Thursday, April 26, 2007

Brain Dump...

Well [insert standard rant about the difficulties of finding time to update this here] it has been a will since I've posted anything here. Most it is due primarily to my being sick for the better part of two weeks. The other is that there just isn't anytime.

Time has always been my nemesis...my mismanagement of it I suppose. The cluster fuck that is my work-life ties me up a little too much. Probably more than I should let it.

I've have several things I need to spout-off on, including:
  • Baby 2.0
  • Orbiting the Giant Hairball
  • My moderate obsession with abandoned amusement parks
There's probably much more, but until then, i remind you the Pearl Jam's latest disc "Pearl Jam," rocks.

Friday, April 13, 2007

Trey Pleads

Trey Anastasio pleaded guilty today to the charges resulted from his arrest with a boatload of pills and heroin last December. He's getting a fairly stiff sentence, but no jail time...unless he royally messes up. I say stiff considering the transient rock-star life he has been accustomed to. Not only does he have to move to Whitehall, NY for a least three months due to daily drug testing, but if he slips up once, he could be sent away for one to three years. He's got five years of probation to serve after his court drug program is complete. Quite a life change for him I'm guessing.

I'm not sure what to think of it myself, other than sadness. It's been obvious to many that he has had a problem for years. Just makes me sad to think it come to this. I'm not one to pass judgement, it really could have happened to any of us back in our younger years. Granted, the difference is the severity of the charges and the fact he is 42. And in that respect, it probably could have been much worse for him. Here's hoping he comes through a better person.

Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Crack(berry) Kills

It probably didn't come as a surprise to many, but a new survey by Yahoo HotJobs says that the corporate world's reliance on mobile devices is blurring the Work/Life balance lines.

Unless you've been in a coma, the crackberry addiction that has gripped the nation is substantiated by the findings that indicated 26 percent of workers feel like wireless devices keep them on a permanent corporate leash. I'm surprised it was actually this low.

I see this first-hand everyday. There a good numbers of "select" people who are issued these devices in my workplace. And nearly everyone uses them as an additional appendage. What I find most assuming (and annoying) is being in a meeting with these people. Unless the meeting leader is presenting absolutely riveting info, without fail, 10 minutes in, everyone in the room with a crackberry is checking it under the conference table.

I've been able to avoid being issued a crackberry in my working life, and hope to remain that way. However, I do waiver on my need/desire for one. Often, my position has me needing to respond to requests instantly, when you're in PR, it's the nature of the beast. But, what really gets me is when it affects my ability to communicate with others within my organization.

There have been countless times where I've been tied-up in back-to-back meetings and some email goes out asking a question that I could easily resolve. But, too often, in the time I'm away from my computer, a handful of people on the email chain manage to escalate something in my absence. What makes in worse is that things get elevated because the people responding are doing so via crackberry; meaning that the fire off quick answers or opinions that just raise the confusion of things.

This might be my biggest beef (aside from coming in in the morning and seeing emails from all hours of the previous night). The nature of these devices often solicit rapid responses, that are quite frequently never thought out. It drives me nuts.

And it also where I base my argument that technology is killing the human experience. I'm only have serious of course, but I think there is merit to technology eroding people communication skills. This is also quite relevant in the younger generations entering the workforce. The Gen Y'ers have been raised on this stuff, so much so that the art of conversation is becoming lost on them. Gen Y does everything through email, text messages, IM, etc., that they are losing skills. There are undoubtedly stats to support this, but I don't have the time to dig them up now.

Maybe if I had a crackberry, I could dig it up on my commute tomorrow. But, before I get on my soapbox about people using their crackberries while driving, I think I'll call it a night.