Saturday Snap – Ready for Puddle Jumping…

…just as soon as she figures out how to walk.

(She’s definitely mastered “Stand for Indiscriminate Amount of Time Before Plopping Back onto Bum”)…

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Friday Fun Link – 43 of the Happiest Little Kids in the World

Okay, 43 plus a couple more…

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What Is The Most Important Thing You’ve Learned About Leadership?

Below is the top voted answer, by former NASA astronaut Garrett Reisman, to the Quora question “What Is The Most Important Thing You’ve Learned About Leadership” (it’s worth clicking through for some of the other answers as well.)

1) Have a grand vision – Elon Musk, SpaceX CEO, CTO
As a leader, you can inspire and motivate your team to tremendous effect by communicating a vision in a clear, straight-forward way.  But don’t think small – raise the bar really really high.  Elon wants us to make the human species multi-planetary.  That’s different than a CEO whose vision is to increase the company’s market share by 10% within 5 years.

2) Be Competent – Ken Ham, Commander Space Shuttle Atlantis, STS-132
Being very good at what you do will inspire others to follow you and trust your judgement.  Ken is the best pilot I have ever flown with, and I’ve flown with a lot of good ones.  We did stuff in airplanes that I have only seen before or since in video games.  When he was at the controls of Atlantis, you had the feeling that everything was going to be ok.  Kind of like when Captain Kirk walks onto the bridge of the Enterprise.

3) Take Care of Your People – Nancy Currie, NASA Astronaut
This is an important principle that is ingrained into most military officers but is sadly often lacking in civilian managers.  Mentorship is important but moreover, doing whatever you can to advance the careers of your subordinates should be one of your prime duties.  Nancy was my branch chief in the Astronaut Office Robotics Branch when I was a rookie astronaut.  When a prime flight assignment became available for a skilled robotics expert, she went to the chief of the Astronaut Office and relentlessly championed me for the spot – despite the fact that she herself was a much better candidate.  Neither one of us got the job, but I never forgot her loyalty to me.

4) Give Your People as Much Autonomy as Possible – Chris Brennen, Caltech Professor
Resist the temptation to micro-manage.  If you telegraph the answer you expect to your team, then you are not going to get an innovative solution to a problem – or even a correct one.  When I would be struggling in the lab and talking to my Ph.D. advisor, Dr. Chris Brennen, he would work with me at his white-board just long enough to make sure I was heading in a pretty good direction.  Then he would take the maker out of my hand and say, “you’ll figure it out, now let me show you where we should go canyoneering this weekend” and he would start drawing topo maps of the San Gabriel mountains on the board.

5) Say What You Mean – Carl Fisher, former Senior VP of Northrup Grumman
Be a “straight-shooter”.  Don’t be passive-aggressive and resist the temptation to tell people what they want to hear, only to proceed in a different direction.  This is harder to do than it seems.  As Carl advised me, “To be a good program manager, don’t worry too much about making friends.  If you need a friend, buy a dog.”

6) Set the Bar High – Gerry Vandervoort, Parsippany High School Physics Teacher
You should have very high expectations of your team members.  Don’t berate them for their failures, but challenge them with goals that seem above their abilities.  Elon Musk is exceedingly good at this too, but I choose to use Mr. Vandervoort as an example.  His physics class was tough, and he didn’t suffer fools.  You had to want to be there – but as a result I was instilled with a love of science that never waned.

7)  Lead by Example – Roman Romanenko, Russian Cosmonaut
What you do is so much more important than what you say.  As a leader, you should be the hardest worker, the most well-prepared and the one willing to do all the things no one else wants to do.  When we did our winter survival training in Moscow, our commander Roman was always the first to go out to chop more firewood, the last to eat, and the one who carried the heaviest load through the forest.

8) Allow Your Subordinates to Tell you That you are Wrong – Garrett Reisman
Often leaders who do their job too well end up surrounded by a bunch of “yes-men/women”.  This can have disastrous consequences.  When I was the leader on a desert survival course our task was to navigate to a water source by map and compass.  I studied the map and proclaimed that a certain mountain peak in the distance was the one indicated on the map.  Then I told my team – it is the job of each and every one of you to prove to me that this mountain is not the one on the map.  We found the water and lived to tell the tale…

The Coteauster

I missed a pretty clever April Fool’s joke yesterday – Coteau Books announces the “Coteauster” which will burn daily excerpts from one of their award winning books onto your morning slice of toast!

Lots of comedy gold here…

Enter the Coteauster.

Wirelessly linking directly to your preferred eBook vendor’s online store, the Coteauster enables you to buy, download and print Coteau titles to enjoy with your breakfast. We like to kick it old-school at Coteau, so we’ve incorporated the Dickensian idea of serializing our titles to give you a daily taste of literary goodness.

Just insert your slice of bread*, and the Coteauster will toast a page of your chosen novel, poetry collection or short story onto it. Toast, read, eat. It’s that simple.**

Coteaust***

Gluten-free and children’s book options available.

The Coteauster will be available from our website, and from all good bookstores and kitchen appliance stores, soon.

*Coteau cannot accept liability for outcomes resulting from the use of bagels, croissants, toaster pockets or other hazardous materials.

**Coteau cannot accept liability for weight gain due to printing an entire chapter for one breakfast because “I just couldn’t put it down”.

 

The Definitive Guide to Every April Fool’s Prank on the Internet Today

Warning: lots of viral ads ahead!

Last year, Shea got Pace with the old “bowl of cereal left in the freezer overnight” trick.

This year, I got him a couple ways – first, I put peanut butter on both sides of his toast (though I’m not sure he even noticed or cared) and his milk in a coffee cup (to which he said “I’m not drinking that coffee!” even after I assured him it was really just milk.)

He often watches Minecraft videos on YouTube while eating his breakfast so I enabled the lock code on our iPad, put a screen grab of a Minecraft video up full screen in the Photo Gallery for when he got past the Lock Code and, for good measure, used the Accessibility setting to invert the iPad’s colours which, I have to admit, added up to a more “confused” than “ha-ha funny” reaction from him as he though the iPad was on the fritz.

Oh well – next year…

 

Music Monday – “I want to be a happy boy/This means you must employ my lies”

October Swimmer” – JJ72

Pirate Bay’s Longest Surviving Torrent Turns 10 Years Old

I would’ve guessed the longest lasting torrent would’ve been The Anarchist Cookbook (uhm, probably a bad idea to link to that, eh?) 😉 but it’s not.  Instead, it’s RECIPES!!!

Exactly ten years ago a Pirate Bay user uploaded a torrent linking to “Top Secret Recipes” ebooks. Today, this torrent is the oldest surviving torrent file on the notorious torrent index. The book torrent beats an Italian teen’s home video and the Linux documentary “Revolution OS” which were uploaded one and two days later respectively.  – more

(via Reddit)

Saturday Snap – Sasha Eating Pudding

As I mentioned on Facebook, Sasha and I have a lot in common – we don’t wear shirts at the dinner table, we’re pretty messy eaters, and we occasionally gnaw on the bottom of containers to try to get at the food! 😉

Friday Fun Link – Ten Things That Can Ruin An E-Book Help Session at the Library

So I consider myself a fairly tech-savvy individual.

I’ve been using computers since I was ten years old.  The first computer I used regularly was a Commodore-64.  I sent my first e-mail in 1995 and designed my first web site in 1997. I’ve since designed numerous web sites and even got paid to produce many of them. I published the first article about Facebook in CLA’s Feliciter magazine.  I’ve blogged for nearly ten years.  I have a five digital MetaFilter user number (which should’ve been four digits if I hadn’t visited the site as a lurker for so long.)  I’ve been on Reddit for seven years.

So occasionally when an e-book help session doesn’t go the way I want at the library, I’m inclined to think that maybe, just maybe, it’s not me.  I hate to admit that instead of hitting 100% in terms of helping people, I’m probably around 75% (and some days it feels like 50-50 as to whether I’m able to give people the help they need.)

Yesterday I was 0 for 2 in helping people with their e-readers and that inspired this list…

TEN REASONS E-BOOK HELP SESSIONS CAN GO OFF THE RAILS 

1. The patron doesn’t know their password.  Or that they have a password.  Or what a password is.
There are a few passwords you’ll likely need before you get started – maybe an account on the Apple App Store or the Google Play Store.  Or maybe you’ve already set-up an account with Adobe but have forgotten that you’ve done so.  The number of times that my sessions begin with a game of “guess the password” is amazing.  “Oh, but then can’t you just click “Forgot Password” and have it e-mailed to you” I hear you ask?  Well, then they usually need to know the password to their e-mail account since e-mail’s not set-up on their iDevice.  And the cycle continues…

2. The patron has a slow and/or outdated computer 
For many dedicated e-readers/iPods/MP3 players, the patron can’t just bring the actual device.  They need to also bring in a computer that they’ll use to tether to their e-reader so they can transfer downloaded books from the computer to the reader.  Luckily, at least most patrons have laptops in this day and age (although that didn’t stop one patron from bringing their entire tower to a help session when I worked for Southeast Regional Library.)  But then, often, the laptop is old or really slow or both.  (One does not follow the other – old computers tend to be slow in general but I’ve seen new computers so loaded down with add-ons and malware and “free” software that I’m almost afraid to touch them, lest I catch a virus myself!)

3. Slow and/or Unreliable Internet
You’d expect a public library in the year 2014 to have strong, consistent wireless Internet available.  You’d be wrong.  Often our wireless is spotty.  Or doesn’t do well where the patron has set-up all their equipment because they arrived ten minutes early for their appointment, sat down in the one dead spot in the entire library and then you have to tell them – “Sorry but I’ll have to move you to a table closer to the router.  The Internet doesn’t work well at this table for some reason.”  Or simply the amount of small talk you have to do as you wait for Adobe Digital Editions to download – a file that might come down in thirty seconds but might take five minutes or more.  More than once, I’ve pulled out my iPhone and enabled the local hotspot feature to speed the process when the library’s wifi is giving me grief.

4. Outdated Software
I get excited when people bring in iPads because those are usually the most straightforward set-ups and help sessions.  As long as you can download the app (See #1), its usually smooth sailing from there.  So it’s rare but occasionally you get stopped in your tracks when you flip on the iPad and see that it’s still got iOS4 on it (Apple’s up to iOS7 for those who are counting.)  The app store actually pops up a “Ha ha!” message when you go to download an app with that old of an operating system and for good measure, the patron brought in their device with a whopping 7% showing as the remaining battery life as well so I’m not sure how long they expected our session to last but I’m pretty sure it wasn’t going to be that long!

5. Weird Tech
To save money, you would be amazed at how many families manage to give their parents the gift of reading – in the form of e-readers that are apparently purchased on the black market from Russia or China.  So in addition to all the other usual barriers, you might find yourself trying to navigate a completely unfamiliar operating environment in a language you likely don’t understand!

6. Lack of Patron Knowledge About and Comfort With Technology
I know it comes from a good place but please, children of elderly parents, don’t buy your parents or grandparents an e-reader for Christmas because “they like reading”.  If they’re not computer savvy enough to at least navigate to a web site, use a search engine, or download a program and install it, you’re probably better off getting them a gift certificate to Chapters so they can buy a good, old-fashioned paper book.  (Or just get them a gift certificate to Swiss Chalet or Perkins because that’s what they really want!)   How bad can it be?  I knew I was in for a long one when a recent patron told me she’d gotten her Kobo Vox as a Christmas gift from her daughter but hadn’t figured it out yet as “she wasn’t sure how to get past the Lock icon when she turned it on.”  Oh, and also, “Do you know what Android mean?”  (I decided to skip my usual much-simplified instruction about DRM, book licensing, and copyright at that point and focus on showing her how to just turn her tablet on and open an application as a first step, let alone downloading apps and setting up accounts to download books from the library!)

7. Weird Glitches
My all-time favourite was during one of my first e-book help sessions at RPL where everything went right until the very last step when the book simply refused to transfer from the patron’s computer to their e-reader.  I tried everything I could think of before throwing myself at the mercy of a more knowledgeable co-worker.  “Oh, I’ve seen that before,” she said, going to to explain that “if the e-reader doesn’t have the date and time set correctly, the file won’t transfer.”  Oh, of course…   Recently, I had a very smooth e-book help session with a patron – everything installed, set-up, book downloaded, transferred, confirmed – all good.  That’s when I made the cardinal mistake of asking “Did you want to download one more book to make sure you’ve got the steps down?”  Of course, something went wrong the second time and when we transferred the book to her e-reader, it showed up with a black box instead of a cover and a message that the file was protected by DRM – even though the first book transferred with no problem and I confirmed the devices were properly authorized.  Cue an additional thirty minutes as I try everything I can think of to troubleshoot this unexpected error  – all to no avail.

8.  The Patron “Helps” You
I understand the desire of patrons to be protective of their devices and not want you to download the wrong thing or move an icon that they’re very attached to or whatever.  And I understand that, for some people, doing rather than watching, is the way they learn best.  But there’s nothing so frustrating as a patron who’s trying to move the mouse around while you’re typing on their laptop.  Or randomly tapping apps open while you’re trying to scroll to the right place for the app you actually need.

9.  I’m Not Even Supposed To Be Here!
An ongoing – and yet unresolved – debate in our public library (and I’m sure many others) is exactly how far we go with our tech help.  Do we only instruct people in the e-services that the library offers?  Do we give basic tech support such as how to use a mouse/use Google/surf the Net?  And where do you draw the line?  (To re-use an earlier example, should I have upgraded that lady’s iOS knowing that was part of what was required to get to the point I could help her download e-books?  Or is that crossing a line into something more suited for the teenager who lives next door and could really use the $10 you pay them to do it for you?)  😉

10.  Even When It All Goes Smoothly, They Have to Be Able To Replicate It On Their Own
You have a great session.  Everything works perfectly.  You’ve talked really slowly through each step.  The patron seems to get it.  You give them a handout the library has carefully crafted to show them step-by-step what they need to do (another ongoing argument – how much detail should these handouts have?  I’m almost to the point that you almost need two – one bare bones, single page one that only focuses on the core steps after basic set-up is already done and one, in-depth, text-heavy five or ten pager that shows all the possible steps including screen shots, arrows and lots of 18pt bold-face type – again, recognizing different people have very different learning styles.)  So you’ve done it all, it’s all gone smoothly and then you get a call the next day “I thought I had it but I got home and couldn’t get it to work.  Can I come see you again next week?” <sigh>

 

“Friends and Family in the News” Edition

Saskatchewan Naval Commander Helps Drug Bust
Victoria Divita, only the fourth woman in history to command a Canadian Naval vessel, is from Indian Head. I grew up with Victoria (though I knew her as “Vickie”), she was in my sister’s grade, a couple years younger than me, and in fact, her older brother was best man at Shea’s and my wedding.  (I’m sure that brother also told me that his sister was the first woman to command a ship in the Canadian Navy, not the fourth like the article mentions.  But perhaps he meant first woman to captain a particular class of warship?)  At any rate, it wouldn’t take long in the shoebox of photos mom and dad have to find a picture of Vicki at a birthday party or BBQ or whatever (our parents were quite close too back in the day since their kids were the same age.)  I won’t torture her that way since she now has heavy artillery at her disposal.  But I will observe that playing war with her brothers, twin sister and various other friends may have contributed to her career choice.  That, or watching the marathon sessions of “Axis and Allies” her brother and I engaged in with our friends!

Parents of Kids With Epilepsy Want More Pediatric Neurologists
Shea’s cousin, whose son has a rare form of epilepsy and has been to eight experts in four provinces (and was who I was referring to when I mentioned “Saw a photo of the brain of someone I know” as the “Something I’d Never Done Before” point in my end-of-year summary a couple years ago after Rylan’s trip to Vancouver for surgery was documented online by his mom and her partner) is in the news for her advocacy work on behalf of families suffering from epilepsy.  As she mentions in the article, her son was normal in every way until he was around two (I have a memory of him saying some really big word – helicopter? – and being blown away by how smart he seemed) and then his seizures began.  Makes me realise how fortunate you are if your children are healthy (he says, knocking furiously on wood.)

Three Killed in Rollover on Rural Highway
This isn’t directly related to family or friends (thankfully!) but is more a one-step-removed connection.  There was a head-on collision on the secondary highway that Shea and I usually take to go visit her parents in Weyburn (and that we took on a weekly basis when I worked for Southeast Regional Library).  We saw that a red truck was involved and briefly worried it was someone we know who also regularly travels that road and drives a red truck.  It wasn’t but when I got to work the next day, it turned out to be three co-workers of the daughter of one of my staff members.  And very fortunately, the daughter would have been in the truck with her co-workers had she not been assigned to another job site very recently!  Again, as with the randomness of Shea’s cousin’s son’s illness, this is another example of just how tragically random life can be sometimes.