02. May 2007 · 3 comments · Categories: Gin, Linky

An always thoughtful friend pointed me to the New York Times two page article discussing a martini tasting. My love for the topic (gin!) prompts me to post about it here, but do be warned that they only review ten gins and I’d lodge a few disagreements. I keep saying I need to do this more in depth at some point, but now is certainly not the time. Some commentary on their gin reviews:

  • Plymouth – They’re right to love it. It’s a great gin.
  • Junipero – What they call assertive I maintain is downright undignified. I have a bottle, and have tried it a few times, and it’s just too aggressive for my tastes.
  • Old Raj – Huzzah! Someone else in the world has tried this stuff! It’s a strange gin, and you should totally try it out in a bar. But it’s also the most expensive gin I’ve ever seen, and having bought a bottle back in the days of full employment, it’s tough to recommend someone else doing so unless you’re also a collector of such things.
  • Hendricks – It’s a fun gin and it comes in a delightful bottle. I’m a sucker for packaging. Not my favorite but close to it and there are lots of my lovely friends who adore the stuff. It is a little different, but in this case different is good.
  • Bombay Sapphire – I like their review on this. Sapphire tends to be a little harsh for my tastes these days, but it’s ubiquitous and not bad.
  • Quintessential – Ugh. Enjoy it in a gin and Fresca but it’s really a terrible base for a martini.
  • Martin Millers – I always think of this gin as a little bubbly, but I recall enjoying it. It was the favorite of one of my friends, and I think he was on to something. It’s one I’m looking forward to returning to at some point, and if you’re touring gins I’d say it’s worth a stop.
  • Keep in mind that my “go to” gins are Magellan and Van Gogh, both of which are somewhat soft and floral. As such, my tastes are a bit different than the NYT folks and probably my dear readers. Hrm, perhaps I need to host another Tour of Gin soon!

23. April 2007 · Comments Off on Communication · Categories: Linky

As an MBA student with a tech background, it’s no great surprise that I’m a member of LinkedIn (you can see my profile here). After I voiced an opinion on one of the questions (there’s an open “question & answer” section where people post a variety of questions, often related to business, and other folks post responses), the author wrote me back and in the course of a small discussion pointed me to a Wikipedia link on Paul Watzlawick. It’s a quick and fascinating read, especially the part about Watzlawick’s five basic ideas on how communication works (which implies that, if any of these are interfered with, communication breaks down).

It is interesting to watch ye olde blogosphere move towards audio and video posts, and away from purely text means as communicating online. In part, it seems this might be related trying to increase the richness of the communications channels, which makes a lot of sense in context of Watzlawick’s comments on metacommunication. Comments on blogs as an attempt to regain some of the cyclic nature of conversation: there’s a reason we at least desire the illusion that we’re not just speaking into a vacuum. Keeping an eye on webstats perhaps serves the same kind of purpose, although to a lesser extent.

And now I need to do some homework…

So I was mucking about with WordPress and playing with SlimStat to check out statistics. It turns out there are, in fact, more than three of you, and some of ones I don’t know are very weird.

The first person ended up stumbling in from Australia and was, I think, looking at a post from last December when folks baked cookies at my apartment for hours on end. I don’t imagine that reader will be coming back.

The other person ended up here by searching on Microsoft’s Live.com (I didn’t know anyone actually used that!) for “Pictures of Cats with Pulled Out Hair”. It turns out that my Pictures category is number seven with a bullet, baby! These are the 4 pictures I uploaded before I started using flickr and most of them are cats. I can’t imagine the terror one must feel when attempting to search for hairless cats and stumbling upon Omar instead. What’s even better is that this post will probably rocket to the top of the charts. Welcome searchers-for-hairless-cats! You’re at the wrong site. I’m sorry.

Finally, there are a few requests for RSS/Atom feeds going on. I can’t tell if these are bots or actual humans. I also am clueless about this feed as I never use RSS, so if you’re reading this through RSS or Atom and you sure wish I’d change the format to something else, please drop me a line and let me know.

To end our randomness in a truly nerd-like fashion, here’s a link for all you trying to figure out who to vote for in the 2008 election.

30. March 2007 · Comments Off on Virtual Currencies · Categories: Business, Linky

Twice recently I’ve read an article about virtual currencies (mainly QQ) in China and how the Chinese government is a getting a little freaked out. Frankly, I think they’re probably right to be given how tightly they want to control the yuan.

Quick links for your edification:

This is part of why the internet is so fascinating. A currency starts out, and is intended for, online trading of virtual objects. However, as has being going on for years, people are willing to pay real money for virtual objects (witness buying characters, etc.). Suddenly, we’ve jumped. Now other merchants are starting to join in, especially those that want to use micro-payments (say you want to sell access to your online book for $1). Micro-payments are hard because 1) nobody wants to go through the hassle of online paying for $1 and 2) the fees from credit cards are high enough that it’s difficult to make this economically viable (unless you’re someone like Apple who can really scale it up). So why not take a virtual currency, instead? Obviously this becomes cyclic: the more people that accept it, the more useful it becomes.

This raises some large concerns. Governments cite money laundering as a big one, but so is currency control. The more accepted a virtual currency becomes, the more it influences the physical (such as they are these days) currencies it interacts with. For example, if QQ becomes massively popular in China, and they suddenly change the way their currency is traded (for example: suddenly you can’t transfer more than $50 worth of it to any one individual in 24 hours), this could have very real effects on China’s currency and economy. That’s a hell of a thing.

There are all sorts of interesting things going on here. Which currencies are becoming popular? One imagines it starts with something that’s easy to use both for customers and 3rd party merchants, but what are the implications if you’re Nintendo and want to allow people to have some sort of “points” they can earn and trade online? Do you specifically limit this so that it’s only useful in your zone of control? This means you probably won’t have to deal with the some of these issues, but perhaps you want it ubiquitous? One imagines there is some real advantage to controlling a popular currency. Currency traders are looking into online currencies and starting to trade them, and after all what’s the difference? To them, it’s all virtual anyways.

This is the kind of thing that warms my nerdy, little heart. It’s also fun to think about this given my continuing learning about currency issues through business school.

26. March 2007 · Comments Off on Base of the Samosa – What’s in a name? · Categories: Business, Linky

Base of the Samosa – What’s in a name?

Due to classes and my involvement with Net Impact, I end up thinking and discussing “Base of the Pyramid” (BoP) issues a fair amount. These are often related to how to build partnerships so that businesses and the target communities (very poor people) both profit. The article above was one I found while researching SC Johnson’s efforts in Kibera, Kenya.

There are some great thoughts about being wary of defining a people solely by what they lack. In addition, one of the local NGO workers echoes my concerns with programs to Make Poverty History. They haven’t worked yet, and just throwing money to the poor, assuming the money actually gets to them, doesn’t necessarily do a lot of good. By definition this is a group of people that might be experts at making scarce resources last an incredible amount of time, but certainly aren’t experts about what to do with money.

Look at Taka ni Pato (trash is cash), a program run by CFK in Kibera and funded by the Ford Foundation. The project enables youth self help groups in Kibera to turn the community’s trash into a source of income, yet CFK has quickly learned that too much cash flowing too quickly could kill the very groups they are seeking to uplift, the groups that are now providing a much needed service to the community. Just because a group has increased income, perhaps for the first time any income at all, doesn’t mean that the group is ready to do something productive with that income. Are they mature enough to handle it? Do they have the transparency necessary to keep money issues from tearing the group apart? Do they have plans for tomorrow so they don’t spend it frivolously today? As Ibrahim Sakuda of Faulu Kenya reminds us, “As more income comes in, groups need time and help to broaden their vision beyond what they currently do.”

26. March 2007 · 2 comments · Categories: Linky

I, for one, welcome our new squid overlords.

The day people warn their children, “look out for the Humboldt squid” instead of “look out for sharks”, is going to be one to remember. How come the ocean gets the really scary animals?

07. March 2007 · 3 comments · Categories: Linky

I was writing an essay about how fundamentalist Christians seem to exist more in the suburbs and remembered an article about Ted Haggard and his church from pre-scandal days. It’s from Harper’s Magazine, and I thought it was a fascinating read.

Originally from May, 2005:
Soldiers of Christ – Inside America’s most powerful megachurch with Pastor Ted Haggard

06. March 2007 · Comments Off on Joel on lots of things · Categories: Business, Linky

Ok, some links I’ve been reading from Joel on Software. They’re all about developing software, not so much programming as managing the process. This is what I’m interested in, and it’s amazingly refreshing to read these. I’m getting an MBA at the University of San Diego, and I’m happy with the program for the most part. Lots of smart students, instructors, good coursework, too much work, etc. Unfortunately, they wouldn’t know technology if it rose up and bit them. I have remarked that it’s akin to being taught from the middle of a cornfield. Given that we’re in San Diego, perhaps it should be a beach. There is movement underway to change this, and certainly they’re doing great things for infrastructure including better wireless network (it’s in great shape now), having the Profs use WebCT, etc. Unfortunately, they are eliminating their MSIT program, so no classes on or from an IT prospective.

Here are some good articles that I should read again before I get back in the world of IT, assuming that’s where I end up next December:

  1. Painless Software Schedules – Software scheduling. Done poorly, it’s the bane of any software company. I could go off a big rant on why scheduling is so important, but Joel does a far better job here.
  2. Seven Steps to Remarkable Customer Service – I love customer service. Really. I come out of years of technical support, where I loved my job and excelled. I get a huge kick out of making sure the customer is delighted with our company. There wasn’t anything in this article I didn’t already do or know, but it’s good to be reminded of a lot of the basics. People in this country (world?) are trained that customer service is terrible, which is part of why good customer service is (in a lot of ways) so easy and so much fun! This is here because I have to explain all this to other folks sometimes, and it’s good it have another source.
  3. Fog Creek Software’s Software Management Training Program (also discussed here) – This seems like a cool opportunity. The Columbia program actually doesn’t have a ton of overlap with my MBA (one of the reasons I shied away from these instead of getting an MBA is that I think a broader knowledge of business is much harder for me to pick up on my own than knowledge of technology issues) so it’s kind of tempting. Move to New York and work with what has for years seemed a great software company and get experience and more training? More tempting than it should be. Apparently, I like pain. Of course, I also like the beach, so this seems unlikely.
  4. The Complete Archive – reverse chronological listing of Joel’s writing, starting with the bigger articles. I’m sure there’s lots more gold, but I need to do some homework.