For future reference
Just found another banana bread recipe to try out:
Beautiful sunny Sunday.
Today’s activities:
I went to church, the fitness center, and sat in the park and drank a latte macchiato in the beautiful spring sun.
And I took some snapshots.
20th March was my grandmother’s birthday. I always wanted to write her story: the little that I know from my mother and what my imagination has filled in. Maybe one day I will.
I really like the current series of preachings at Crossroads church. We are studying Deuteronomy. If you are curious, there is a audio podcast on the church website. I can recommend last week’s and today’s.
Attached to the news and Twitter:
I guess you are doing the same as I am: checking the status at Fukushima nuclear power plant. And the news from Libya. Egypt. Tunisia. Bahrain. I am reminded of Billy Joel’s song “We didn’t start the fire”.
One recurring buzzword that has entered the business world is “crowdsourcing” – it is used as a silver bullet in all sorts of contexts. Here are some notes and thoughts:
Wikipedia has a good definition and describes how the term emerged.
Famous examples are:
Facebook’s use of the community to translate its interface.
or Twitter
and Google that use the power of the community to translate their web apps. For example the Chichewa interface was translated by Malawian and Zambian volunteers:
See Clement Nyirenda’s blog entry calling for volunteers and his subsequent post celebrating the launch.
Another very famous crowdsourcing platform is Amazon’s Mechanical Turk, which provides some remuneration for so-called human intelligence tasks.
Reasons why a crowdsourced project may fail:
Prerequisites are:
What about B2B projects? How can B2B companies use crowdsourcing?
Tartan Marketing (not Scottish despite the branding) describes 2 scenarios:
Here is a further list of less well-known crowdsourcing platforms.
A backlink for a local Basel artist:
Martin Gyger is showing recent work in a small show at:
Gemeinschaftspraxis Auberg 7,
Zentrum für Osteopathie,
Auberg 7 in 4051 Basel
Related news item:
In a 3sat Kulturzeit interview Heike Faller said if you really want to invest ethically, you need to understand the product you are investing in, e.g. a piece of land in an area that you know well or a local artist that you’ve met and believe in.
Just started a Twitter storm with the extraordinary mllea following my tweet yesterday evening to investigate all PhDs with the same scrutiny and dedication that Mr. zu Guttenberg has been subjected to:
I don’t support zu Guttenberg and I think what he did is simply wrong. But there is another aspect in this story that is being wholly ignored: the role of the German uni system and the blatant incompetence of many, many professors and researchers to communicate “wissenschaftliches Arbeiten”.
My MBA law professor said:
“A pancake can never be so thin, that it doesn´t have 2 sides to it”
So before you condemn, please consider the other side. An underfunded, outdated university setup with many faculty members that have little to no didactic training/skills and low motivation.
Coming from Malawi where education and the teaching profession is highly regarded, I was shocked.
And compared to my recent MBA experience at a US state university, there is a world of difference.
Coincidently another friend commented on my tweet saying: if you check them, the Bundestag will be empty.
In the end I managed to get thru my German university because there are dedicated, thoughtful professors that care. And I would always hire somebody with a Magister in Humanities from a German university because I know they are self-starters with excellent research skills that don’t give up easily. It is a good learning experience.
If the bicycle parking area is too large, people will forget where they left their bike.
Like at the Velo Parking at Basel SBB.
This evening a young woman was looking for her bicycle. A couple of days ago a young man was wandering up and down the aisles in search of his bike.
And the same has happened to me as well. I was extremely tired and couldn’t remember in which aisle I had left my bike.
In almost all cases, people grab their cell phone and call someone.
Wouldn’t it be cool if you could call your bike and it would identify itself by ringing out loud or flashing a light?
Which reminds me of another cool presentation I saw at Lift 11:
The web of things
Tunisia, Egypt, Bahrain, Libya, Iran…
I read a quote to the effect that the technology invented 10 years ago, will change society profoundly in the next 10 years.
I wonder about the progress that could be achieved if a developing country would provide free and open access to the Internet and computers for its entire population over a long period of time.
Meanwhile Germany is discussing the PhD thesis paper of the Minister of Defence and the missing references. In my humble opinion, the university professors are to blame as well. Why accept a thesis paper or dissertation if it doesn’t cite sources correctly? I am missing this aspect in all of the discussions. If this is your area of research, you’ll be familiar with the various sources and recognize copycats. Right?
And I stumbled across this article on information overload.
It rained today. The first time in weeks. I can’t remember if it rained in January.
The air was so fresh and clean this evening. Beautiful.
Alles wird gut.
I am back from Lift11. This time I took part as a volunteer. I was a runner, helping out with errands, bringing things from A to B, and general troubleshooting.
I like the idea of giving back.
Again the mix of topics and people at Lift was inspiring.
All of the videos are online:
http://www.livestream.com/liftconference/folder
Some highlights:
Social Capital – Brian Solis suggested scenarios where we are/will be assessed according to our online reputation or digital credit rating. Scary.
Tiffany St. James provided a practical guide to online communities.
Hasan Elahi explained how he used his calendar, photos and full transparency to escape from the US suspected terrorist list. He has turned his digital tracks for the FBI into an awesome “Document your life” art project.
I really liked Etienne Mineur’s presentation about a book that wanted to be a video game.
Downtime at Lift11:
The wifi went down on Thursday as Lifters connected to the Internet all at the same time, with numerous devices. 2 to 3 IP addresses per person. I left the charger for my cell phone at home. My Blackberry to keep in touch with my work emails would not recharge despite having the correct charger with me. And I managed to forget my PIN number for my data sim card. And I forgot to take my digi cam.
Things I had forgotten about Geneva:
Shops close early – only open on Thursdays until 8pm.
Customer service is (still) an unknown concept in some places. At the counter of a cafe, the sales person insisted on selling the coffee pour emporter cos the coffee place was closing soon. It was 20:10 and the place was closing at 21:00.
Good news for bloggers! That is – for bloggers that write their own posts rather than copying blog posts and entire blogs.
Matt Cutts writes about upcoming changes that will benefit original content:
http://www.mattcutts.com/blog/algorithm-change-launched/
Via a retweet by Handmade2.0
I pay 45 CHF (approx 45 US$) for a haircut in Basel, Switzerland. Nothing special. Just washing and a haircut.
I paid 1650 Malawi Kwacha (approx 10 US$) for a haircut in Blantyre, Malawi.
I paid the equivalent of 4 US$ for a haircut in Shanghai, PRC.
Just saying.
Another way to read Chiperoni.ch:
Google Reader Play
As a Lift 2011 volunteer, I have a promo code for a 25 % discount to give away.
Please leave a comment below if you are interested 🙂
I am back from BT. I spent two and a half weeks in Malawi’s biggest city.
I started off in snowy Zurich with some delay. There was a long and slow queue of aircrafts waiting for de-icing. The transparent and open explanations by the Lufthansa captain, at the beginning and throughout the delay, were great – a lesson in communications. In Munich the entire airport was in quiet mode due to Christmas Eve celebrations. After another de-icing session, the plane took off for Joburg. I sat next to a young South African student who is studying medicine in Warsaw. Made for an interesting conversation. After a smooth flight, I learned that my flight to Blantyre was already boarding. No time to stock up on books and magazines at my favourite airport book store. I was the second last person to board the plane. And the first to go through customs at Chileka airport, cos my bag was the first on the conveyor belt.
Driving towards Blantyre on Chileka Road, my eyes rested on the familiar mountain outlines of Ndirande and Michiru. It has been raining regularly and everything is green.
In the afternoon on Christmas Day, I took part in a Christmas carol service at Chombo Children’s Home in Chirimba. Afterwards my mom presented gifts to the 47 children that live at Chombo. This year all children received a school bag filled with books and sweets.
BTW, I have become the unofficial official photographer of Chombo. Snapshots from my previous visits are available at http://www.flickr.com/photos/chombo-mission/sets/.
I spent the next couple of weeks shopping for Chombo, driving sick children to hospital, helping out with simple admin tasks.
I persuaded my mom to try a TNM USB mobile internet modem, since her current email via telephone dial-up is unreliable and slow. Downloading 451 kB takes over 8 minutes:

waiting for 451 KB to download…
And many of her European and American and South African contacts don’t reduce the size of their attachments, sending their photos in original size. Because we have fast flat rates. Internet is ubiquitous.
Please consider my previous blog post on re-sizing images. Many people in Malawi pay lots of US$ for every kilobyte and megabyte they receive. Many connect to the Internet via their smartphone.
Or don’t have any connection for days.
By chance I read Vincent Kumwenda’s “Letter to the Editor” in The Nation:
I wonder how much the re-branding from Celtel to Zain to Airtel has cost / will cost.
I managed to read three novels. And I enjoyed listening to BBC radio. One particular interview with the actor Michael Caine impressed me. Caine described how many fellow actors tried to discourage him, how he was physically sick before going out on stage, and how he met his wife. He referred to a Winston Churchhill quote:
If you are going through hell, keep going.
I need to add BBC to my podcast lists.
My dad has two young mischief puppy dogs that love to play and chew and jump.
The flight back was uneventful. I sat next to a lady from Oslo that had visited Plan projects in Zimbabwe. She was quite impressed and thinks Zimbabwe will mend fast.
My contributions to the Chichewa group on Flickr.
My contributions to the Malawi group on Flickr.
For me 2010 has been special.
While I was a kid, I wondered and dreamed about 2010 and where I would be. My life is very different from what I dreamed it would be. But it is good.
I achieved one of my long-standing goals.
I am venturing out to embrace new challenges.
Hello 2011.
How do I find my best photo of 2010 on Flickr?
Not easy.
I need an app for that.
I (still) don’t edit my photos according to composition or technical aspects.
I have been uploading snapshots at regular intervals.
Despite a busy schedule.
Still following my motto:
Document your life.
Some spontaneous selections:
Today I talked to @sufranke about an event I am planning at the day job.
Before long I was explaining how I was fascinated by the power of blogs and Twitter and the possibility they offer to bypass the gatekeepers who decide which media content you are supposed to consume. In my case, blogs and Twitter help me circumvent traditional Western euro-centric media with their pre-set opinions on Africa to learn about news in Blantyre.
The story of Nchenga at Chiperoni.ch is hidden in this blog:
Example of the power of blogging: During the last General Elections in Malawi, Alex at the Polytechnic helped to keep us informed by posting regular information and allowing Malawians to comment. In general, blogging has increased the amount of direct infos available on Malawi in the Internet.
Why use the nom de web Nchenga and why is my blog called Chiperoni?
No real reason except that I set up this blog shortly after a visit to Blantyre:
Somehow I felt “blurry image” describes my blogging adventure and cos it also means “sand” I was happy.
I am enthused by the sound of words.
Chiperoni describes the weather here in Europe. And it sounds like home.
Did you know? I am one of the admins of the largest Malawi photography group ever. And I maintain a list of Malawians on Twitter.
Instead of watching Tatort, I went for a short jog combined with lots of walking. I am still not back in my jogging routine. Yet.
But I am enjoying being outside. It was so beautifully warm today.
And. It is a good way to reflect.
Time for mind blogging.
I like being outdoors.
I really like living in Switzerland. I think it is great that people take such meticulous care of their houses and gardens.
This afternoon I went to see “Wien 1900 ”“ Klimt, Schiele und ihre Zeit” at the Beyeler Museum. I liked the architecture and poster designs. And Klimt’s landscapes.
I didn’t like the additional shopping area they added for Wien 1900 merchandise. One shop is enough.
A couple of Wikipedia links:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Egon_Schiele
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gustav_Klimt
You’ve probably heard of poetry slams. But there are also science slams: 10 mins to present your research project. There is one in Freiburg im Br. on 29th November and 17th January. I would love to go and see one.
The incredibly influential a. of Handmade 2.0 invited me to a new web app called Pinterest. We have been blogging since January 2003. And it has been an incredible journey…. Thank you a. for the billions of emails, links and ideas. I am truly amazed at the amount of data we have collected.
I am still trying to figure out how to use Facebook as can be seen occasionally in my tweets. I worry that a platform like Facebook could replace the web. That would be the end of HTML pages, simplicity, transparency and diversity.
That’s why it’s important to support and use other platforms and tools. Try out WordPress and Drupal. Learn HTML. Write your own articles. Voice your opinion. Become involved. Think before you click re-tweet, like or comment.
It is my belief that after the fragmentation of the media scene and citizen journalism and the removal of the gatekeepers, we will see consolidation and the rise of new media giants with new gatekeepers.
I started playing around with Open Atrium, a Drupal-based tool for open and closed groups.
The install was smooth and easy.
Setting up a closed group is easy as well.
I would like to remove the introductory video on the dashboard but couldn’t find out where.
Documentation:
https://community.openatrium.com/documentation-en/
I like this quote:
“Do what you can, with what you have, where you are.”
Attributed to Theodore Roosevelt but sounds like it could have originated in my childhood somewhere.