to be a little more pro-active.

If you want to participate in the hunt for my friend Robert I have made a badge that you could host to help spread the word. I’ll be reporting regularly here to give you any news I receive.

Here is the badge:
Looking for Robert, a long lost friend.

You can copy the code below:

<a href="http://graham-lawrence.com/wp/2008/03/17/robert-part-two/">
<img src="http://www.graham-lawrence.com/files/looking_for_robert.jpg"
alt="Looking for Robert, a long lost friend." /></a>

It was not as easy as I thought to post the above code without it being interpreted a second time. In the end I had to install a plugin (Code-Markup) and this allows me to display just the code without markup. I would have thought that this should be integrated with WP but it doesn’t seem to be the case.

That’s strange don’t you think?

Anyway, please help spread the word to help me find Robert!

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Robert: Part two

March 17th, 2008 | 1 Comment | Posted in People

I lived in Edinburgh from 1968 to 1978 and had some very good friends. Robert Irvine (Whose photo I posted yesterday), John Sharp, who later came to Switzerland and was my best man at my wedding and James whose surname I have forgotten although it might be Cameron. We used to hang out together frequently, discovering music and taking photos and doing what friends do best, having a lot of fun.

I’ve lost touch over the years and would really like to get in touch with them. I want to try the power of the web because they must have made or are making waves on it as I write.

I’m starting with Robert.

Robert was born in Edinburgh and lived with his Mum in Lauriston Place before emigrating to the States. I know he was living in San Francisco in 1984 because the last photo of him was of his wedding with a woman named Sharon that was taken with the Golden Gate bridge as a backdrop on the 19th of February 1984.

Please help me find him by relaying this info and the photo I posted yesterday. I know it’s possible. Let’s make it happen.

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Yes I do want to make a difference!

January 29th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Events, Geneva

One of my Twitter friends mentioned that he has signed up for Earth Hour 2008. I think that’s a great idea so I’ve signed up too. As it is in 60 day’s time it might not make it big here in Geneva but you never know…




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Google Apps Scores Big Deal in Switzerland

November 24th, 2007 | No Comments | Posted in Uncategorized

I don’t quite know how this will come out but I’m trying anyway (using flock)

Google Apps Scores Big Deal in Switzerland
November 23, 2007 — 05:34 AM PST — by Sean P. AuneShare This

Sunrise Google

The second largest telecom in Switzerland, Sunrise, is teaming up with Google to offer a new, unified, email system to their customers.

As opposed to having to make a large investment in their infrastructure, Sunrise sees this partnership as a quick way to implement giving their customers larger email accounts in a reliable frame work. There is no mention if the Google brand name will be on the new service, but one can easily imagine this may be the first of many “white label” offerings from Google. Perhaps there will be a footer link, or something similar, but this may be the Mountain View, CA Internet giant’s way of expanding into even more markets by providing quick solutions to companies who wish to forgo large investments.

I have always been one to wonder why so many companies go to such lengths to “reinvent the wheel” when there is one out there that works so well already.

(via Heise Online)

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Swivel

July 17th, 2007 | 2 Comments | Posted in Geeky

I discovered Swivel this morning. This is another site where I could spend a lot of time punching in data and churning out graphs.

This is a test of embedding an available graph here on the blog.


# Males and # Females by Country

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Software is socially ineffective

July 11th, 2007 | No Comments | Posted in Commentary, People, Technology, Work

I have been working in IT for over 15 years and through that time software has always been seen as being effective in solving business and real life problems.

There is however a dimension that has been sorely neglected and that is organizational and social structures and human psychology. If you look at this as a triangle it makes sense. The bottom third is the technological infrastructure, the middle layer is the functional features whereas the top third, the cone, is users and usability. So initially software was chosen on it’s technical merits and then functional matrixes were elaborated to make sure that software was functionally rich.

We can see this in the evolution of products such as Microsoft Word. Initially it had to work albeit with a minimal function set. Then it evolved into a functionally (too?) rich product. The problem was that not many used a significant portion of these functions but many complained that although rich in functions it wasn’t particularly “usable”. The latest version therefore is functionally very similar but a vast effort has been made to make it more usable (or at least more visibly attractive).

I could expand on this but the point of this post is really to highlight a problem.

My work description leads me to promote collaboration in my organization. My employers are obsessed (in a way very rightly so) about the technical infrastructure, standards and frameworks. On it’s own this leads to very frustrating, functionally poor and unusable software packages that are almost always rejected.

It was then decided to create and test software on a functional matrix using real world tasks and problems to “functionally fit” the software to the organizational needs.

The problem of course is that if the software is not given usability tests by focus groups or future users we inevitably end up with software that is technically excellent, functionally rich but users don’t want to approach it let alone actually use it.

Good software then needs a holistic approach with all three considerations factored in.

There is however a further problem that needs to be solved or at least considered.

Human psychology and sociology is independent of software.

Unfortunately, you can give the best collaborative software available to users but if they are not collaborative in nature or if the organization is structured and organized to impeach or hinder collaboration. The software will fail.

This is why, in my opinion, that the organization needs to be stimulated by management through structure, processes and education to become collaborative in nature precociously before or during the introduction of collaborative software.

This brings me to my last point in this post. I am not really a social animal at heart. I suck at polite conversation and social skills although to balance this I love meaningful conversations and real discussions so I’m not a social outcast either.

The Web 2.0 is here and with it we can all join in. I blog here (and elsewhere), I have a flickr account, I partake in de.lic.ious, Facebook, MySpace, Netvibes, Last.fm, Twitter, Pownce, Picassa, StumbleUpon, MSN, Gtalk, Digg, etc etc

Has this made me any more “social”. I fear not. What I remark the most that most of my friends are on most if not all of the aforementioned “networks.” What we need is training in social skills because mine sometimes are spread very thinly and I sometimes wonder if I would happier signing up for less new things and concentrating on existing ones (like this blog for instance ;-).)

I’ll leave it there for today.

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Wiki and blog use in Business

June 28th, 2007 | 3 Comments | Posted in Commentary, Geneva, Musings, Technical, Work

Stephanie made an interesting post today reporting on a Suw Charman talk over at Google.

Now this is something I am directly involved in. I use both socially and feel that they are good and useful tools in businesses. One of the problems, from my point of view, is that technical enterprises tend to attempt to solve problems through the use of software tools. Most problems are either social (people) or organizational (people and structures) problems and can only be resolved by directly addressing the causes of the problem.

Personally I would love to read the blogs of my boss and of my Director. I feel it is a much better (and well organized chronologically) medium than newsletters or email distributions and could contribute towards animating business life in my service and organization respectively.

In a service comprised of 12 or so members a wiki would be an excellent way of sharing and building info and documents.

The problem of course is once again people and the organization but (un)naturally my organization is spending a disproportionate amount of time on deciding which tools we need and focusing on the technical platform and the functional matrix of the tools on option.

A social and organizational matrix might be a more efficient way of attacking the problem because in the past our IT department has been known to propose tools that were neither useable or understood and were thus never adopted.

More about this later if it interests you.

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Annoying article in the local press

June 22nd, 2007 | No Comments | Posted in Swiss

I read one of those articles that never cease to annoy me. Along the lines of a big announce either for something that “might” happen one day or of something that will only happen much later on.

This mornings article proclaims that we will no longer be inconvenienced by noisy garden machines such as lawnmowers and leaf blowers. The new law will come into effect on the first of July … in two weeks.

But :

  • It doesn’t apply to existing machines
  • It will only apply to machines bought after the 1st of January 2010

Our lawnmower is already 7 years old and most lawnmowers last at least 10 years. I get the feeling that the law won’t really have any effect until 2020…

This then is distinctly in the “This is not real news” category.

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Thanks for the milestone

June 12th, 2007 | 2 Comments | Posted in Geeky, Me

I have very thoughtful and attentive friends out there and I wanted to thank you for your well wishes and also to say that thanks to you my blog reached a milestone today. 1000 comments! You are fantastic and even if I don’t update sometimes you can be sure that it will only be a temporary thing. I’m not giving up and I’m in it for the long term.

1000.jpg

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Shift happens

May 10th, 2007 | No Comments | Posted in People

My very good friend Nils sent me the link to this presentation and I thought I would share it with you this morning.

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