Nothing Else Matters
A few years ago, probably seven years ago, I'd reached my life quota of commuter driving. When our children were young it seemed there were many reasons to drive rather than take the bus. Dropoffs and pickups at daycare, school events, sport practices, etc. were all logical reasons that one might have to get up and go. There was a brief time when that all ended that taking the bus seemed logical and I was about to do that. My mother's living situation and increasing challenges with things like the thermostat in her apartment, questions over received mail and requests to stop by kept me in the commuter car. Adding good music helped but I found that I would listen to the same CD or half-dozen CDs for months at a time. Once in a while I'd think that knowing a half-dozen CDs very well would be good if I was ever thrown into a prison in a foreign country. A car change led to Sirius Radio which provided more stations than I can imagine. I settled into about six that kept me sane for the last few years of the commute. Of course sane means listening only to the Pearl Jam channel for the past 2.5 years.
One of my co-workers could be enticed to ride with me if I had adequate music and for a period of time so I added Metallica because "Nothing Else Matters."
Humiliated
This evening as I avoided serious work...writing...I fell to a new low and found myself listening to Miley Cyrus on Oprah HQ. Clearly I need a job, or at least more focus and less distraction. My excuse for the Miley/Oprah experience was running through every Joan Jett clip on youtube.
Challenge-Knowledge Project
I have this rather abstract project centered on knowledge sharing in the commercial construction IT space. IT groups in even large commercial construction firms tend to be small and the challenges of technology and investment are huge. It's widely acknowledged that commercial construction is very poor at IT investment and innovation and process improvement. Every firm makes the same knowledge mistakes. There is little advantage to early adopters. The opportunity is for all companies to share and not make the same mistakes.
I was part of a local group and perhaps one of the founders of a metro area group that met a few times per year and shared experience, ideas, innovation, problems, etc. We have a LinkedIn group and there is a certain level of activity there. It's been my plan to take that local experience and role it into a national knowledge sharing venue. So far even the local group has indicated that there are other organizations doing the same thing. Having looked at those I find them lame. There are more than enough reasons to drop this idea but that's how a lot of good ideas die.
how is your online business going with the market products?
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