AJC development group mentioned at APME

We’re in [film!](http://alt.coxnewsweb.com/ajc/soundslides/ajc_apme/soundslider.swf)

Robin Henry, our Digital Managing Editor extraordinaire, spoke at a recent [Associated Press Managing Editors conference](http://www.apme.com/) and screened this [Soundslides presentation](http://alt.coxnewsweb.com/ajc/soundslides/ajc_apme/soundslider.swf) that Emily Murphy and the [AJC](http://www.ajc.com)’s multimedia group put together.

I look and sound like a total dweeb, but wanted to take a chance to pimp the developers, designers, DBAs and sysadmins at work who make all the cool stuff we do possible!

Posted in Django, Journalism, Programming, Python, Technology | Comments Off on AJC development group mentioned at APME

Human nature vs. good business sense

I was home sick the other day with an awful sinus headache and stomach flu.

About the only bright side was that I got to watch [Battlestar Galactica](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battlestar_Galactica_%28re-imagining%29) on DVD.

I thought to myself, “Boy this is a really great show. It’s a shame they never put it on NBC in the summer as was rumored on the Internet.”

Then I caught myself. Here I am enjoying a fine, fine television show — the visual and dramatic equivalent of a fine [bourbon](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knob_Creek_(bourbon)) or scotch — and yet I somehow think it’s a shame it wasn’t put on an over-the-air network for mass consumption.

Which got me wondering — *does human nature, at its very core, conflict with what is sometimes good business sense?*

[Humans](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human) are **social animals**. It’s one of the characteristics of our species the enables us to do so much good, and harm.

Allow me to list some common business idioms that fit within that framework:

* Grow a larger audience

* Add more employees

* Add more clients

* Attract more investors

And yet there are *plenty* of times and plenty of *businesses* that could probably have been better served by:

* Focusing on a tight, niche audience

* Keeping the same number of staff and enabling them to work smarter/harder

* Keeping the same number of clients and improving quality or revenue-per-client

* Stayed self-funded, or not gone public and avoided the associated detrimental market pressures that come with those “growth” routes.

Nothing terribly insightful here, I suppose.

Just got me wondering if that primal instinct to grow/expand our social network — even cloaked in a business setting — leads us to judge the first set of points as “sexy” and the others as “wimpy.”

Posted in Business, Management | Tagged , | Comments Off on Human nature vs. good business sense

Great quote on philosophy

Trust your passions less, your reasons more, and your limits most.

From [Prof. Daniel Robinson](http://www.philosophy.ox.ac.uk/members/drobinson/index.htm), Oxford University, via an NPR podcast.

Posted in Management | Comments Off on Great quote on philosophy

AirPress

AirPress

This could be interesting. I like MarsEdit, but I wish I could write and save a draft to my server, so I could start a post at work at lunch and finish up at home.

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Facebook + AIM = evil

To the 105 people I spammed today via IM while playing with Facebook… my humble apologies.

That was way evil of me, and I’d say slightly evil of facebook to offer… in what universe do folks want IM spam?

So aplogies for pressing buttons without thoroughly reading what will happen **before** I press them.

**Update:** The only thing I could have done that would be worse, is [this](http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/09/24/how-to-lose-all-your-friends-immediately-in-real-time/), a service that lets you blast messages to your “friends” e-mail, IM and SMS, all at once. Yikes!

Posted in Technology | Comments Off on Facebook + AIM = evil