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Trip to Lausanne

January 15th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Work

I went for my annual outing to Lausanne this morning to record the oral part of the Apprenticeships exam this summer.

I go to a recording studio near the lake just outside of Lausanne and spend a few hours recording the texts.

This year we were three instead of two as my colleague’s daughter made her debut and did a mighty fine job of it. I was picked up and dropped off at the station and was back in Geneva just after midday.

I have been testing a GiSteq GPS and Phototracker software so this morning I synchronised my mobile phone with the little GPS before leaving home and took a few pics (of little interest I might add) and will be adding some Geolocalisation data to the pics once I get home.

This is a fascinating photo of a Lausanne Trolley Bus taken from the car…

If this sort of thing interests you let me know and I’ll give you more details of exactly how it works.

Although I am testing this for work, I am seriously thinking of using a GiSteq for my own personal usage.

It’s a pity I didn’t use it during our holidays in Scotland as then I would know with certainty exactly where each photo was taken and the altitude it was taken at.

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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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It had to happen one day

December 16th, 2005 | 3 Comments | Posted in Musings

I’ve consistently succeeded in my studies over the years. My lucky streak just ran out.

I’m afraid I failed with a possibility of resubmitting my Project Report. At this point in time I don’t know if I will resubmit but this might just be due to being disappointed.

If I am honest with myself, and this is usually what I attempt to be, I would say that I really tried hard to present a good report with what I had to work with but as my motivation was quasi-inexistant during the early stages of the report there was insufficient substance to the report itself.

I will be getting some feedback from the examination board within the next six weeks they say and I would be well advised to stay my final decision until I get that.

If it would be a life changing or significant achievement, I would more inclined to follow it up but I don’t feel it is that important. There are far more important things in life than an MBA which would only be three letters after my name that nobody would add anyway.

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All ready to go

September 13th, 2005 | 2 Comments | Posted in Places

Well my project was posted a whole week before the deadline, and sent express post to the UK. It should arrive well before the deadline of this Friday.

I’m free! Free of exams, of tutor marked assessments, of study and report writing. Now I just have to pass on the project to be awarded my MBA (Technology Management) and hopefully be able to go to an award ceremony to collect me diploma.

So I’m off on holidays the day after tomorrow, back to the same hotel we stayed in last year in Bali. This means that posts will probably be non existant for the next two weeks as well.

I’ll see y’all when I get back. Look after yourselves won’t you!

Oh and I’ll be bringing my new site online when I get back too. I’ve got lots of ideas for that.

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Oops, that was clumsy

September 8th, 2005 | No Comments | Posted in Geeky

I deleted one of my own posts this morning!

I was investigating reports of difficulties in adding comments and discovered that one commenter was being trapped by my spam filter for reasons I have not had time to investigate yet.

I then deleted my last post instead of a comment.

Silly me.

Oh and by the way my report is ready to send and I will be doing that tomorrow. Then it is just a case of crossing fingers and toes until I get the result (just before Christmas I think)

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Exams

June 10th, 2005 | 2 Comments | Posted in People, Swiss

No not mine I hasten to add!

Every summer I am an “expert” (their term not mine) during examinations leading to a commercial apprenticeship here in Geneva. First I help students pass their Oral exam and then I correct the exam papers with the teachers.

This year I am also a member of the Coordinating Committee so I had to scrutinize the (top secret) papers before they were submitted.

Yesterday I had to attend the written exams and be available to students who needed to ask questions during the exam (the idea being to help without giving the answers…)

I wasn’t quite prepared for the number of students who sat the exam but apparently there were more than 500.

Here is a photo to the left of me:

Palexpo 9.6.2005

and another to the right:

Palexpo 9.6.2005 (2)

I now have my already busy weekend to mark some of the papers which are re-marked by a teacher. Then a week later I meet with the committee to correct the corrections in final copy.

There were also more than 20 people hired to distribute the papers and check that nobody was cheating. One of the ladies told me that she has been doing this for 38 years!

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Last exam for the foreseeable future

April 29th, 2005 | Comments Off | Posted in Musings

Well it didn’t go too badly. The examinators managed to ask questions that I was capable of giving answers to, so I was off to a good start.

Cramp set in after an hours writing which was to be expected but I finished everything in time and timed the questions correctly. I guess I’m used to it now.

Providing I pass, this will have been the last exam in my current cursus. My last course is a project and it has to be completed and handed in for the middle of September.

I’m taking the weekend off and I’ll get back to it Monday.

The weather sounds very promising this weekend. Sun and temperatures up around 25-26°C.

Whoopee!

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I’ll soon be a student again

March 17th, 2004 | 2 Comments | Posted in Uncategorized

I think I blogged a while back that I was probably going back to studying for my MBA this year.

I got the OK from the personnel department by the post today so it is happening.

Tomorrow I will contact my University and enroll on the required courses. They start in just over a month so I must get geared up and ready. I am apprehensive but also a little excited. When I took a break around two years ago I had completed half so I “only” have two six month courses and a years project to do. With any luck, in just over eighteen months time I will be graduating again with an MBA in Technology Management to complete my Bachelors Degree.

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Studies

January 26th, 2004 | 1 Comment | Posted in Uncategorized

Now that I’ve got my worklife back into shape, I am seriously thinking of finishing the course of studies I started a few years ago.

After my bachelors degree I started an MBA in Technology Management at the Open University and completed 90 out of the 180 credits I need to graduate. This leaves me with two 6 months courses and a project lasting a year.

I figure that if I start in May, which is the earliest I could enroll, I would finish next year before the summer. I don’t like not finishing something that I have started so I am remotivating myself to get stuck in and finish it. It’s only 10-15 hours of study per week in addition to my current schedule. It sounds a fair amount but I’ve already been there and done that, so in the end it is only a matter of getting back into the routine of it.

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