NEWS: Dilbert advices for new graduates

[via Scott Adams]

A *bit* too late for me, could be useful for you? Pure Dilbert ;-)

  • Your potential for senior management will be determined by the three H’s: Hair, Height, and Harvard degree. You need at least two out of three. (Non-Harvard schools will be acceptable if it’s clear that you “could have gone” to Harvard.)
  • There’s no such thing as good ideas and bad ideas. There are only your own ideas and other people’s. If you want someone to like your idea, tell him he said it last week and you just remembered.
  • Teamwork is what you call it when you trick other people into ignoring their priorities in favor of yours.
  • Leadership is a form of evil. No one needs to lead you to do something that is obviously good for you.
  • Business success is mostly about waiting for something lucky to happen and then taking credit.

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NEWS: About IE7

[via BetaNews]

Interesting interview of Gary Schare, Director of IE Product Management, from BetaNews. It is about IE7, RSS, Firefox’s growth.

We really didn’t announce a restart of IE development, we announced an extension of the development to bring the work that we were doing in IE7 for Windows Vista down to Windows XP users. […]

The primary driver behind expanding the reach of IE7 to Windows XP was security. […]

There are a number of new feature areas that were showing up in alternative browsers — ones built on the IE platform like Maxthon and Avant Browser, as well as the alternatives such as Netscape, Firefox and Opera — that people said they would really love to see in addition to better security. […]

At the same time, there are alternative technologies that we’re investing in and bringing out to developers, such as the Windows Presentation Framework and the Windows Communication Framework. We’ll be pushing those quite aggressively in March at the Mix 06 conference. We expect a lot of developers to utilize those rich client platforms for building Web-based applications, but we certainly don’t expect ActiveX to go away in any way, shape or form. […]

In general, competition is a good thing, and we respect the work that the Firefox guys have done. It was interesting to read their assessment on their public blogs when we released IE7, and the respect that they showed for us. […]

We’ve built the first RSS platform that any developer can take advantage of, so when you subscribe to a feed in IE7, that feed data will be available to any application that wants to look at it. This opens up a whole new host of RSS reading applications, as well as applications that in the past would have nothing to do with RSS, but now can take advantage of it because of the platform.

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MUSIC: U2…

[via U2log.com]

U2 has played some concerts in Brazil for about one week. One crazy example of their success was the second concert in Sao Paulo, which was sold out in 7 hours. The tickets were exclusively sold by telephone, the call-center received more than 600’000 calls within these 7 hours…

And, in Monterrey:

U2 kicked off the fourth leg of their Vertigo tour in the Mexican city of Monterrey yesterday (Feb. 12). 48 hours before the concert, more than 600 fans were sleeping at the gates of the stadium in order to get into the ellipse; 24 hours before the show, there were more than 2,000 fans.

By the way, U2 won for every category they were nominated, again, at the last Grammy Awards Show:

  • Rock Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal for Sometimes You Can’t Make It On Your Own
  • Best Rock Song for City of Blinding Lights
  • Best Rock Album for How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb
  • Song of the Year for Sometimes You Can’t Make It On Your Own
  • Album of the Year for How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb

On the top, Steve Lillywhite won a Grammy for Producer Of The Year, Non-Classical category due to his work on How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb.

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BUSINESS: Oracle strategy

[via Jeremy]

Good analysis from Jeremy about the strategy of Oracle.

Trying to put MySQL out of business would be a fairly short-term tactical move. I think Oracle is looking 5 years down the road and seeing what the world looks like as the commoditization of enterprise scale infrastructure software components continues. They’re seeing that they “own” a progressively smaller piece of that pie unless they act soon. The rumors of Oracle eyeing JBoss and others are completely in line with this thinking.

If Oracle can become a one-stop shop for folks building the next generation of big business applications, whether or not they use “traditional” Oracle software, the company manages to stay relevant in the new world–and that includes their lucrative consulting services.

Is this reminiscent of IBM’s approach to Linux circa 2001? It sure is.

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TRAVELLING: Anguilla and St.Barths (01)

Gosh, back from 2 weeks in paradise(s). Incredible holidays :-) The eyes full of beautiful colors and wonderful landscapes. And these *beaches*…

As usual, to extend the holidays-feeling, I will publish some pictures and information to share our experience, step-by-step.

First package now!

Anguilla

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St.Barths

st barths[click]

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st barths[click]

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BLOG: Holidays, yes!

We are just finished with all the preparation, we are flying in a few hours to Anguilla and St.Barths. The weather seems to be ok there :-) Let’s see how we manage the travel this time….

My dear friends and readers, more than 62’000 unique visitors have visited this blog in January, visits that have generated about 92’000 pageviews, 400’000 hits and 11GB of data transferred. In one month…

Thanks a *lot* for staying a bit here, you are always welcome :-) Take care for the next two weeks, I should post again from February 18, 2006.

holidays

[via LetterJames]

BUSINESS: Most businesses fail … slowly

[via Seth Godin]

Have a look at this one from Seth, good input concerning speed.

Most businesses don’t fail dramatically.

They do it slowly. […]

The answer, more likely than not, is to consistently and regularly stop the bleeding. To improve the boring stuff.

Organizations fail slowly. They often succeed fast, though. That’s where the remarkable comes in. So, if I had to summarize it: You take a big step up… by being bold. But you avoid a slow death by getting every little thing right.

PRIVATE: 34 years today

Pffuuu, 34 years today, happy birthday to me ;-)

Thanks to my grandmother who called me yesterday evening because she was afraid to be late :-) too nice, laurence, julien, andré, nicole, marlyse, joseph, hélène, dany, théo, toni, martine, lars, frape, hans, silvio, laurent, nick, michel, valérie, marc, markus, dominique, nelly, manu, patrick, véro, sylvie, openBC :-), giordana, thomas, nico, and all others I have forgotten to mention spontaneously (outch)….

Great to live with you and/or to work with you and/or to have fun with you and/or just to be your friend :-)

eCENTER: CIO Insight article

CIO Insight

Swiss Company Proved Value of Services Architecture Before the Name Was Even Coined

Wow, that’s us :-)

I am very excited and proud to announce you that Edward Cone (contributing editor at Wired magazine; a senior writer for Inter@ctive Week; an opinion columnist for Greensboro News & Record; a freelancer covering business, technology, and a wide variety of other stuff; and a staff writer at Forbes) – Oh Ed, I haven’t known that you have a blog… – interviewed us end of 2005 for CIO Insight.

His article about the ecenter, called Insuring the future, is really great, thanks a lot Ed for your time and your great challenging questions! Have a look ;-) You can find the whole article here.

Before all the hype over service-oriented architecture, before the cumbersome acronym had been coined, and before the now infamous Microsoft memos were sent, one small insurance company in Switzerland had a big head start. Helvetia Patria Group, a St. Gallen, Switzerland-based insurance company put its service-oriented architecture in place four years ago, before anyone even knew what to call it. […]

Built on an electronic banking platform from Hewlett-Packard Co., with assistance from H-P consultants, the Helvetia Patria eBusiness Center makes more than two dozen products available on line. The company says it has realized a return on investment of 111 percent in the system’s first three years, and anticipates a six-year return of 201 percent.

Actually, the ROI study was done by a neutral external specialized company called Thoughware Worldwide. You can find an Executive Summary of this study here. We had really a great time during this study with Tim, Jacob, Fotios and Rose-Marie, thank you all ;-)

TRAVELLING: Anguilla and St.Barths

anguillaI am soooo sorry :-)

In about 5 days we will be in Anguilla and the week after, in St.Barths, with my wife and my son. Oh oh, we are waiting for these holidays as crazy. Just too much time since the last one. I am completely behind for the last organization and preparation tasks… Plus a *bunch* of things to do before going, plus by birthday, grrrrr…

It seems that the weather was not so cool there the last days BUT the sun should be present again from Wednesday, good timing :-) As usual, 24°C during the night, and 26°C the day, sea at 25°C. Oh I WANT TO BE THERE!!!

anguilla