Man often becomes what he believes himself to be. If I keep on saying to myself that I cannot do a certain thing, it is possible that I may end by really becoming incapable of doing it. On the contrary, if I have the belief that I can do it, I shall surely acquire the capacity to do it even if I may not have it at the beginning.— Mahatma Gandhi
Follow Me On Twitter
Well after a period of watching, testing & playing around: I’m officially hooked and using Twitter.
For those not familiar with Twitter, it can be best described, I think, as a micro-blogging / social networking platform that allows users to send “updates” (or “tweets”) to the Twitter website, via short message service, instant messaging, or a third-party application. Updates are then displayed on the user’s profile page and instantly delivered to other users who have signed up to receive them via instant messaging, SMS, RSS, email or through an application.
I’m personally using Twitter to post my quick thoughts, ideas, reactions or things that are either too small to make a blog post or that I want to blog about later on but don’t want to forget.
I’m using Abiro Jitter on my mobile phone to post my updates while on the go; Google Talk for when I’m chatting with friends; Twhirl for when I’m working on something, but not necessarily with an open browser; and otherwise it’s online through the Twitter website.
I’m also using Twitterfeed to post little updates with the last entries I write on this blog.
So, if you’re interested you can follow me on Twitter here: http://twitter.com/mmm
You can also join in on the fun, create yourself an account and start tweeting yourself. If you do, don’t hesitate to add me as a friend so I can reciprocate and follow your twitter stream too.
10 Signs You Aren’t Cut Out To Be An IT Manager
I just came across a great article on TechRepublic listing the ten signs that show if you’re not cut out to be an IT manager.
The list goes as follows, I’ll keep the writer’s phrasing because it’s straight to the point and effective:
1. You have a real desire to be liked
2. You prefer to avoid the spotlight and just be a part of the gang
3. Every time you are called on to comment about the topic being discussed, you experience short-term memory loss
4. Having a tough conversation with an employee causes you a great deal of duress
5. You don’t like to make tough decisions
6. Being stuck in the middle between the leaders and the team makes your stomach churn
7. You prefer to keep a low profile, just doing your job; when people look at you, it reminds you how many flaws you have
8. Having a verbal duel in a meeting isn’t your idea of fun and you feel uncomfortable standing up to communicate in a meeting
9. You dislike having to work hours beyond the “regular” schedule
10. You could never fire someone because after all, everyone needs a job
I couldn’t agree more. This list englobes all the points an IT manager, or any manager actually, should be careful of and know how to deal with.
For more details, read the full article: 10 signs that you aren’t cut out to be an IT manager (TechRepublic)
Another great article along the same lines is here: 10 signs that you aren’t cut out to be a systems analyst (TechRepublic).
World Outsources Pregnancies To India
IT companies outsourced programming there, other companies outsourced customer support amid other services, now it’s pregnancies that are being outsourced to India…
More than 50 women in this city are now pregnant with the children of couples from the United States, Taiwan, Britain and beyond. The women earn more than many would make in 15 years…
[Source: The Guardian]
I totally understand the natural desire for a lot of people to have children and a family, and I know how hard it is for infertile couples, how they feel, and how they yearn for a solution; and I think that if a woman is ready to help them out and be a surrogate mother for their child, then that is a very kind, generous and respectable action from her side.
But I think turning this around into a business, where people take advantage of some poor women in India or elsewhere who are doing this just because they can’t afford a good living otherwise is just very wrong, immoral and unacceptable.
Rudy Guiliani Will ‘Chase Muslims Back To Their Caves’
So here’s an interesting quote from John Deady, a designated surrogate for Rudy Giuliani’s presidential campaign, and a leader with a group called “Veterans for Rudy”…
He has resigned now after those remarks, but after such comments you can only wonder if there is a truth in there somewhere, if maybe Rudy Guiliani who is one of the Republican front runners for the US presidency actually thinks a bit like that; After all, we know there is no lack of people who do think that way or even worse.
[Via: Huffington Post]
Copyrighting ‘Allah’
Just came across this weird bit of news from Malaysia…
In the Malay language “Allah” is used to mean any god, and Christians say they have used the term for centuries.
Opponents of the ban say it is unconstitutional and unreasonable.
[Source: BBC News]
Fortunately, they’ve woken up, and reversed the ban now…
But, of course it was unconstitutional and unreasonable, also stupid and unthinkable. I can’t find one ounce of logic behind a decision or a decree like this. It’s just too much.
Ali Eteraz writes on ‘Comment is free‘ how he thinks “This is yet another instance where Islam is being used by conniving leaders to advance political agendas. Leaders in Malaysia promote supremacist, dominionist versions of Islam, because it makes political sense for them to do so. Sixty per cent of the country is Malay-Muslim; the rest are Chinese Buddhists, Tamil Hindus and animists. So, if you can control the Muslims, you will control the government.”
But even if that’s why the government tried to do this, I don’t see how the Muslims of Malaysia would see such a move as anything but absurd.
Cheap And Efficient Solar Energy Breakthrough
Great news: Cheap and efficient solar energy is becoming a reality…
The solar panels produced by a Silicon Valley start-up company, Nanosolar, are radically different from the kind that European consumers are increasingly buying to generate power from their own roofs. Printed like a newspaper directly on to aluminium foil, they are flexible, light and, if you believe the company, expected to make it as cheap to produce electricity from sunlight as from coal.
[…]
The technology is particularly exciting because it can be used nearly everywhere. “You are talking about printing rolls of the stuff, printing it on garages, anywhere you want it. It really is a big deal in terms of altering the way we think about solar,” said Dan Kamman, director of the Renewable and Appropriate Energy Laboratory at the University of California at Berkeley.
[Source: The Guardian]
Netscape Navigator Officially Dead
AOL just announced that Netscape Navigator, the browser that launched the commercial Internet in October 1994, and that they acquired in November 1998 as part of their Netscape Communications Corp. acquisition deal for $4.2 billion, will die on February 1, 2008.
Netscape Navigator is currently at version 9. Recent surveys suggest that Netscape currently has only 0.6% market share among browsers, compared to Internet Explorer’s 77.35% and Firefox’s 16.01%. This is down from more than 90 percent of the market in the 90s, when the browser wars began, then the Microsoft antitrust trial took place, before IE took over as leading browser.
To me Netscape Navigator died a long time ago, the last version that counted was somewhere around version 4.5 or 4.7; everything went downwards from there on for Netscape as a browser.
Still, we mustn’t forget the success of the Mozilla foundations and its projects, like the Firefox browser, which spun off of Netscape in February 1998. The legacy of Netscape will live on through Mozilla’s projects.
So, again, support for existing versions of Netscape Navigator will cease on February 1, 2008. A cool thing AOL will be doing though is setting up an archive where people will be able to download older versions of Netscape, without any support.
Rest in peace Netscape Navigator, you can rest assured your role in internet history will never be forgotten.
A history of Netscape Navigator can be found here on Wikipedia.
[Sources: Netscape Blog, TechCrunch]
Top Seven Health Myths
The list of the top seven health-related myths and misconceptions, that even some doctors fall prey to, and that we’ve been hearing time and again, goes as follows:
1. Reading in dim light ruins your eyesight.
2. Using cell phones in hospitals is dangerous.
3. Fingernails and hair grow after death.
4. We use only 10 percent of our brains.
5. You should drink at least eight glasses of water a day.
6. Shaved hair grows back faster and coarser.
7. Tainted candy from strangers is a Halloween threat.
Full article: Top Seven Health Myths (Newsweek).
Egypt to Copyright Pyramids And Sphinx
Egypt’s MPs are expected to pass a law requiring royalties be paid whenever copies are made of museum pieces or ancient monuments such as the pyramids or the sphinx.
Zahi Hawass, who chairs Egypt’s Supreme Council of Antiquities, says the law would apply to full-scale replicas of any object in any museum in Egypt, in all countries, and that the move was necessary to pay for the upkeep of the country’s thousands of pharaonic sites.
This could be a potential blow to themed resorts all across the world, from Vegas to Tokyo, where large-scale copies of Egyptian artefacts pull in the crowds.
Personally, I’m against involving copyright laws in stuff like this. The Pyramids, the Sphinx, Machu Picchu, Stonehenge, and all the other historic sites left for us by older civilizations are part of our world heritage, a heritage that was left for all of us and that we’re all proud of. They’re not anyone’s property to demand royalties for.
[Sources: Google News, BBC News]
[Via: Slashdot]