browsing aimlessly thru my Malawi photos…
Category: General
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Ruling Families
I agree with this:
I’m tired of Bush and Clinton families running America and want a change.
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Holiday reading II
I recently read “Digging to America” by Anne Tyler.
It’s an easy read. I read the entire book in one day while travelling. I can’t really decide on my recommendation level though. I liked it because it feels like a biography and I tend to like biographies. It feels a bit like real life, i.e. it chugs along. No sudden surprises. No unexpected twists. A good description.
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Connecting users
A quote to keep in mind:
Sites that look like they suck are often a hundred times more useful and popular than sites that actually suck. Why? Because the key to Craigslist and Plenty of Fish is their ability to connect users to useful user-generated content, and vice versa. Everything else (…) is “trivial.”
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Greek version of Nutella
added to the Nutella alternatives group.
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Holiday reading
I stumbled across this in Miami:
Call centers take toll on Indian workers
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I am a snow bird
just got back from one week Southern Florida.
More snaps in my Flickr stream:
http://flickr.com/photos/chiperoni/. -
Malawi blogger
Another Malawi blog I’d like to share with you:
Dr Khumbo Kalua writes about his studies and work as a Senior Eye Specialist in Blantyre.
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Search phrases
I saw this search phrase in my blog stats:
was idi amin involved in movie production?
errr…
“The Last King of Scotland” is based on a fictional book by Giles Foden and is a US and UK production with Forest Whitaker in the main role.
See also this Wikipedia page on Idi Amin.
And this IHT article.
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The van der Post trail
Found this interesting read at Times Online:
A voyage round my fatherA daughter follows her father’s footsteps to Mount Mulanje.
Page three of the article includes travel tips.
Malawi is Africa as it once was, so there are no vast luxurious holiday compounds and few sumptuous lodges to insulate you from the masses.
Here are a couple of links on the book “Venture to the Interior” by Laurens van der Post: 1 2
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Yahoo Mail archive deleted
Rant ahead.
I have an old Yahoo email address, where I keep (or better kept) old emails for reference purposes. Mostly for nostalgic reasons. From dotcom times. From 1999 or 2000. None of it mission-critical.
Gone. I logged into Yahoo Mail the other day and was greeted with a smug everything’s deleted message, asking me if I’d like to re-activate my account.
Granted. I only logged in once every six months or less. But they could have sent me a couple of warnings on the alternate email I listed.
It also shows that there isn’t much Yahoo-wide interaction, ‘cos if they would have looked across to Flickr they would have seen that the same ID is still in use.
For me that’s the huge downside of online apps: corporations decide at will what they can do with your content.
It’s happened to me before by smaller companies as well. My old blog disappeared into Nirvana. Cos I didn’t get around to downloading the data fast enough.
I just read Seth Godin’s post on monopolies:
Welcome to a new century. In the new century, we all have the same goal:
1. Establish a direct and positive relationship with the end user.I feel that tech. companies are using “user generated content” as a way to build their business, but forget that there are real people on the other side.
Keep going down this road. And I’ll move on.
Jahuuuuu.
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I See Faces
a favorite photoset is:
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The next please
aargh*
Here’s the next marketing book to read:
Interview with Seth Godin about Meatball SundaeWhat a name for a book.
*just finished reading “The new Rules of Marketing and PR”
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FYI
You still have 29 days left to finish up your 2007 New Year’s resolutions. Stop slacking.
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10 Minute Banana Bread
for future reference:
Recipe for Banana Bread -
Conf Attendees 2.0
new word:
“VapoGurus” – People who seem to make a living solely by attending “2.0” conferences.seen in Gapingvoid’s Twitter stream
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Running Update
I’m kind of busy at my day job and I didn’t get around to post my regular weekend post. So here’s a short blog post to say hi.
And btw – about 20 years after everybody else – I’m discovering Twitter: Call it pseudo-blogging for busy knowledge workers. Or a quick way to communicate my jogging achievements.
So far Autumn 07 has been great for jogging. The dry, fresh weather is just right. I’ve been running regularly in a running club (the corresponding German word is Laufverein) since last summer and I can wholeheartedly recommend it. I’m still a slow coach, and don’t have any marathon plans (gory details how toe nails come loose and fall off are enough to scare me off 😉 )
A couple of running tips of the top of my head:
- Start slowly but be persistent. If you’re just starting out this means 1 minute running, 1 minute walking for about 1 hour. Extend the running period slowly from week to week. I’ve been part of several beginner groups in the past year and some people start off much too fast.
- The bad news for our instant gratification generation: you need to run at least twice a week for at least four to six weeks to see any improvement.
- Get some good running shoes. Don’t worry so much about the clothes. The functional shirts and running tights will somehow find their own way into your wardrobe. Plus running is a good place to wear all of those over-sized IT conference t-shirts.
- There is a phenomenon within our running club that I can’t quite understand yet. When it comes to forming running groups, there’s usually two groups: a fast one and a slow one. And about two to five people that don’t want to go along with the fast guys, don’t want to form their own middle-fast group, and end up running with the slow coaches (MY group). Inadvertently making the slow group faster. Too fast for the newbies. Instead of feeling discouraged by the middle-fast guys, keep going at your own pace. Be self-confident. Know your true performance level. Say what you want loud and clearly. For example, tell the middle-fast guys to form their own group or live with the slower pace.











