This guy is really funny… I like his style. There are a number of things he’s doing in here that a good professional speaker could emulate.
Looks like he is a pretty current blogger 🙂
This guy is really funny… I like his style. There are a number of things he’s doing in here that a good professional speaker could emulate.
Looks like he is a pretty current blogger 🙂
This is brilliant… watch the whole thing. This should be shown in college classes on leadership.
This is a post I’ve skimmed, and need to print out to read more indepth later: Analysis for Continuous Delivery: Five Core Practices
I love this type of reading… although I can’t implement everything from the article. But I always get at least one awesome idea I can implement…
This is a quick read, sent to me by my QA person. Excellent stuff… if you are interested in being an entrepreneur, read this list.
Ten Entrepreneurship Rules for Building Massive Companies
Funny how there are haters in the comments. Reid isn’t a multi-millionaire entrepreneur. He’s a self-made billionaire entrepreneur. I’m guessing the haters in his post’s comments are not as successful as he is 🙂
This has been frustrating for weeks. I tried to work with it, but finally had to switch to Firefox just for this one thing I do.
I use Google Docs quite a bit. One on of my spreadsheets when I click a cell, I can’t really tell where I am putting data. The red arrow shows where I have my mouse when I click, and you can see the row that I’m putting it in… I think (is it 108 or 109??). BUT, check out the blue line around the actual cell I’m putting the data in.
What the heck? I have to open Firefox, cussing Chrome and/or Google Docs, wondering when the brilliant brains at Google are going to get Chrome/Docs working together.
One of the most common questions I hear about homeschooling is about socializing the student.
It’s a pretty ignorant question, and usually it’s brought up in a manner like “homeschoolers can’t deal with other humans – you aren’t socializing them” rather than the person really wondering if it’s true.
The homeschoolers aren’t socialized issue is old and most homeschoolers laugh at the idea.
It’s amazing how many decades-old perceptions homeschoolers still deal with. Luckily, there is a lot of laughing about how ignorant people are, instead of getting feathers all ruffled up.
Here’s an excellent article on homeschoolers and socialization. Not to be a spoiler, but here are the last two lines (note that not all homeschoolers feel this way):
We’re just opting them out of the strange public school bubble that, in our experience, doesn’t even represent normal, healthy society.
In other words, we’re socializing them for what they’ll actually experience beyond high school.
Note also that this might not be the main reason that people decide to homeschool, but it is a compelling reason to think about it, for sure!
So, what about this socialization thing?
I’ve spent time at camps with homeschoolers. Some of them are overnight camps, some of them are multi-day camps where you leave at night and then come back the next morning.
I can guarantee you that the kids I’ve met are amazing. Typically they are great with little kids, kids their own age, and … get this: adults.
I love seeing how kids who are homeschooled interact with adults. I can sit down with a homeschool kid and have a fantastic conversation. The conversation can usually cross many topics, whether it’s talking about a classic, talking about American/world history, or talking about social stuff.
Here are two things I’ve loved to see:
1. At a recent day camp, called Simulations Week, we had a talent show. I think there were about 60 kids that stayed for the talent show. More than half shared a talent. Some of them were AMAZING. The most impressive, to me, where the talents shared that were NEW. In other words, someone who just started learning the cello played a beginner piece, with plenty of mistakes. But they did it. It was such a “safe place” for them to perform… and the audience was amazingly supportive. I’m really amazed at how talented homeschoolers are.
2. Dancing. My daughter has a “mentor” who teaches some Shakespeare classes. These are vigorous classes where there is a lot of reading, studying, discussing, memorizing and acting. This particular mentor is a dance nut, and has taught the kids a bunch of period dances. It’s so amazing to see the kids dance like they did hundreds of years ago… and guess what? THEY LOVE IT! They have so much fun, and they are very respectful to their partners. It’s fun to watch.
BONUS: Here’s a video that is hilarious: Seven Lies about Homeschoolers
Sorry for the gory pics… I had to put them somewhere 🙂
Kaisie and I were running and errand across the valley and got a calm call from our oldest daughter: “Um where are you?” Then she said William was bleeding out of a wound on his head, but he was okay, and when would we be home? A neighbor was there taking care of him…
We headed back home to see what was going on, but before we got there we were on the phone with our neighbor and agreed for her to meet us at the urgent care at the hospital. Lucky the urgent care was in the hospital because they scooted us over to the emergency room right away.
It was a long night… especially for him. He was terrified to get stitches. We were home in bed by 1am, and he was okay. His stitches and staples are now out, and I saw his wound yesterday and it looks really, really good! He can almost sleep with his head resting on the back…
Here’s the funny thing… “the story” of what happened changed over a couple of days. What really happened had more mischievousness than what we originally thought :p Isn’t that how it always happens?
GORY PIC ALERT:
This is right after the nurse flushed it out with saline solution. He’s laying on the hospital bed… happy that part is over.
Note the difference between the wound and the tip of the arrow… the nurse lifted up the skin and it went all the way up to the tip of the arrow. This was a deep wound that required internal stitches before they would put staples and stitches on the outside.
I’m grateful for many blessings, including modern medicine, and that this was not any worse than it was 🙂
Did you know you can easily get into the t-shirt business?
I really don’t want to, but I want to test it out… and Cafepress makes it easy for me to have this “business” without doing anything more than getting an account.
Here’s the post you must read about how much you can make. Honestly, it’s not a lot. But the alternatives include (a) get an inventory or (b) buying the stuff to have a t-shirt making factory (my friend has one in his basement). With either option you have to worry about sizes, colors, styles, etc. Seems like you could get a big warehouse of shirts and you’d still have someone ask for something you don’t have.
I’ll choose cafepress for now 🙂 Here’s my shop. Here’s my first design… can you tell what the text stands for?
Now, if you’ll excuse me while I go look at some yacht and jet websites so I can plan on what do to with all the money I’ll make 🙂
Seriously though, this might be a way for people to make a few hundred (or thousand) dollars a month. And that’s what 101 Alternatives is all about 🙂
I loved this post by Charlie Hoehn, who works with Tim Ferris, on how they marketed Tim’s book. Tim’s blog is well-known for his indepth posts, and this is one to print and refer back to anytime you think about doing a product launch or relaunch.
It’s long, so I’m going to just link to it here. It’s mostly about marketing, but there are some nuggets about how Tim “manages” Charlie that are also awesome lessons.
I just read an interesting blog post, and decided to leave a comment.
My comment was really good (yes, I’m biased). It was highly relevant, and helpful to the blogger as well as to her readers.
When I hit submit, I was prompted to login to (a) wordpress, or (b) gravatar.
I don’t have a wordpress account that I use, so I tried to login with my gravatar account. I haven’t done this for, oh, years. Since I set up the account.
I got an error message, prompting me to try again.
But here’s the sad truth: by this time, I was done. I had lost interest in making this work. Even thought the comment was good, and would have helped increase the credibility of the blog and blogger, I was done. I closed the tab, moved on to the 50 other things I try and do before my workday starts.
Would the blogger have wanted and appreciated the comment? I’m sure. Bloggers want comments like addicts want ________. It helps validate them as a blogger.
But the blogger made it too hard for me to leave a comment.
If you have a blog, logout and try and comment on one of your posts. If it is not stupid-easy (that is, fill in the comment, your name, email addy and your URL, and that’s it!!), then you are making it too hard.