Updated: 11/28/2002; 8:03:54 AM.
Mark Oeltjenbruns' Radio Weblog
The glass isn't half full or half empty, it's too big!
        

Friday, October 04, 2002

Bruised and Beaten.

Bruised and Beaten

Andy over at www.347.com has an excellent article on things you should know and do if you are starting a business.  It's short and totally worth reading.  I liked this the best:

If you're not willing to finish the marathon, don't start the race.

He is so totally correct about this.  Businesses are marathons, not races.  They take time to build and once you are successful, the hardest thing to understand is that it can often take the same amount of time to be successful in a different area.  Here's an example:

  1. I sold my first company, NTERGAID / HyperWriter,  to Dataware Technologies in 1996, a company which had gone public on the strength of their CD-ROM tools.
  2. We were to be their new entry level web tools division.  That plan was scrapped 3 days after the acquisition closed.  (I kid you not).  Happily there was no "30 day return policy" (or perhaps unhappily given how it all ended up). 
  3. On my advice the company decided to focus on Knowledge Management as it's new area.  This was in November of 1996.
  4. Dataware had been founded in 1986 and gone public in 92 / 93 (if my memory serves me correctly).  It took roughly 7 years to be really successful and just barely made it.
  5. The CEO of Dataware really expected instant success in Knowledge Management where "instant" might be  12 to 18 months.  We had told him up front that this was really an enterprise business and an 18 to 24 month sales cycle.  It actually has turned out that Knowledge Management is still not really successful for vendors -- to this day.  And it may never be.
  6. The CEO, also the founder, had been willing to sweat it out for more than 5 years to be a success the first time.  So, why did he expect to be successful so much more quickly in what amounted to a new business?  Sure he didn't have to build a sales force, create a company, etc, but he did still have to build credibility as a vendor, learn the market and those type of tasks -- which aren't transferrable between different businesses.
  7. The bottom line is that building businesses takes time.  They are marathons not sprints and it can take years and years.  While we all hear about the instant over night successes, these are the rare exceptions to the rule.  They are very, very rare.  They just make good stories for the media but they are not indicative of the reality.
[The FuzzyBlog!]
6:51:23 AM    comment []

Interesting New Content Management System.

Interesting New Content Management System

Open Source, written in Perl.  Looks interesting.  Haven't evaluated at all.  Bricolage.

[The FuzzyBlog!]
6:49:06 AM    comment []

Resume Writing Tips for Geeks and Non-Geeks.

Resume Writing Tips for Geeks and Non-Geeks

This is a good article on writing resumes that make it through the screening process.  Even though the focus of this article is for geeks, I actually think it's much more broadly applicable.  I actually thought the last tip was the best "Give it a Good Filename" i.e. NOT resume.doc.  Given that files do need to be extracted from emails from time to time, naming it something like "resume.doc" means that the HR person has to rename it to something real.  Now do you really think that they'll bother or just move on ot the next one?  Trust me -- they'll go onto the next one if they have to do anything extra.  "resume_tjones.doc" is just as easy for you to send to the recruiter and a lot better for you.

[The FuzzyBlog!]
6:46:30 AM    comment []

Can Humans Learn to Regrow Missing Limbs?. New York Times: Science -- In a closetlike room at the "Leg Lab" here, salamanders stare blankly out of clear plastic drinking cups. The lab is so named because many of the animals have had, or will have, a leg cut off. But the salamanders recover, with perfect new limbs growing back in weeks. Salamanders are the superstars of regeneration. They can grow back not only limbs but also tails, parts of their hearts and the retinas and lenses in their eyes. Humans cannot do any of that. So scientists here hope that the salamander's tricks may one day be applied to people. "I really do believe it's just a matter of time before you're going to regenerate an arm or at least a finger," said Dr. David M. Gardiner, a biologist who runs the laboratory at the University of California at Irvine with Dr. Susan V. Bryant, the dean of biological sciences and his wife. "I'd like to see that in my lifetime." Regenerative medicine, regrowing or repairing damaged organs, has become a hot topic. Almost all the attention has focused on stem cells. The idea is to grow stem cells outside the body, turn them into particular types of tissue and transplant them into patients. But a few scientists theorize that a better approach is to induce the same regeneration in people that occurs in salamanders and some other animals. Natural regeneration, which might be accomplished with drugs or genes, would be easier than transplanting, they say. And the tissue would be the patient's own, doing away with the problem of rejection. Even if salamanders' feats cannot be reproduced in humans, those scientists say, studying regenerating animals will at least provide clues for stem cell scientists. (09/26/02) [Synergic Earth News]
6:34:18 AM    comment []

Russian Engineers Teach America. New York Times: Science -- Moscow may have lost the cold war, but its companies are beating Western capitalists at the game of making rocket motors. With technology that is simple and reliable, powerful yet relatively cheap, the Russians are winning over not only commercial customers around the globe but the American military as well. What's more, the Russians have outperformed their technologically advanced rivals by relying on a strikingly low-tech fuel: kerosene. ... A Russian company, NPO Energomash, formed an alliance with Pratt & Whitney to make a new engine for Lockheed Martin. The result is the RD-180, a new Russian design that experts say has a performance edge of at least 10 percent over its Western rivals. "We're getting the crown jewels," said Charles P. Vick, an expert on the Russian space program at the Federation of American Scientists, a private group in Washington. "It makes up for 30 years of not doing the appropriate amount of engine research ourselves." The trick is that the Russians learned during the cold war how to excel without pushing technological limits — the opposite of the West's approach. For instance, Moscow often relied on kerosene, an inexpensive fuel that can work at room temperature. In contrast, Washington pushed to perfect the use of liquid hydrogen. This costly, high-energy propellant must be refrigerated down to hundreds of degrees below zero, a temperature that can freeze, shatter or otherwise play havoc with fast-moving parts. (09/27/02) [Synergic Earth News]
6:32:24 AM    comment []

Need Any Uranium?. CNN News -- Turkish officials said Saturday they have seized 34.6 pounds of uranium and arrested two Turkish men in Urfa, a town in southeastern Turkey. U.S. officials are in touch with authorities to get information about the seizure. The men were arrested carrying the material in a box as passengers in a taxi that was en route from Urfa to the nearby city of Gazi Antep, police said. They were identified as Salih Yasar and Mehmet Demir. The driver was interviewed and released. Authorities displayed the material, which they said was worth $5 million and originated in the former Soviet Union, to reporters in Urfa. It will be taken to Ankara for analysis, police said. (09/29/02) [Synergic Earth News]
6:30:49 AM    comment []

IRAN Demands that the U.S. Give Up Its Nuclear Weapons!. Yahoo! News -- NEW YORK: Making the case for United Nations intervention against the United States, Iranian President Mohammad Khatami told the organization yesterday that military action will be "unavoidable" unless the U.S. agrees to destroy its weapons of mass destruction. ... "Nearly two years ago, the civilized world watched as this evil and corrupt dictator subverted the world's oldest representative democracy in an illegal coup d'état," said Khatami. "Since then the Bush regime has continued America's systematic repression of ethnic and religious minorities and threatened international peace and security throughout the world. Thousands of political opponents and ordinary citizens have been subjected to arbitrary arrest and imprisonment. Basic civil rights have been violated. This rogue state has flouted the international community on legal, economic and environmental issues. It has even ignored the Geneva Conventions on the treatment of prisoners of war by denying that its illegal invasion of Afghanistan --which has had a destabilizing influence throughout Central Asia--was a war at all." ... "Bush has invaded Afghanistan and is now threatening Iraq. We cannot stand by and do nothing while danger gathers. We can't for this tyrant to strike first. We have an obligation to act pre-emptively to protect the world from this evildoer," Khatami said. (09/30/02) [Synergic Earth News]
6:29:31 AM    comment []

Problem/Solution : Fat Embolus Damages Brain/Fat Filter. The New Scientist -- A new ultrasonic device that removes tiny fat droplets from blood should help prevent brain damage after heart surgery. Two thirds of patients undergoing major heart operations suffer some form of mental impairment afterwards, such as a reduced ability to perform mental arithmetic or remember phone numbers. In half of these patients the problems are permanent. The cause is still controversial, but most researchers think that minute fat droplets lodging in the blood vessels of the brain are responsible. It is thought these block the supply of oxygen to tiny clusters of nerve cells. ... The fat comes from tissues damaged when the chest is cut open. It mixes with the patient's blood in the chest cavity. Surgeons recycle this blood by suctioning it from the chest cavity and re-routing it into the circulation. This avoids the risk of infections inherent in using blood bank blood - but the recycled blood also contains the extra fat. "Fat blockages probably form in every organ, but the brain is the most sensitive," says Henrik Jönsson, head of Erysave, a company in Lund, Sweden. Now he and his colleague Thomas Laurell at the Lund Institute of Technology, have developed a device that uses ultrasound to filter the fat from the blood before it is put back into the patient's body. (10/01/02) [Synergic Earth News]
6:27:12 AM    comment []

Ten Secrets for a Successful Group. University of Human Goodness -- 1. See the postive in those around us. 2) Speak Constructively. 3) Be on Time. 4) Be Present. 5) Practice Openess to other's thoughts. 6) Maintain a postive attititude. 7) Look for and find the positive qualities in others. 8) Keep the larger picture and purpose of the group's work in mind. 9) Consciously use the power of thought and visualization, each day. 10) Make a strong, personal commitement to respect, honor, and uphold the work and its purpose. (10/01/02) [Synergic Earth News]
6:26:14 AM    comment []

© Copyright 2002 Mark Oeltjenbruns.
 
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