20100625

You're already self employed

Nice statement from Seth's Blog: You're already self employed

When are you going to start acting like it?

The idea that you are a faceless cog in a benevolent system that cares about you and can't tell particularly whether you are worth a day's pay or not, is, like it or not, over.

In the long run, we're all dead. In the medium-long run, though, we're all self-employed. In the medium-long run, the decisions and actions we take each day determine what we'll be doing next.

And yet, it's so easy to revert to, "I just work here."

20100615

SeaMicro SM10000 Server

Nice idea and solution. The only thing is that no body mentions OS. I assume that Linux is capable to run on it in some or another way...

The SM10000 High Density, Low Power Server | seamicro.com

Here some review:


25 Tips for Perfecting Your E-mail Etiquette

These are very good points...

25 Tips for Perfecting Your E-mail Etiquette

20100612

Six Things About Deadlines

1. People don’t like deadlines. They mean a decision, shipping and risk. They force us to decide.

2. Deadlines work. Products that are about to disappear, auctions that are about to end, tickets that are about to sell out–they create forward motion.

3. Deadlines make people do dumb things. Every time I offer a free digital document or an educational event that has a deadline, I can guarantee I will hear from several (or dozens of) people with

ornate, well-considered and thoughtful arguments as to why they missed the deadline. Never mind that they had two weeks… the last fifteen minutes are all they are concerned with. If it’s important enough to spend an hour complaining about, it’s certainly important enough to spend four minutes to just do it in the first place.

4. Deadlines give you the opportunity to beat the rush. Handing in work just a little bit early is a sure-fire way to tell a positive story and get the attention you seek. The chart below tracks the day (out of 10) that I received each of the more than a thousand applications for the free nano MBA program. Want to guess which day’s applications got the most attention from me?

5. When we set ourselves a deadline, we’re incredibly lax about sticking to it. So don’t (set it for yourself, in your head, informally). Write it down instead. Hand it to someone else. Publicize it. Associate it with an external reward or punishment. If you don’t make the deadline, your friend gives the $20 you loaned her to a cause you disagree with…

6. They have a lousy name. Call them live-lines instead. That’s what they are.

Key takeaway: Deadlines are a cheap and useful tool to for yourself (and others) to make a decision and to ship.


Seth Godin: Six Things About Deadlines - PSFK