Donnerstag, 18. Dezember 2014

Greatness in writing

John Updike. (March 18, 1932–January 27, 2009) wasn’t merely the recipient of two Pulitzer Prizes and a National Humanities medal, among a wealth of other awards. He had a mind that could ponder the origin of the universe, a heart that could eulogize a dog with such beautiful bitter-sweetness, and a spirit that could look on death without fear.

Describing his subject as "the American small town, Protestant middle class," Updike was well recognized for his careful craftsmanship and his unique prose style.

He is also credited with making suburban sex sexy, which landed him on the cover of Time magazine after "Couples" in 1968 in under the headline “The Adulterous Society” — something Adam Begley explores in the long-awaited new biography Updike.

This book chronicles Updike’s escapades in Ipswich, Massachusetts, in the early 1960s, just as he was breaking through with The New Yorker — the bastion of high culture to which he had dreamed of contributing since the age of twelve.

His literary career began to gain momentum with the publication of Rabbit, Run in 1960 — the fictional story of a twenty-something suburban writer who, drowning in responsibilities to his young family, finds love outside of marriage. That fantasy would soon become a reality for the 28-year-old Updike himself, a country boy who had gotten through Harvard by playing the class clown dressed in his ill-fitted tweed jackets and unfashionably wide ties.

I love all Updike's work, -his novels, short stories and book reviews. The Rabbit novels especially, which are a unique social chronicle of the 1960s, 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s, a wonderful mix of the poetic, coarse, witty, and lyrical.

Dienstag, 16. Dezember 2014

Greatness

             -Wendy MacNaughton

Behind every great person there is someone who enabled his or her ascension. These friends, relatives, partners, muses, colleagues, coaches, assistants, lovers, teachers, and caretakers deserve some of the credit. When you consider your own life, there are dozens of people who have guided you along your path — whether a teacher from fourth form who finally got you to raise your hand in class, a family friend who gave you your first camera, or that whiskey-sipping uncle who’d tell you stories. These relationships shape our lives, some lightly and others with more impact.

Quite often we don't realise that the loving and staunch support of other people is one of the greatest privileges. And for many people we’ve come to celebrate as geniuses, such human support was precisely what made their achievements possible.


Mittwoch, 3. Dezember 2014

Keep on running..

Das Ackerloch in Unterkirnach ist einen Laufstrecke in Schwarzwald die über hügeliges Wiesengelände führt. Als besondere Herausforderung erweist sich immer wieder der Zielhang ... Auch die Rentner waren unter den Leichtathleten unterwegs. Crosslauf 7,6 Km.


  

Donnerstag, 27. November 2014

Done already, bereits vorhanden ..

What stops you trying out something new ?

Perhaps the fear that you're doing something that's already been done before, that everything that you think of doing has been done.

Just about every successful initiative and project starts from a place of replication. The chances of being fundamentally out of the box over the top original are close to zero.

A better question to ask yourself is, "have I ever done this before?" Or perhaps, "are the people I am trying to serve going to be bored by this?"

Originality is local. The internet destroys, at some level, the idea of local, so if we google long enough we'll find that turn of a phrase or that unique concept or that clever app, somewhere else.

But no one is asking you to be original. We're asking you to be generous and brave and to matter. We're asking you to step up and take responsibility for the work you do, and to add more value than just "cut and paste". To do it anyway.

Sure, it's been done before. But not by you. And not for us.

Donnerstag, 20. November 2014

Netflix kommt!

.. bestimmt Programmierer vom Beruf!




Samstag, 8. November 2014

Spiel mir

Sonntagnachmittag, 16:10, es regnet.






The music of Ennio Morricone, the voice of Ms. Edda Dell 'Orso  and the Film of Sergio Leone combined.  Made this in my humble opinion the greatest western ever made.


Morricone's score for Once Upon a Time in the West is one of the best-selling original instrumental scores in the world today, with up to 10 million copies sold

"Unübertroffen", as we say in Germany.


Montag, 27. Oktober 2014

Handshakes and Contracts, the future and the past

If you rent a car, borrow money for school or engage in some other complex transaction, there's a contract to sign. It's filled with rules and obligations, and the profit-maximizing finance organization does everything it can to do as little as it can and make you responsible for as much as it can. This sort of contract has evolved into a battle, an effort to get something now and deliver as little as possible later. Loopholes and fine print are there for a reason, and it's not to make you happy. Contracts like this are about the past. "We agreed on this, you signed it, go read your copy, we don't care so much that you're annoyed, goodbye."

A handshake deal, on the other hand, is about the future. Either side can claim loopholes or wriggle out of a commitment, but the consequence is clear—if you disappoint us, we won't be back for more. The participant in a handshake deal is investing in the future, doing more now in exchange for the benefits that trust and delight and consistency bring going forward.

It might be sensible to write your handshake deal down, to memorise the key promises in an email. If your goal is to delight and to exceed expectations, the more clear you are about the expectations, the more likely it is you'll exceed them.

But it also pays to hesitate when you (or your advisors) start pushing to transform the handshake about the future into a contract about the past.

"I'm hoping to do this again with you," evokes a very different reaction than, -  but you said..."
-Seth Godin.

Freitag, 24. Oktober 2014

Expanding the Cloud, Amazon AWS

Introducing the AWS EU (Frankfurt) region, October 2014.

Amazon Web Services is expanding its worldwide coverage with the launch of a new AWS region in Frankfurt, Germany. This infrastructure built to support the strong demand in Europe and to give customers the option to run infrastructure located in Germany. The new Frankfurt region provides low millisecond latencies to major cities in continental Europe and is also run with carbon neutral power. With the launch of the new Frankfurt region customers now also have the ability to architect across multiple regions within the European Union.

In addition to a broad base of customers, AWS has a vibrant partner ecosystem in Germany that has built innovative solutions and services on AWS. Among the many local Independent Software Vendors are: SAP, Infopark, Suse, and Software AG. With the new Frankfurt region, companies that are required to meet certain compliance, control, and data locality requirements may now be able to achieve these certifications. As with all AWS regions, customers can choose to keep their data entirely within the Frankfurt region.

Und auf Deutsch:
In unserer neuen Region in Deutschland können Sie - wie bei allen anderen AWS-Regionen - auswählen, wo Ihre Daten verarbeitet und gespeichert werden. Einige Kunden haben nach einer Möglichkeit gefragt, ihre Daten innerhalb Deutschlands hosten zu können, und wir freuen uns darüber, dass wir Ihnen jetzt diese Möglichkeit geben können.


Durch die geographische Nähe profitieren Sie auch von einer kürzeren Latenzzeit, die Ihre Anwendungen schneller machen kann. Außerdem können europäische Kunden jetzt zwei AWS-Regionen nutzen, um die Fehlertoleranz ihrer Applikationen noch stärker zu verbessern, ohne den EU-Raum verlassen zu müssen.




Montag, 20. Oktober 2014

We are Optimists

"Humans are hard-wired optimists. It may have something to do with survival and evolution, but we must go on – and going on is driven by hope. We always think this time it’s going to be different. When we become optimistic about the economy, we behave like we are in love for the first time. We get giddy, we dispense with logic and we fall headlong into a new adventure.

We also become over-confident. Most of us inflate our abilities. For example, men everywhere inflate their intellect and social skills. We believe we are more able then we are. A recent study revealed that 95 per cent of European men believe they are in the top 20 per cent when it comes to social skills. We exaggerate in lots of areas and our belief in ourselves is where we start."
-David McWilliams


Donnerstag, 25. September 2014

perbit at the BBC London

BBC aktuelle Nachrichten heute! (www.bbc.com/news/)














Gut gemacht Gabi! Eine der meist besuchten Websites der Welt.



Free U2 Album

A free U2 Album on iTunes. Apple and U2 have grown up together. Steve Jobs incorporated Apple in 1976, the same year that U2 formed at Mount Temple Comprehensive School (Mountjoy) in Dublin. Both thrived on constant reinvention, retaining a loyal audience by delivering pioneering products – the iPhone, and U2’s ever more spectacular live shows.

The 2004 release of a U2-branded iPod first brought them together in a bid to strengthen their grips on the entertainment sector, but now the demise of the traditional record industry has given both middle-aged brands intimations of obsolescence.

Following the relative low sales of their 2009 album No Line on the Horizon, U2 feared that the paying public’s appetite for further releases was in decline. U2 aren’t the only victims – album downloads on Apple’s iTunes store are dwindling as fans turn to streaming services. 

Was the giveaway of Songs of Innocence a success ? Apple said a “record-breaking” 38 million people have already “accessed” the album, far more than would have bought or heard the record normally.

Bono remains unapologetic. He told Time: “We want to get these songs to as many people as we can. We went to Apple and we said ‘We’re not interested in free music – we think music is undervalued. Would you be interested in buying our album and getting it to all 500m of your iTunes accounts?"


Giving Songs of Innocence away makes sense for U2, since the album will act as a promotional tool for their next global tour.

Despite the negative reaction in some quarters, the union between Apple and U2 is set to strengthen. The partners are now embarking on a “secret project” to create a new digital music format which will compensate musicians for their efforts, and aims to revive the dying art of listening to a complete album.


Donnerstag, 18. September 2014

Do it again!

U2’s Mission to Save Music!
For the second time in the band's history, U2 is on the cover of TIME magazine. The September 29, 2014, issue features a black-and-white photo of the band with the headline: The New U2 - The Veteran Rock Band Faces The Future.

Apple and U2 are giving the new album Songs of Innocence to over 500 million iTunes customers worldwide. Never before have so many people owned one album, let alone on the day of its release.


U2 was also on TIME's cover in 1987 when the magazine called the band Rock's Hottest Ticket. And Bono got the cover in 2002 and 2005.



Montag, 15. September 2014

Programming takes time!

One thing people who don't do development don't easily understand is that the time spent doing something repetitively is how you figure out how it works. So when users ask for features that are needed early in the life of a product, for example, where fotodesignarri is now, while I recognize there's a need to simplify and automate the design process for end users, for me as a designer, the repetition of redoing the programming is how I figure out how to address the issue of user enabled web design.

I can't tell you how many times I've programmed quick fixes in the last 30 years, and then had to live with those foolish decisions for years afterwards. Two years later when people ask why it works that foolish way, I have to say it's because I delivered too quickly. I'm now working again on something I've already done half a dozen times over the last two years. This time, I see how to organize it. The other 7 times I was fumbling around in the dark. How long did this take? In this case -- 3 years. But I did wait. So now I'm fairly confident I have the right answer.


Mittwoch, 3. September 2014

Hold on...

Sitting outside a street cafe in Konstanz the other afternoon a street musician (from Budapest as it turned out) with just an accoustic guitar set up and sang a 10 minute version of this REM song even better than Andrea Corr here. An amazing five minute interlude in a busy street.

We all have things going on in our lives that try to drag us down, make us hurt, or tear us apart. But as Winston Churchill said, if you're going through Hell...keep going. To put it another way, the way out is through. Keep your heads up, your hopes high, and never give up no matter how rough the road looks ahead, you'll make it. You are not alone. 





Freitag, 29. August 2014

1966, The Beatles final concert..

..was this evening 48 years ago.


Although they made an unannounced live appearance in January 1969 on the rooftop of the Apple building in London, The Beatles' final live concert took place on 29th August 1966 at Candlestick Park in San Francisco, California.

The Park's capacity was 42,500, but only 25,000 tickets were sold, leaving large sections of unsold seats. Fans paid between $4.50 and $6.50 for tickets, and The Beatles' fee was around $90,000.

The compère was 'Emperor' Gene Nelson of KYA 1260 AM, and the support acts were, in order of appearance, The Remains, Bobby Hebb, The Cyrkle and The Ronettes.

The show began at 8pm. The Beatles took to the stage at 9.27pm, and performed 11 songs: Rock And Roll Music, She's A Woman, If I Needed Someone, Day Tripper, Baby's In Black, I Feel Fine, Yesterday, I Wanna Be Your Man, Nowhere Man, Paperback Writer and Long Tall Sally.

Of which my favourite today would be Nowhere Man (Here from Munich in 1966).


Montag, 25. August 2014

Steve's Birthday

Happy Birthday! Imagine a time when songs about angst, misunderstanding and broken relationships become obsolete in a world where people said the right things, kept their promises and happiness became so common that it would hardly be worth a song! (There would be one less thing to discuss however.)





And the hard part isn't merely thinking of ideas. Yes, it's hard to sit with a bunch of amateurs and discuss the script that took months to finish, and hard to get it made and hard to get the first one distributed.


But the truly hard part is, 15 years later, sticking with it long enough for it to actually work.

Montag, 18. August 2014

Field of Dreams

Fairy tales and hero stories follow similar patterns: the good win, the bad lose, and people who do the right thing get prizes. These rules are pleasant, easy to remember, and have been with us as long as we’ve had stories to tell.

Applied to business, the myth that goodness wins is best captured in the famous saying, “If you build a better mousetrap, the world will beat a path to your door.” It’s sometimes paraphrased as “If you build it, they will come,” the iconic phrase from the baseball film Field of Dreams. Unfortunately, the quote is a misattribution to Ralph Waldo Emerson, a leading 19th-century american intellectual.

What he actually said was probably, “If a man has good corn, or wood, or boards, or pigs to sell, you will find a broad, hard beaten road to his house.” I’m not sure when you last sold pigs or grew corn, but Emerson had something other in mind than rallying would-be entrepreneurs to get in the innovation game. The phrase was meant to be poetic, not instructional, and he’d be disappointed at how many people have taken his words literally. The phrase has been used as the entrepreneur’s motto, misguiding millions into entertaining the notion that a sufficiently good idea will sell itself.

It’s not going to happen. These days, the best equivalent to the metaphoric mousetrap is “to build a better web site,” proven by the 30,000 software patents and 1 million web sites created annually. Certainly not all of these efforts are motivated by wealth or wishful thinking, but many programmers still hope that the “If you build it, they will come” sentiment is alive and strong.

And HTML5 and JavaScript are far from the best software development languages, yet they’re perhaps the most successful in history. Even today, right now, ideas of all kinds that experts criticize are gaining adoption.

Mittwoch, 13. August 2014

Reminder to myself


What's it for and How will we know if it works?

Answer these two questions first, please. If it's worth doing, it's worth knowing the answers before you do it.

A hammer is for getting nails into wood, and it's pretty easy to tell if it does the job well. That's one reason why we have so many good hammers in the shops -real clarity about what it's for, and whether it works or not. Too often, we wait until we see what something does before we decide what we built it for.

(Examples: what's a receptionist for? Cat food? Life insurance?)

Donnerstag, 31. Juli 2014

Getting it done?

You know what you want to accomplish.

You know how you'd like everything to turn out. The real question is, "what are you willing to make sacrifices for?" What are you willing to stand up for, bleed for, commit to and generally be unreasonable about? Because that's what's going to actually get done.

One model of organization is to find something that you're good at and that's easy and straightforward and get paid for that. The other model is to seek out things that are insanely difficult and do those instead.

"How do we do something so difficult that others can't imagine doing it?" is a fine question to ask every now and then.

"There are two types of genius. Ordinary geniuses do great things, but they leave you room to believe that you could do the same if only you worked hard enough. Then there are magicians, and you have no idea how they do it. Feynman was a magician"
-Hans Bethe, theoretical physicist and Nobel laureate.


Dienstag, 29. Juli 2014

Individualität im Personalmanagement ..

ist weiterhin der Schlüssel zum Erfolg!

sagt nicht nur perbit ..

Maßgeschneidertes Customizing schafft die beste Voraussetzung für einwandfrei funktionierende softwaregestützte Prozesse. Die Anpassung des Personalmanagement-Systems an die unternehmensspezifischen Gegebenheiten geschieht bei perbit präzise und schnell. Flexible Individualisierung ohne großen Aufwand.

.. sondern auch Dan Bricklin in 2014 in Bezug auf Microsoft..

“Microsoft came from engineers building things: programmers, programmers, programmers — and the hearts and minds of programmers mattered a lot to them. People want to customise things, make it right for what their problem is. It’s the difference between being a carpenter and being an architect — one size does not fit all.

Microsoft built systems that could be customised, so users could replace that part themselves and it listened to a lot of people and provided what they wanted, all the bells and whistles. People say you end up with bloatware and only 10% of the features get used by any user but that 10% is different for a lot of users. Apple went for smaller number of people and that’s OK because there’s Microsoft for the rest."

Donnerstag, 10. Juli 2014

What's the point?

Occasionally, especially lately since I've retired, some people say something like this: "It's great that you still go to work every day, but I don't see the point."


The point is really simple. I'm a software developer. I decided that's what I wanted to do when I was in my late teens. I never ask myself why I do it. When it clicked for me at that young age, it was like it probably is for a person who plays soccer professionally, or who plays in a rock band.

We don't question the point of them doing what they do, so why would people question what I still do ?

I probably know the answer. They see software development and programming as a job. If you don't have to work at it, why do you still do it?

I never felt that software was a job. For me, strange as it may seem, it was a challenge. I had great stuff to do. And I'm not finished. So that's the point.

I've been doing it for years. To me, it's gratifying to have people use my software and for me to hear what they want and the problems they encounter so I can improve things. That's an awareness of data, and it informs what I do. These are puzzles that I love. To me software is like a performing art, it's never finished, always evolving. I do it even if I'm the only one using the software. But it's much much better if there are others, the more, the better.

"I think of software engineering as one of the few skills where you can create something new and exciting *every* day. There is almost no other creative skill that allows you to do that. And it makes many software builders true artists."
-Werner Vogels, Amazon Web Services.

Dienstag, 8. Juli 2014

Held des Tages, WM 08.07.2014

Miroslav Klose, Germany's leading goalscorer with 71 goals in 136 international games, he is the third player to score at four World Cup finals, -2002, 2006, 2010, 2014.

16 Goals in 23 World Cup games, (Brazil legend Pele and West Germany's Uwe Seeler both scored at the 1958, 1962, 1966 and 1970 finals.)


Germany have never lost a game in which he has scored.

Sonntag, 29. Juni 2014

A nearly forgotten jewel

Just back from a week in Dublin with Alan McCreery and Kathy. We stayed in Finglas once again, just like 1986 but in Clune Road instead of Ballymun Avenue. That was the year I found out that U2 were something really special. This song travelled with me all over Germany for the next few years on the car radio. Just today I stumbled upon a video from that time.  


Last Saturday (21.06.14) the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity gave Bono its inaugural Lionheart award for his work with RED. The award recognizes a person or organization "that, through innovative use of commercial brand power, has made a significant and positive difference to people or the planet."

Dienstag, 10. Juni 2014

Boundaries und Grenzen

One of the most popular home computers ever made was the Commodore 64 in 1982. The "64" was the amount of memory it had--not 64 Gigabytes or 64 Megabytes, but 64K. 

The thing is, the amount of available memory was right there, in the name of the machine. All the people who developed for the machine knew exactly how much memory it had. Any time a developer whined or made excuses about how little memory there was, he was telling us something we already knew, making excuses where no excuses were needed or welcome.

With unlimited time, unlimited money and unlimited resources, of course you might do something differently. But your project is defined by the limitations and boundaries that are in place when you set out to accomplish something.

You build something remarkable because of the boundaries, not without them.

Dienstag, 3. Juni 2014

Cloud Computing, Strategie Europe 2020

"One of the core messages we have been taking to the European Cloud Partnership (ECP) is the call to put data protection, ownership, and control, in the hands of cloud users. For cloud to succeed, and realise its potential, it is essential that customers own and control their data at all times. Recent news stories have brought this topic to the fore. Customers, governments and businesses, large and small alike, have concerns about the security, ownership and privacy of their data. If they are not addressed, these concerns have the potential to undermine the pervasive adoption of cloud computing and the resulting benefits to the business community.

At AWS we decided on day one (2006) to put this control in the hands of our customers. They own the data – they choose where to store the data and their data would never be moved to optimise the network. This means that European customers using the AWS Cloud can choose to keep their data in Europe. We also give customer’s tools and techniques to encrypt their data, both at rest and in transit, and manage their secret keys in such a way that it is the customer who completely controls who can access their data, not AWS or any other party. Content that has been encrypted is rendered useless without the applicable decryption keys.

I believe that many of the elements needed for cloud computing to be successful in the region focus on values that are core to all of us as Europeans. As a Dutchman, I hold European values in close regard - values such as the right to a fair and democratic society, and a strong protection of privacy and freedom. Cloud computing –done right– enables broad expression and realization of these European values, especially when combined with a business model that puts customers first. One of the key themes of the ECP’s vision document is the call for a cloud computing framework that focuses on customers and empowers Europeans.


According to a study from the center for economics and business research, the expected cumulative economic effects of cloud computing between 2010 and 2015 in the five largest European economies alone is around €763 billion. Analyst firm IDC notes the cloud economy is growing by more than 20% and could generate nearly €1 trillion in GDP and 4 million jobs by 2020."

- Werner Vogels CTO, Amazon Web Services. 


Mittwoch, 28. Mai 2014

Wie kommt das Neue in die Welt?

Echte Innovationen sprengen bisher scheinbar festen Rahmen und setzen Grenzen völlig neu. Sie eröffnen etwas, was es vorher nicht gab. Etwas, was man auch gar nicht haben will sondern bekämpft. Ähnlich geht es zur Zeit Cloud Computing. Die wesentliche Frage für mich wäre jetzt "Was ist zu tun um diese Neuentwicklung erfolgreich in den Markt zu bringen?" Innovation ist ein Langstreckenlauf, bei der es besonders auf die Kräfte in der zweiten Hälfte ankommt. 

Dienstag, 20. Mai 2014

Jeff Bezos on Cleverness vs. Kindness

"Cleverness is a gift, kindness is a choice. Gifts are easy — they’re given after all. Choices can be hard. You can seduce yourself with your gifts if you’re not careful, and if you do, it’ll probably be to the detriment of your choices."

In 1986, Jeff Bezos graduated from Princeton with a degree in computer science. In 1994, he founded Amazon.com. In 2010, he went back to Princeton to address the graduating class about the difference between gifts and choices.   Read now.



Mittwoch, 14. Mai 2014

Buch Empfehlung

Jeder kann seine Lebensweise ändern. Gewohnheiten und Lasten sind eine Frage der Entscheidung. Beim Bergsteigen ebenso wie im Beruf. Eine sinnvolle Aufgabe, gute private und freundschaftliche Beziehungen, sich bestens vorbereiten. Und die erste Überraschung: "Gute Unternehmer sind, genauso wie gute Bergsteiger, sehr risikoscheu." (S. 178)

"Vor einer wirklich großen und schwierigen Tour, und besonders vor einer Erstbesteigung, sind Bergsteiger mit Erfahrung weder optimistisch noch pessimistisch, euphorisch oder begeistert. Schon am Vorabend sind sie eher still und nachdenklich, frühmorgens am Einstieg dann gefasst, gesammelt. Sie schweigen ..."

Tatsächlich sind berühmte Helden kein Vorbild für Fredmund Malik.

Dass jeder von uns jeden Tag mehr leisten kann, mit weniger Stress, klingt zunächst utopisch. Und doch können alle durch eine Auflösung ihrer meist eingeprägten Grenzen viel mehr erreichen als angenommen. Nicht der Charakter, die Ausbildung oder das umfassende Wissen sind zentral, sonder die Art des (konzentrierten) Handelns. Das Buch konzentriert sich im Vergleich zu "Führen, Leisten, Leben" sehr viel mehr auf den Manager als Mensch.

Mittwoch, 30. April 2014

Uncertainty

Your job isn’t going to make you happy, your spouse isn’t going to make you happy, the weather isn’t going to make you happy. You have to decide what you want, and you have to find that way of doing it, whether or not the outside circumstances are going to participate in your success. You have to be able to create your own happiness, period. And if you can’t, then you need to find a good friend who can help you figure out what it’s going to take.

Think big. Pick yourself up from rejection and plow ahead. Don’t compromise. Start now. Start now, every single day.

Richard Branson





Montag, 31. März 2014

April

"Here cometh April again, and as far as I can see the world hath more fools in it than ever."
-Charles Lamb.

Donnerstag, 27. März 2014

My Mistake (Looking Back)

My Mistake !    -why are these two words so hard to say?

All programmers, when they fix a bug, are implicitly saying exactly that.
And the process of building a piece of software involves the constant fixing of bugs. When I write a piece of code, I write it knowing it has bugs. The first time I use it, I notice things I didn't see when I was visualising the software before it existed.

I remember the first time Wolfgang tried out one of the first versions of Pers-Info DOS I had written in 1982, lots and lots of errors! I was surprised, angry, disappointed, troubled, felt inadequate, all these emotions - but after I calmed down, I fixed as many of the problems as I could. Later, we hired people to write these reports for our programmers. Everyone has to face the reality of what their software looks like to people who use it, who don't know how to avoid all the traps. And Kai now does this so well he can do it for a living.

When I was young there were a lot of foods I didn't like: cabbage, certain fish, paprika, olives, to name a few. When I was 23, I made a conscious decision to try to eat all these things and find out if it was still true. It wasn't.

I tried the same thing, later, with apologizing and admitting mistakes. Like a lot of people, I didn't like to admit mistakes. I think this was the way I was brought up. In my mind, if you admitted a mistake, or even changed your mind, this was a sign that your thinking was wrong. The feeling was, if you were wrong once, you're probably often wrong.  So better not admit it.

That was a mistake. I got it wrong in 1972. I'm sorry, my mistake.

Try it some time. See what happens. I bet most people they will respect you more for it.

I know I will. No harm in making a mistake.

We all do it.

Freitag, 14. März 2014

Time waits for No One ..

by the Rolling Stones, 1974, -ein schönes Lied und schöne alte Fotos! 


Am Ende eine tolle Gitarrensolo von Mick Taylor, der anstelle von Rory Gallagher in 1969 dazu kam und allzu früh im Dezember 1974 die Gruppe wieder verließ.

Mittwoch, 12. März 2014

Happy Birthday Jack Kerouac!

Geboren am 12.03.1922, Jack Kerouac's sportliche Erfolge brachten ihm 1940 bis 1941 ein Stipendium an der Columbia University in New York ein, wo er zusammen mit Kommilitonen wie Allen Ginsberg und William S. Burroughs die Zelle der Beat Generation bildete.


On The Road (1957), auf deutsch Unterwegs war Kerouac's Durchbruch und der Höhepunkt seiner Karriere. Auch in Januar 1957 schrieb Kerouac eine bewegende Brief an seine Ex-Frau Edie, indem stand:

"I have lots of things to teach you now, in case we ever meet, concerning the message that was transmitted to me under a pine tree in North Carolina on a cold winter moonlit night. It said that Nothing Ever Happened, so don’t worry. It’s all like a dream. Everything is ecstasy, inside. We just don’t know it because of our thinking-minds. But in our true blissful essence of mind is known that everything is alright forever and forever and forever. Close your eyes, let your hands and nerve-ends drop, stop breathing for 3 seconds, listen to the silence inside the illusion of the world, and you will remember the lesson you forgot, which was taught in immense milky way soft cloud innumerable worlds long ago and not even at all. It is all one vast awakened thing. I call it the golden eternity. It is perfect. We were never really born, we will never really die."

Die Filmemacher Sergi Castella und Hector Ferreño haben daraus für Dosnoventa Bikes (in Barcelona) eine wunderschöne Werbefilm gemacht, mit Musik von Pink Floyd und Johnny Cash.




Vielen Dank dafür nach Spanien!

Dienstag, 18. Februar 2014

The Gratitude Visit

Close your eyes. Call up the face of someone still alive who years ago did something or said something that changed your life for the better. Someone who you never properly thanked; someone you could meet face-to-face next week. Got a face?

Gratitude can make your life happier and more satisfying. When we feel gratitude, we benefit from the pleasant memory of a positive event in our life. Also, when we express our gratitude to others, we strengthen our relationship with them. But sometimes our thank you is said so casually or quickly that it is nearly meaningless. In this exercise … you will have the opportunity to experience what it is like to express your gratitude in a thoughtful, purposeful manner.

Your task is to write a letter of gratitude to this individual and deliver it in person.

The letter should be concrete and about three hundred words: be specific about what she did for you and how it affected your life. Let her know what you are doing now, and mention how you often remember what she did. Make it sing! Once you have written the testimonial, call the person and tell her you’d like to visit her, but be vague about the purpose of the meeting; this exercise is much more fun when it is a surprise. When you meet her, take your time reading your letter.
-Martin Seligman

Mittwoch, 12. Februar 2014

20 Jahre Amazon

It’s easy to forget that in general here in Germany, people think of Amazon primarily as an online bookseller.


Amazon Homepage 1995
Today, as it nears its 20th anniversary, it’s the Everything Store, a company with around $75 billion in annual revenue, a $140 billion market value, and few discernible limits to its growth.

In the past few months alone, it launched a marketplace in India, opened a website to sell high-end art, introduced another Kindle reading device and three tablet computers, made plans to announce a set-top box for televisions, and funded the pilot episodes of more than a dozen TV shows. Amazon’s marketplace hosts the storefronts of countless smaller retailers. 

Amazon Web Services handles the computer infrastructure of thousands of technology companies, universities, and government agencies. 


When you get older, you slow down. That’s not good, and it’s not something you want to encourage; at least that is my experience. It’s easy enough to convince yourself that you ought to take it easy, but that is not a good strategy. Push yourself to your present limit, and then a bit further next time, and keep that up. The result is good.

So, Mr. Jeff Bezos, my main wish for 2014 is that you don't slow down yet!

Mittwoch, 29. Januar 2014

Nostalgie 2, Finbar Furey and ..

..George Best! 
Fußballzauber von 1968 musikalisch im irischen Stil festgehalten. (Beckenbauer gut, Pele besser, Best best.)

Und Finbar Furey, bereits in den 60'er aktiv, war mit "The Last Great Lovesong" August 2013 wieder Nr. 1 in der irischen Hitparade.
   

Dienstag, 14. Januar 2014

Nostalgie, Anfang 2014

Dieses Lied fand ich bereits in 1984 sehr schön, meistens im Auto unterwegs zwischen Trossingen und Altenberge: