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Friday, January 2

Huge
I took my brother-in-law and his family down to the docks today to look at QM2. They took the Hythe ferry and got up close and personal, while I took this picture from Hythe Marina to try to give an idea of the scale of the thing. The ship is the other side of Southampton Water from the marina - maybe 2 miles away - so is even more massive than this picture suggests.
QM2 seen through moorings
Update: Larry takes me to task saying that the ship is in fact no more than half a mile from the point where I was taking the photograph. I checked on MapQuest and he's right - so much for my wild guess!

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Thursday, January 1

Sunrise on 2004
Sunrise photoWe're all safely in 2004 now so I'd like to wish everyone a blessed and successful year in 2004. I'm straight in to a heavy travel schedule in January which reminds me to aim to balance the work and family dimensions of my life in a way I've not been able these last few years.

I think that's a fine base for a resolution for the new year. I'll aim to maintain a spiritual, a social, a work and a family focus, each however small, in every day - feel free to ask how it's going when we meet!

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Wednesday, December 31

Between Darkness and Wonder
Album cover courtesy of AmazonThe new CD from Lamb arrived today, 'Between Darkness and Wonder' [UK|USA|CA]. I really like it - it has the quirkiness I've come to expect from them but seems more melodic than the last two albums. The video for 'Wonder' is pretty typical - if you like that you'll like the album (and what eyelashes those are!). Favourite track so far is actually the instrumental, 'Angelica', still on continuous play though.

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Can Americans Send Text Messages?
Those of us in Europe have our doubts. Russell Beattie will help get you started - let's blow away the SMS system at midnight...

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Tuesday, December 30

Beware Almanac Bearers
It's deeply suspicious. Today Amazon have no stock of Old Moore's Almanac for 2004. Is it because it's been outlawed as a weapon of mass destruction? We need to know the truth.

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Monday, December 29

Inside the ant hill's mind
Is Charlie Demerjian of The Inquirer right when he asserts Microsoft is in trouble? Cameron Reilly is upset that the Inquirer isn't balanced [via Scoble] but the drift of the article is actually surprisingly compelling for them:
Just as the press proclaims the inability of anyone to challenge the Redmond beast, control is slipping from Microsoft. As with any company faced with a huge loss of market share, Microsoft is acting predictably, pretending it is not happening, and putting on a smiley face when asked about prospects. On the inside, Microsoft is as scared as hell.
How might one look inside and see what the mind of the 'ant-hill', as Robert calls it, is really like? Well, take a look at the Amazon Purchase Circle for Microsoft and see what people are reading. It will change of course, so here's what it says now:
  1. Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix (Book 5) – There's lots of bed-time story reading going on in the north-west. The company has grown up. Employees have families and are discovering the needs they have, just like competitors.
  2. Good to Great: Why Some Companies Make the Leap... and Others Don't – Is Microsoft going to make the leap to Great? And will jobs survive the culture change involved if it tries?
  3. Execution: The Discipline of Getting Things Done – If the strategy is right yet it's still not working (see The Inquirer article) then the solution must be better execution.
  4. The Tipping Point: How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference – This is a great book, I recommend it. It explains how apparently random, small things can be the pivot around which huge change can take place. Just the book to read if you think The Inquirer may be right ;-)
  5. Who Says Elephants Can't Dance? Inside IBM's Historic Turnaround – IBM was on the brink of the abyss (I remember it well) and the old-think leadership of John Akers had to be eliminated and reversed to save the company, even though it was huge, rich and thought to be as unsinkable as the Titanic. Is Steve up to the job? Maybe this book has clues.
So... "I have kids like everyone else - we're no longer the all-nighter office-living rebels we were. I wonder if my employer is as unsinkable as they say? Look at IBM - they had to get rid of the old order and employ an outsider to survive, they seem to have made the switch from good to great. It could be something as small and insignificant as that Java Desktop System that tips the system and blows us out of the water - can't really imagine that though, it's so random. Steve must be right, it must be my execution that's faulty, I'll focus on it like he says and try not to think these bad thoughts."

I'll leave you to look at the rest of the top 10 (mainly fiction) and work out what people are thinking. But to my eyes these book choices suggest Charlie Demerjian is on to something.

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Sunday, December 28

Dawn at the Docks
You may recall the link I felt with the RMS Queen Mary. The world's largest cruise liner, the Queen Mary 2, is in her home port this week...
Queen Mary 2 stern seen landscape Queen Mary 2 portrait with sky Queen Mary 2 portrait with gulls Queen Mary 2 funnels

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(c) 2003-7, Simon Phipps. Some items may be repeated in the editorial column on the home page.



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