Archive for March, 2008

Reflection On VON-Day 2

Monday, March 31st, 2008

Niklas Zennstrom, Skype founder was there to kick of the day and we got to talk later in the evening face to face. The night ended with my having dinner at 9 PM by laptop at the Grill on the the Alley. In between, my second day at VON was packed with meetings with clients like VoEX, GrandCentral and Truphone, impromptu gatherings, being pulled into things and just catching up with people you see only at VON. Folks like Steve Smith who left LavaLife as Chief Scientist in December and has started a new company. I was able also to check out the VLIP booth and see The SightSpeed Guy, Peter Zottolo live and in person.

I caught up finally with the two most successful geek companies in VoIP, Digium via the very personable Bill Miller and Fonality with the hyper-kenetic Chris Lyman. There was the Skype party at the end of the night then some bump into’s with Scott and Jason of the PulverMedia clan. Somewhere in the hotel Jeff was having a soiree, but I was too tired from being on my feet to keep the party hat on…you see, VON Is back.

I was able to spend time with Jim Granelli of the L.A. Times and discuss the current state of the newspaper business, just like I did at SNCR in Las Vegas with Tom Abate of the SF Chronicle two weeks back. It’s a subject that as a former copy boy and sometimes high school sports reporter in my college days with the long defunct Philadelphia Journal at the age of 18 still intrigues me as I love to study how media works and is evolving and getting first hand insight helps when I lecture at colleges these days.

Jeff talks about VON Blur. …..and he’s right. The size of the show floor is twice as large as last year or at least looks that way. The Press Room is standing room only, and the speakers lounge is about the only quiet place there is. The hallways are abuzz with activity and it was great to see that Jason, Jeff and Scott took my suggestion of creating more “conversation” tables around the event to allow the hallway meetings to get off the floor (well those are still happening too) and be more than stand up quickies…Arcadia at the Marriott and the dining room at the Hilton are full of VON badge toting attendees. I had meetings in both at breakfast and lunch with ex MobileCrunch Oliver Starr now at Guidewire Group working for two of the nicest and most respected people in the biz Chris Shipley and Mike Segal. Shipley is DEMO and with Mike as her business partner, the new venture, geared towards providing VCs and Biz Dev types with insight about what’s hot next will be propelled by Starr’s keen mine and almost tireless energy when it comes to mobile and portable communications. I also spent more time with David Spark, who is the host of Sprint’s “The Communications Insider” and a regular radio show host, part time eWeek writer and more who I’ve known forever it seems. Like Oliver he’s joining Guidewire Group too…then there was John Dvorak, of PC Magazine fame and the Cranky Geek podcast. Ironically we’ve talked many times but never met face to face.

For me VON is about the people and the time savings. I get so much done at these events that I wonder why anyone would not show up..you don’t have to exhibit..You just have to be here.

DV Filmmaking from start to finish review (Reviewed by: Rafiq Elmansy)

Saturday, March 29th, 2008

DV Filmmaking for Ian David Aronson gives you in 18 chapter a coverage for the production, post-production and distribution process of the digital film making.The book starts with basic digital Cinematography principles. It covers he process stages such as composing shoots, lighting, shooting, working with cameras, audio, still images and titles.This book doesn’t give you a specific software tutorial, but if you are working learning with video production and video editing program, you should get a background about the whole film making process. However, this book gives you a strong background in this industry. I find this book useful for animators, multimedia designers and creative directors. The two appendixes in the end of the book gives you a tips about getting your work in various media and selling your products. Product Details:Writer: Ian David Aronson

Book Name: DV Filmmaking from start to finish
Publisher: O’Reilly
ISBN: 0-596-00848-1
URL: http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/dvfilmmaking/

Reviewed by: Rafiq Elmansy

Cunningham's Case for Bloomberg

Thursday, March 27th, 2008

The better Rudy Giuliani does in the national polls, the more it proves that Mike Bloomberg could be a real contender for president.

That seemed to be the case that Bloomberg’s former communications director Bill Cunningham was making last night on NY1.

“Everyday, another newspaper writes about it. You talked about it. Your guests talk about it. It’s on all the talk shows. You can’t run away from it. But, I take him at his word [that he won’t run]. On the other hand, I know a lot of people wonder if a New York mayor, who is pro choice, pro gun control, pro gay rights, anti-smoking, can run nationally. Rudy will find that out, if you can be all those things and run nationally. But there are many states in the country where a Michael Bloomberg can do very well.”

– Azi Paybarah

More Story Talk by digby Atrios and Ann Friedman…

Wednesday, March 19th, 2008

More Story Talk

by digby

Atrios and Ann Friedman have been discussing the need for real stories about abortion and it reminded me of a post I wrote a couple of years ago during the Schaivo circus and it seems like a good one to add to the mix today:

Matt Yglesias over on TAPPED makes a good point about the new parental notification law. It pretty much clears up any remaining notion that repealing Roe vs Wade will solve the abortion issue once and for all so we can put all that unpleasantness aside as various progressive states will do as their constituents require and everybody will live happily ever after.

Pro-lifers are driven by a very serious moral commitment to the idea that aborting pregnancies is a serious wrong. They’re not going to be happy sitting idly by while Virginia women travel to Maryland or the District of Columbia to have abortions any more than they’re happy with inter-state travel to avoid parental notification laws.

That is correct. I don’t know how long it’s going to take Democrats to understand that those who vote one way or the other on that issue alone cannot be finessed. We can try to sound sympathetic to the “ick” factor and whittle away at the rights of women over time until there is only the most bare right to abortion if the woman’s life is threatened and it won’t make a difference to those who believe it is a fundamental issue of morality. We have to fight this one on the merits.

This reminds me of an interesting article by Paul Rogat Loeb in USA Today from a while back in which he writes that one of our problems with abortion is that we have not told personal stories:

Even if you’ve heard enough about Terri Schiavo, it seems useful to consider why President Bush’s political grandstanding in her case backfired. More than 70% of Americans, including solid majorities of self-described evangelicals, opposed the intervention of the White House and Congress. Those surveyed mistrusted the Bush administration’s disregard for local control, the rule of law and the right to be protected from a capricious federal government.

Their responses also speak to a broader shift in how we deal with difficult end-of-life issues. For 20 years, gradually increasing majorities have agreed that for all our technological inventiveness, what some people need most is the right to die in peace. You’d think this belief — that the most difficult decisions must be our own — would also raise support for maintaining the right to abortion. But it hasn’t. In the 30 years since Roe v. Wade, support for keeping abortion legal has stayed even, at most, and new onerous restrictions keep getting imposed.

The difference comes, I suspect, from the stories we tell, and those we keep hidden. Many families have wrestled with end-of-life choices. But they’re brought on by the illness and aging of loved ones, not by our own actions. No one judges us for having a sick parent as they might for our sexuality. So we’re likely to talk in public about such choices.

But most women don’t publicly discuss their abortions. Although a third of all U.S. women have abortions by age 45, they’re more likely to view the dilemma as a product of their own failures — to use adequate birth control or to have the financial or emotional resources to afford another child. They’re more likely to feel shame.

When the movement to legalize abortion began, advocates talked about the human costs of prohibition. They told the complex stories of why women would choose to value their own lives, choices and possibilities over the potential life of the fetus. They framed abortion as an act of compassion. We see this in the recent film, Vera Drake. Its working-class protagonist in postwar England views her actions “helping young girls in trouble” as part of the same ethic of caring as looking after her aged mother. Pro-choice activists eventually told their stories powerfully enough to convince America that its abortion policies had to change.

Since Roe, these voices have been neutralized by those speaking for the humanity of the fetus. Some oppose abortion from compassion and conviction. The motive of others, who also campaign against sex education, access to birth control and financial support for poor families, seems more like punitive vindictiveness. As the stories of the women involved faded, the reasons why women have always made this difficult choice, and will keep doing so, got told far less often.

Schiavo was a soap opera that everyone could understand in narrative terms. And most people underestood that it was a complicated story in which all of the characters were drawn in various shades of heroism, love, selfishness and grief. The discussions around the Easter table in many homes, I suspect, were characterized with sighs and stories of “remember your Aunt Millie’s first husband Bill back in Baltimore? She had to pull the plug and her son wasn’t happy about it at all” kind of dialog. “Morality” was probably not the frame in which this topic was overtly discussed because the morality of the issue was so complicated.

Abortion, I think, has always been difficult to talk about because it had to do with sex — and therefore, in some people’s minds, sin. But I do remember back in the day that one of the things that made abortion finally come out of the closet was the willingness of people to talk about the issue. The stories were of the horrors of the back alley abortions they endured and the complexity of circumstances that led them there. For instance, here’s just one example from Gloria Feldt’s book “Behind Every Choice is A Story” of a complicated situation and the horrible way the women was forced to deal with it:

In 1970 I had a back-street abortion. I had a young daughter of 18 months at home and was separated from an abusive husband. When I found out I was pregnant with another child right after finally having the courage to leave an abusive man, I cried and cried. This was before abortion was legal. I told a close friend who said she knew of a doctor who performed these abortions.

I went to his clinic, which was dirty and sleazy underneath an underpass in Metairie, Louisiana. I was treated as a criminal and so were all the other women in the room. You had to give $150 in cash before they would even speak to you. I was led to a back room where there was no caring or anesthetic to be found. It was very painful and I threw up immediately and kept throwing up for over an hour after the procedure. My girlfriend who went with me was worried as I did not come out right away as others had. She inquired about me and was led to the back room where she saw that I was in pain and throwing up. She held my hand and got a washcloth to wash my face and help me. She asked the nurse if there wasn’t something wrong and she replied “this is how some of them get.” My girlfriend was horrified at the coldness and uncaring atmosphere of the place. We left sometime after and she drove me home and called a friend who was an intern at the time. He came to the house and prescribed some antibiotics and pain medication. He was very kind.

This ABC News poll says that 81% of the public believe that abortion should be available to rape and incest victims. That is not an absolutist “culture of life” position. However, 57% of the public believe that abortion should be illegal if the reason is to end an unwanted pregnancy. The question, of course, is what does “unwanted” mean and who decides? If you were to tell that personal story, a woman with a toddler already and an abusive husband she is trying desperately to leave, would 57% agree that this particular unwanted pregnancy should be dealt with in that horrible back alley situation? Should she have been forced to have this child under those circumstances? I doubt it.

Certainly, a fair number would say “tough” — that women should have to carry the preganacy to term and give it up for adoption. But suppose that meant that the abusive father would have the right to take full custody? And, after all, how easy is it to give the sister or brother of your two year old up for adoption? And what about money or health care or legal fees? People don’t want to think about the practical, financial aspects of having a child under stressful stituation, but it is likely to be a primary concern of the person who is going to have to pay the price. I know that in the discussions I had about the Schiavo case, the issue of cost was somthing that came up in every single conversation. Who pays and where will the money come from are things that real people talk about when they deal with these issues.

I understand the impulse of those who say “I’m not sorry” as a way of expressing their right to dominion over their own bodies. As a knee jerk civil libertarian, I am very sympathetic to a straight forward expression of individual rights. But from a political point of view, it makes far more sense to present this issue as one of complicated morality which individuals see differently in different circumstances and which politicians are much too craven and self-interested to intervene.

There are probably cases in which large numbers of people would see abortion as repugnant on some level. But there are many, many cases that would evoke the dinner table conversations that happened around the Schivo case if people knew the stories. 16 year old girls who made mistakes and 34 year old struggling mothers of two whose birth control failed and women who have no money and low paying jobs and medical students with a mountain of debt and a year to go. These stories may or may not meet every single person’s criteria of what constitutes a “good reason” for having an abortion. But every single one of those women might very well decide that the circumstances are so dire for them that they will take their chances with a back alley abortion if a legal one is unavailable. That is the stark, dramatic choice that this country faces in this debate. And as Matt says, don’t count on being able to just drive to California or Canada (even if you can come up with the money) because repealing Roe vs Wade will not be the end of it. They will not stop until it is outlawed nationally.

It is important to introduce back into the dialog the fact that this is not an abstract moral issue, but a multi-dimensional, intensely human dilemma. When people understand things in those terms they are far more likely to want the government to step back than step in. It seems they know instinctively that the blunt instrument of government in the hands of moral absolutists is a bad idea.

Update: And yes, it would have been very helpful if people knew the horrible situations in which some of these young girls affected by the new parental notification laws find themselves. Parental notification laws do not hurt the healthy families that just want to help their girls make a good decision. Those kinds of families can deal with complexity and have probably built up a lot of trust over the years. These laws hurt the girls whose families are cruel, violent and authoritarian. Many adult women have had their lives ruined because they were forced to bear the burden of their parents’ obsessive religious or political zealotry.

Update II: Friedman points out that the pro-choice movement has been publicizing these stories, but they don’t seem to be able to penetrate the mainstream media.

.

Effectively Managing Post Merger Integration

Tuesday, March 18th, 2008

The Art of Post M&A Integration

One of the many questions that companies face in a post M&A environment is “How do we identify and manage access rights to existing and new systems that are in place?” Corporate IT is faced with the challenge of determining what systems and projects require new levels of approval. Not only do new approval processes need to be established, but providing a common platform to define and execute processes, document proper approvals and provide users immediate updates are simply not in place to handle the additional workload.

These are common challenges that many IT departments face in the wake of corporate M&A. In order to ease the pain of integrating organizations into a unified corporate structure, required approval processes not only need to be established, but executed through a common system. By adopting technology that can provide this capability quickly and effectively, a post M&A corporation can reduce the chance for unauthorized user access, inappropriate approvals, heavy reliance on IT for end-user support and lost documentation of process activity. Integrify solutions address these key challenges and deliver the high ROI and rapid deployment that is critical to the success of any M&A integration.

The M&A Marketplace

The demand for solutions to these problems will only increase. Merger & Acquisition activity should continue at the same rate in 2005 and 2006. Fewer targets have created higher pricing. Low interest rate environment in many instances has created higher acquirer stock prices. Balance sheet capacity is a significant long term issue for sellers. Increase in regulatory requirements such as Sarbanes & Oxley may cause potential sellers to sell.
Considering the 2005 increase in M&A activity and further activity expected for 2006, IT departments should be well prepared to handle integration issues. Companies that respond quickly to address these issues can expect efficiency gains and a reduction in costs associated with integrated process management.

Research evidence going back to the 1970s demonstrates that mergers and acquisitions have an unfavorable impact on profitability. They are strongly associated with lowered productivity, labor unrest, higher absenteeism, and poorer accident rates. Depending on which study one reads, 50% to 80% of all mergers and acquisitions turn out to be financially unsuccessful.
Research also indicates that senior executives rate “underestimating the importance and difficulty of integrating cultures” as a major cause of integration failures.

High ROI - Customer Case Studies

Integrify’s iApprove solution for request and approval management has been implemented to help solve the problems that organizations face as part of the post-merger integration.

GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) was formed in 2000 through a merger between Glaxo Wellcome and SmithKline Beecham, two organizations with histories reaching back to the early 1800s. With such a large workforce culled from two sizable established organizations, GSK’s IT team found its request processing methods to be diverse and disconnected. The company’s IT departments were developing their own methods and interfaces for processing users’ requests for IT equipment and service without following a standard template or system. There was a redundancy of some processes and resources while some services and equipment weren’t even available through online requests. While the work was getting done, users were confused about where to go for service and how to make their requests, and management wanted a more organized and efficient method that would more effectively manage and utilize staff and resources.

As a key component of the GlaxoSmithKline post-merger integration toolkit, Integrify solutions facilitated accelerated integration of employees across the merging organizations through secure and authenticated processes that manage their IT business support.

Northern Natural Gas (NNG), on being acquired by MidAmerican Energy Holdings from Enron, was in a situation where they lost a majority of their product licenses and were faced with having to quickly adopt new technologies to support their business. NNG needed something immediately to manage user requests, routing and approvals for IT access and licenses. After searching for a solution that could be implemented quickly and would be flexible enough to meet their current and future needs, NNG turned to Integrify’s iApprove. They now rely on iApprove to manage over 800 processes that involve user requests for access and other critical business functions.

After the acquisition of CCB, National Commerce Financials IT Operations team needed a system to manage the growing branch and user population. There was not a system in place to control access to systems by employees at their many branches. NCF implemented iApprove to improve efficiency and document approvals for user access requests across the newly expanded organization.

Integrify: Key to effective post-merger management

These real world success stories show how implementing a web-based system can not only execute processes according to an organization’s unique business rules but do so quickly and without extensive training.

Post M&A organizations need answers to 2 essential ingredients with a request/approval management system:

-Simplicity in their process definition and user interfaces
-Rapid implementations, not lengthy projects.

Integrify’s iApprove request and approval solution provides these and more.

The Solution: Integrify’s iApprove

iApprove’s flexible process management system allows companies to automate requests and streamline approval processes. The software provides form creation, routing definition and tracking tools to those responsible for processing requests, which leads to minimizing data entry and simplifying requests for approval and fulfillment. iApprove is Web-based, allowing both easy user accessibility and management of approval processes. It eliminates typical problems related to labor-intensive processes, such as manual paper handling and email requests, and can reduce costs per transaction 60 to 90 percent compared to paper-based processes.

With iApprove, efficiency gains are immediate, and most companies can expect a return on investment (ROI) in three months or less. And this is the kind of result that can make any M&A a win.

[Promo Anime] Kodomo no Jikan

Monday, March 17th, 2008

Alternative title:
こどものじかん (Japanese)

Sinopsis:
Aoki Daisuke, profesor de 23 años tiene un gran problema. Una de sus estudiantes de tercer año, Nokonoe Rin esta enamorada de el!? Si, Rin se ha auto-proclamado novia de Daisuke y se encuentra ahora en una guerra para ganarselo o hacerlo que pierda el trabajo… lo que sea que suceda primero!
Ademas de Rin, Daisuke tiene otros pronlemas de que preocuparse, uno de los estudiantes en su clase, Mimi (una de las amigas de Rin), no ha asistido a la escuela ultimamente.

Comedy, Romance

Plot Summary:
23-year old school teacher Aoki Daisuke has a huge problem. One of his precocious 3rd Grade students, Kokonoe Rin, has the hots for him?! Yes, mischievous Rin has proclaimed herself to be Daisuke-sensei`s girlfriend and is now on a warpath to win him over or cause him to lose his job…whichever comes first!
Besides Rin, Daisuke`s got other problems to take care of — one of the students in his class, Mimi (one of Rin`s friends), hasn`t been attending school recently.

Opening Theme:
“Rettsu! Ohime-sama Dakko (れっつ!おひめさまだっこ)” by Eri Kitamura, Kei Shindou, and Mai Kadowaki
Ending Theme:
#1: “Hanamaru☆Sensation (ハナマル☆センセイション)” by Little Non

Official website:
こどものじかん 公式サイト (Japanese)

Technorati Tags: Promo, Anime, Kodomo no Jikan

Worm Your Way to Medical Feeds

Sunday, March 16th, 2008

Information about medicine and health is becoming ubiquitous on the Web. So how do you keep up with the best new material? Since RSS is about giving users the latest information, it is especially helpful in keeping people up with developments in the treatment of disease and the growth of medicines.

That’s where Medworm, a medical search engine run by Frankie Dolan, an IT engineer in England, comes in. Built on data from more than 4000 sources, Medworm is providing RSS feeds for any medical condition or subject you choose to search for. Just type in what you’re looking for, and the search engine will search in journals, news and blogs for the most updated information.

[IP] more on DHS puts even more eggs in one basket…

Friday, March 14th, 2008

Begin forwarded message:From: Lance Hoffman <lanceh@gwu.edu>
Date: January 3, 2007 7:42:05 AM EST
To: dave@farber.net
Subject: Re: [IP] DHS puts even more eggs in one basket…As someone who serves on an advisory committee to DHS and whose
password would be monitored — IF you accept the GCN article at face
value — I was more than a little interested in this, especially
since I don’t recall hearing anything about it before. So I went to
the DHS website and searched on the system named in the GCN article
and immediately up popped a Privacy Impact Assessment that doesn’t
say anything about me having to give up a password. The word
“password” appears exactly four times in the Acrobat document and
seems to describe very standard password controls. The GCN article’s
headline is misleading. (Actually the GCN article is misleading.)
The GCN headline is ” DHS tracking system will keep eye on IT
workers”, and that is the thrust of the article. However, if you read
the PIA, a system is described whose purpose is to allow emergency
responders and others to use information from each other, rather than
one whose purpose is to maintain security over system access. From
the abstract of its PIA at http://www.dhs.gov/xlibrary/assets/privacy/
privacy_pia_st_dhelp.pdf,The DisasterHelp.Gov (DHelp) website or web portal is operated by the
Science and Technology Directorate of the Department of Homeland
Security.1 It is intended to assist political and civil service
leadership, emergency managers, homeland security advisors, and first
responders in the execution of their disaster management
responsibilities. The information on this website will be used to
enhance disaster management on an interagency and intergovernmental
basis by helping users find information and services. The types of
personally identifiable information used will include contact
information for these individuals. The collection of this personally
identifiable information is the reason for this privacy impact
assessment. Lance J. Hoffman
Distinguished Research Professor Computer Science Department
The George Washington University Washington DC 20052
Phone 202 994-4955 Fax 202 994-4875
My home page is www.cs.gwu.edu/people/faculty-detail.php?personID=102
GW is a Center of Academic Excellence in Information Assurance
Education
Scholarship Info for US citizens: www.seas.gwu.edu/scholarshipOn 1/3/07, David Farber <dave@farber.net> wrote:Begin forwarded message:From: Ross Stapleton-Gray < ross@stapleton-gray.com>
Date: January 3, 2007 12:11:26 AM EST
To: dave@farber.net
Subject: DHS puts even more eggs in one basket…According to Government Computer News, the Department of Homeland
Security is creating a new database “to allow the Homeland Security
Department to monitor the names, passwords, citizenship information
and other data on thousands of IT workers with access to the
department’s systems.”
http://www.gcn.com/online/vol1_no1/42852-1.htmlPasswords???Ross—-
Ross Stapleton-Gray, Ph.D.
Stapleton-Gray & Associates, Inc.
http://www.stapleton-gray.com
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I just watched Aki Kaurismaki’s brilliantly odd “H…

Wednesday, March 12th, 2008

I just watched Aki Kaurismaki’s brilliantly odd “Hamlet Goes Business” (”Hamlet liikemaailmassa”), which takes Shakespeare’s dull and overrated tragedy and resets it as a comedic look at the machinations of a Finnish big business. Most enjoyable!

On the subject of films, I’m sad to report that I do NOT like the look of Darren Aronofsky’s new film, “The Fountain”. I just watched the trailer and it looks bloody awful. As he made my absolute favourite film, “Pi”, this is something of a disappointment. Still, I will probably go and see it.

Taking a step back

Tuesday, March 11th, 2008

There was no shortage of blog issues to write about during these past couple of weeks. From the Staal brothers’ bachelor party arrest, to Michael Vick’s plea of innocence, to Tim Donaghy’s alleged NBA game fixing. So much scandal, so little time, and no shortage of opinions.

But with the passing of two men this summer, one most recently this past week, it made a blog on players gone wild seem so wrong.

I know there are a lot of viewers here in Canada who don’t pay much attention to U.S. college sports. Even I will admit that before moving down to the States, the only time I watched was during March Madness and the big Bowl games. But after living in Arizona for two years, it’s hard not to get wrapped up in college games and rivalries in some capacity.

So after learning about the death of Wake Forest basketball coach Skip Prosser last week and the death of Indiana football coach Terry Hoeppner back in June, I felt compelled to write something even if no one knows who they are. In fact, I never knew either of them, but I do know people who do.

Both men, whose lives were cut short were doing something they loved to do, coach. Helping to make a difference, if only for a year or two in players’ lives. In all the articles I’ve read, Prosser and Hoeppner earn nothing but praise from not only their players, but also their peers.

I realize this is a very somber blog, but their deaths just seemed to put life into perspective and make me realize that player scandals are a dime a dozen, but life is one in a million.