Author: nchenga

  • Missing Lift 09

    The top 3 ways to follow Lift 09, if you’re not in Geneva:

    Twitter

    Flickr

    Video

    See for example @afromusing’s talk:

  • Biker’s Rant

    An intense heading for a small observation, while cycling home from work:

    I noticed that many drivers and other cyclists make a lot of assumptions. A sincere road traffic faith that everything will work out in the end.

    For instance, I signaled that I was planning to turn left, and pulled across the road to the middle of the road. A car came hurtling out of nowhere and narrowly passed me on my right side. The driver didn’t slow down to wait until I had reached the center line.

    Kind of scary.

    Another situation: I tend to leave a little bit of space between my bike and any cars parked along the curb. Not much. But some room in case a car door opens suddenly. Some of my fellow bikers are really clever and try to overtake in the tiny space between me and the parked cars, instead of on the left side. Happened yesterday and today. Weird. Especially since the road was clear.

  • About northern France

    Finally got round to seeing “Chez les Ch’tis

    guess which film?

    Funny.

    I was laughing out loud.

    Other links of the day:

    1

    2

  • Sempé at the Cartoon Museum in Basel

    I went to see the Sempé show today. I had seen parts of it during the Museumsnacht, but the small museum was over crowded and I decided at the time that I’d come back another day.

    museumsnacht basel

    My French grammar books at school were illustrated with cartoons from Le Petit Nicolas.

    It wasn’t really quiet today either. There was a museum tour while I was there, and the lady presenting had a very loud voice that you could hear on all floors. It’s a small museum. I learnt that Sempé went through a depressive period after his friend committed suicide. Following this tragedy, Sempé didn’t publish any work for 6 years. And only managed to recover by listening to music.

    I learnt that Sempé required at least 2 weeks time for one his “New Yorker” covers.

    And I learnt another French expression for money: pognon: Used by a couple sitting on a pier, in front of them a yacht harbour and the setting sun to describe the scene.

    I like Sempé’s subtle humor. His illustrations are sentimental and nostalgic, even though they often point out and criticize disparities (e.g. between rich and poor, urban and rural).

    A very enjoyable show, open ’til 13th April 2009.

    I also liked the cartoons by Nicolas Mahler, another exhibition.

  • It’s the Small Gestures

    In a world full of advertising and sales pitches, it’s the little things that count.

    Like a handwritten note on the bottom of the fitness center’s invoice:
    Bisch fleissig

    The owner of the fitness center is a tough business woman. No discount. No rebate. No nothing. But she does build relationships. Which is the right approach.

    I mentioned in my previous blog post that building communities is hard work. And I mentioned the Flickr example. While googling for the quote, I stumbled across the fact that George Oates was fired at Flickr in December 08.

    While I don’t want to delve into something I know nothing about, I just can’t help feeling that this is a bad marketing move. And maybe Flickr is indeed being pruned for sale.

  • Hiding in Full Public View

    In January my stats dropped to an all time low. There are a number of reasons, I guess.

    One reason is that I haven’t been writing much lately. Just an occasional link. Short cross-references to my Flickr stream. That’s it.

    Another reason is my retro-style homepage, which points to my other life stream options (Twitter, Flickr, Google Reader, Delicious) and probably diverts (or puts off) a lot of people.

    Maybe another reason is the second WordPress installation I’ve added to showcase an idea. Maybe the Google bot doesn’t like this kind of setup. I’m not sure. It’s not duplicate content.

    Although I think I am still listed.

    It is surprising because I have over 4 years of content here.

    Fact is I could start a confessional style blog and publish details galore. And only five people would read it.

    Because the amount of information floating around the Internet has exploded. Gone are the times where a blog post on a specialized topic would get hits.

    Somehow I find this strangely comforting. I can hide in full public view. Hide on the Internet.

    And the other message hidden in there is that building communities is hard work.

    As enterprises try to follow their customers and consider integrating Facebook and Twitter into their marketing programs, I think it’s important to hold up some warning signs.

    IMG_3782

    There are no quick wins in this.

    You’ll need Scoble-like marketing resources. Using a video-only communication strategy is not the answer. People are different. Some like screencasts. Some like text.

    Scoble says:

    Truth is that if you want to build an audience on the web you must use EVERY tool available.

    You’ll need to walk the fine line in your choice of communication (no marketing glib, no sales talk, no PR gobbeldygook, a real personal voice, useful and good content at frequent intervals). I read somewhere that the first Flickr team greeted every new sign-up personally.

    You’ll need to have a clear community policy.

    And above all you need to be aware that you’re giving your data to a third party.

    Twitter / Home

    Everything you publish on the Internet is up for grabs. Everything.

    I’m not saying that enterprises should not invest in social media. I’m saying enterprises should carefully consider the costs. Maybe that’s a possible business model for Twitter… corporations pay for the ability to export their data and contacts at all times. A service agreement for data?

    What happens if Yahoo sells Flickr to a stock photo agency?

    As I watch the demise of Technorati and Xing, I keep getting reminded of Adam Greenfield’s talk on “Everyware”.

    As we used to say in Blantyre: Amakhala scared.

    If you’re here and reading this. Thank you. I’m not here for the stats. I’m here to learn. So far the positive effects outweigh the negative bits by far. And I believe everybody needs to become aware of this ocean of data that surrounds us and become a social media expert of sorts.

  • Building a profitable company

    I’d like to share this video on building a profitable internet business. The presenter’s voice sounds kind of high strung, but he does address a couple of good points.

    (via Twitter)

  • photowalking



    i went photowalking.

    again.

  • In my web stats

    Found this phrase in web stats:

    what is the meaning of the african word chiperoni

    See “What is Chiperoni?”.

  • Malawi’s Languages

    I stumbled across this very interesting post and comment on Chingoni, Chilhomwe, Chisena and many more.

  • Blue and white

    blue and white

    IMG_8953

    I went photowalking again 😉

  • Museumsnacht



    Last week’s Museumsnacht was lots of fun

  • Recommended Podcast

    Balanced life is catching things before they fall on the ground

    I stumbled across a podcast from 2006 with Carole Bartz, who was recently appointed CEO of Yahoo. I quite liked the podcast.

  • Blaggede… Surprise…

    How do you know you’ve arrived at the Basel* Swiss railway station?

    You can hear at least 2 people calling out at regular intervals:

    Blaggede

    Surprise (French pronounication)

    *Basel has 3 train stations.

  • How to Resize Photos

    My family’s email account in Blantyre was blocked twice in the past week, due to well-meaning but over-sized Christmas and New Year email greetings. Attachments with over 2 MBs. The family is still on a phone line with a very slow connection rate. And downloading emails with a large attachment takes forever and a day. Luckily I can access their account via the web and move the large emails out of the way. But I thought I’d raise some awareness.

    And point you to some resources describing how to resize photos.


    Using MS Paint

    How to resize your photograph by exact dimensions

    1. Right click on the image and select ‘Edit’. (This should bring up Windows Paint).
    2. On the menu bar at the top, select Image -> Attributes…
    3. If the image is a portrait layout, use a width of 640 and a height of 480. If it’s a landscape layout, use a width of 480 and a height of 640.
    4. Save the file. (You may want to ‘Save As’ to a different file so you don’t overwrite the original).

    How to resize your photograph by percent

    1. Right click on the image and select ‘Edit’. (This should bring up Windows Paint).
    2. On the menu bar at the top, select Image -> Stretch/Skew…
    3. Change the percentages in the Stretch box for both Vertical and Horizontal. Make them both the same or else the picture will not be proportionate.
    4. Save the file (you may want to ‘Save As’ to a different file so you don’t overwrite the original).

    Using Picasa

    Resize by exporting

    Exporting lets you resize your photos while controlling the JPEG compression (image quality) introduced by your applied photo edits. The result is newly resized copies of your photos, saved to any location on your hard drive. During the export process, you can adjust both the ‘Image Size Options’ and the ‘Image Quality’ settings in the ‘Export to Folder’ screen.

    • Under ‘Image Size Options,’ select the ‘Resize to’ option and adjust the size slider. The number of pixels you select with this slider determines the length or height of your photo (whichever is longer). The other dimension is determined automatically to maintain the aspect ratio of the photo.
    • Select the desired image quality for your photo using the ‘Image Quality’ drop-down menu:
      • Automatic: Preserves the original image quality
      • Normal: Balances quality and size
      • Maximum: Preserves fine detail for large file sizes
      • Minimum: Yields some quality loss for small file sizes
      • Custom: Enables you to select your own value

    Resize by emailing

    If you’re sending photos by email, you may want to resize then in order to get under the attachment size limitation. To change the size of the photos you email from Picasa, please follow these steps:

    1. Click the Tools menu.
    2. Select Options.
    3. Click the Email tab.
    4. Under ‘Output Options,’ use the slider to set your desired pixel size when emailing multiple photos. Use the radio buttons to set the desired pixel size for emailing single photos.
    5. Click OK.

    Lazy workaround via Flickr

    I sometimes use Flickr as a lazy workaround.

    1. Upload or email photo to the Flickr stream.
    2. Go to the photo page and select All Sizes.
    3. Select Small or Medium and click Download the Small (or Medium) Size.

    File format:
    Always use JPEG.

    There are tonnes of other ways to resize photos with free software, such as IrfanView or The Gimp.

    Within MS Word:
    Don’t change the viewable size within Word (e.g. dragging the corners of the photo). Word will store the image in its original size. Resize the photo before inserting it into Word.

    Adobe PDF:
    Check the conversion settings.

    Check the sizes of all files (Word, pdf, .jpeg) before sending them.

    Be considerate and don’t send photos in their original size. Especially if you don’t know what type of connection the recipient is using.

    It’s five minutes for you versus 30 minutes of expensive download time on a plain old telephone connection for them.

  • I like red brickwork



    New year photo resolution:

    Take a camera everywhere I go.

  • The Sunday before Christmas

    The jog log:
    Slow but steep run to Bettingen (the long way) through slush, mud and melted snow. The temperature was around 5 to 8 degrees plus. Perfect running weather. The soles of my feet were burning for much of the way. Maybe the wrong pair of socks…? But I kept going and feel relaxed now.

    IMG_8185

    Here’s a quote I heard today at Crossroads from Robert Fulgham’s book “All I Really Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten”, a book I read many years ago:

    All I really need to know about how to live and what to do and how to be I learned in kindergarten. Wisdom was not at the top of the graduate school mountain, but there in the sand pile at school.
    These are the things I learned:

    • Share everything.
    • Play fair.
    • Don’t hit people.
    • Put things back where you found them.
    • Clean up your own mess.
    • Don’t take things that aren’t yours.
    • Say you’re sorry when you hurt somebody.
    • Wash your hands before you eat.
    • Flush.
    • Warm cookies and cold milk are good for you.
    • Live a balanced life – learn some and think some and draw and paint and sing and dance and play and work every day some.
    • Take a nap every afternoon.
    • When you go out in the world, watch out for traffic, hold hands and stick together.
    • Be aware of wonder. Remember the little seed in the Styrofoam cup: the roots go down and the plant goes up and nobody really knows how or why, but we are all like that.
    • Goldfish and hamsters and white mice and even the little seed in the Styrofoam cup – they all die. So do we.
    • And then remember the Dick-and-Jane books and the first word you learned – the biggest word of all – LOOK.

    Everything you need to know is in there somewhere. The Golden Rule and love and basic sanitation. Ecology and politics and equality and sane living.

    Take any one of those items and extrapolate it into sophisticated adult terms and apply it to your family life or your work or government or your world and it holds true and clear and firm. Think what a better world it would be if we all – the whole world – had cookies and milk at about 3 o’clock in the afternoon and then lay down with our blankies for a nap. Or if all governments had as a basic policy to always put things back where they found them and to clean up their own mess.

    And it is still true, no matter how old you are, when you go out in the world, it is best to hold hands and stick together.

    BTW, Crossroads was beautifully decorated today:

    poinsettas at crossroads basel

    Compare and contrast these to the 3-meter-high plants in our garden in Nyambadwe last May:

    IMG_0146

    more of the same

    My year of photography:
    The Malawi plants are some of my first photos I took with my Canon 40D. I bought the dslr shortly before flying to Blantyre. I have had a lot of fun and look forward to learning more.

    I’m planning to get a tripod very soon.

    I may sound kind of spaced out/weird/disconnected, but taking photos has a therapeutic effect on me. A way to be creative and express myself. To de-stress. To reflect.

  • RSS Feeds

    Here are a couple of links in preparation for a meeting tomorrow where I get to explain how I use RSS feeds.

    What is an RSS Feed?

    There’s a video explaining RSS feeds in plain English:

    How do I use RSS feeds?

    1. To follow niche topics: to keep up with news and topics that I am interested in. My advice: don’t subscribe to any high-volume news feeds like CNN or the BBC. Use it to stay up-to-date on topics that you are following regularly, e.g. I’ve subscribed to a number of websites that write about technology in Africa.
    2. As a single-source input base with endless distribution possibilities: I can distribute and cross-reference items  on other websites of mine using RSS. For example, I can display my latest Chiperoni.ch entry at another website and vice versa.  WordPress, the web technology I use at this site,  offers RSS feeds for comments, categories and tags. For example the RSS feed address for entries categorized as Malawi is: http://www.chiperoni.ch/wordpress/category/malawi/feed/
      This is a simple but great way to make a website more dynamic. See also my recent prototype.

    Advantages versus a regular email newsletter:

    • I can easily unsubscribe a feed, if I want (less hassle than email newsletter).
    • I can decide in what intervals I would like to receive updates.
    • I can choose where I want to read a feed (in a desktop reader, in my email inbox or in web-based tool).
    • I can subscribe to an RSS feed via email.

    Tools:

    I currently use Google Reader, a web-based feed reader. I have used dedicated desktop feed readers, other web-based tools, and the feed reader of Mozilla Thunderbird and Apple Mail. My preferences change from time to time. A web-based reader has the advantage of being accessible where ever I have Internet access and a browser. Email clients are great for a corporate environment.

    More on Google Reader:

    I can share, email or tag an entry within my RSS reader:

    Google Reader (1)

    What else? Feel free to comment and describe your usage, while I catch some sleep.

  • shadow on the wall



    Photo walking is more fun when conditions are not quite as cold as yesterday (about 3 degrees plus and windy).

    Older snapshot from a recent trip to Hannover:

    getting cold feet

  • Snow

    snow

    Still find snow exciting. Like a little kid. Frozen water falling from the sky.

    The tag: living in a deep freezer