Sunday, 27 February 2011

The Importance of Being Idle

Importance of Being Idle

OK, so I pinched this from Oasis. A not-half-bad tune either. However, whilst listening to this over the weekend I remembered reading that being idle once and a while actually IS important. In our busy lives of rushing about, endless obligations, sticking to a tireless routine, multi-tasking and juggling commitments, it occurred to me that we are rarely idle. Bored. Nothing to do, nothing to occupy our minds. So, I set aside some time to be.. idle! A couple of hours that’s all. No TV, no phone, no laptop, no interruptions. Nothing to do. Just to see what would happen. Just being.

I would like to report that I had flashes of creative inspiration. That I opened up my mind and inspiration and enlightenment flooded in. However, there were no epiphanies. I lay stretched out on my bed, examining the chips in the paint on the ceiling. Admiring my feet. Watching the minutes tick by. Watching the tree-tops sway out of the window.

But actually, what I did experience was a wandering mind. I drifted aimlessly in and out of thoughts about family, work, friends, holidays, my feet(!), food, pending social arrangements, calls I needed to make, birthdays coming up, stuff I need to buy, people I haven’t spoken to in a long time, snippets of conversations I had had during the week and, well all sorts of ‘stuff’! I experienced a de-cluttering, a ‘housekeeping’ of my mind. Thoughts surfaced, were considered, cogitated and then rightfully filed. I stretched and mused and shifted and reflected.

I didn’t experience the usual frustration of having wasted time or having been unproductive. Afterwards I felt great. Relaxed. Smug actually. I had chosen to do nothing and been good at it! They say children need boredom in order to test their imaginations and creativity and that so few of them ever get bored in this ‘age’ because as soon as the boredom even threatens to creep in they reach for some form of entertainment to take the boredom away without having to be creative in their thoughts and seek out ways to make their own entertainment. I am sure the same can be said of grownups. And I for one will certainly make time to be bored again. Thanks Liam and Noel. Not sure I relate to most of the lyrics in the song, but it got me thinking and.. great intro. Da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da. Da dah!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jySfU10IQu4


Sunday, 20 February 2011

Facebook found my Dog

This is quite a remarkable and true story of how Facebook, mobile communications and the internet found our 3 year old black Labrador Lola when she went missing a couple of months ago.

It seemed such a fab idea at the time. A two night weekend break to Rome as a gift to my husband for his 40th birthday. And then the logistics kicked in. Who would have the children? Who would ferry them to their various hobbies? And, oh no… what would we do with the dog? After painstakingly making all the necessary arrangements, we enlisted the services of a dog walker we had no experience of (dumb owners)! Fear not, we weren’t leaving the poor dog ‘home alone’ for the duration, this was just for the Friday morning before she was collected later in the day by the grandparents!

So, off we went. Giddy and excited about a whole weekend in the glorious city of Rome, just the two of us. No commitments. No cares or worries (ironic - if we only knew what was coming!).

To say this was an ill-fated trip is an understatement. We had attempted to ‘do’ Rome some five years previously, but due to the then striking Alitalia Airline we had been ‘stranded’ in Paris which left Rome as an ‘unconsummated’ love affair. We were also kept waiting on this occasion as we experienced delays and a missed connection. But, we did eventually make it to Rome!

Back to the dog. Late Friday afternoon, in the taxi on the way to our hotel we made the call home and received the words that were once again to deprive us of the Roman Holiday we had dreamed of! “The dog walker has lost Lola”. To any dog owners out there I apologise for the chill that this has just gone down your spine. To make matters worse, she had already been missing for 4 hours. And, to add insult to injury, the dog walker (who shall remain anonymous) had first driven her to a place she had never been to before so Lola (the dog) had no local knowledge of the area in which she had been lost.

At this point, as often happens when couples face these situations, one cracks and the other takes command. I was the one to remain calm and focused at this point. My meltdown came later! By the time we got to the hotel room (quickest, most perfunctory check-in ever) we had set out our tools to convert our bedroom in to Central Command Mission HQ. Two iphones one ipad (also a 40th present), Google Maps, Facebook and of course the mini-bar.

Our military style campaign to find the dog commenced 1700 hours CET or 1600 hours GMT! First we mobilised the land infantry. We phoned and texted everyone we knew in a 10 mile radius of where she was lost. Anyone who was able to get out and pound the pavements.. and fields.. and forests went straight out there. Fabulous. Great response and we were immediately humbled and indebted by everyone’s response.

Second, we posted it on our Facebook pages. Now, this is where it gets really interesting. Within minutes we started to build a picture of ‘sightings’. With the help of a map on the iPad we were able to plot her route. One of our friends has a 17 year old son. He picked up our plea on Facebook and re-posted it. Think of the local network of ‘Facebook-using’ friends of a boy of this age. Imagine his friends networks. It’s a Friday evening. You have just got home from college. Of course you’re on Facebook!

The responses came flooding in. She was seen on such-a-road at about 2pm or she was nearly knocked down (!!) on such-a-street at about 3pm. Then came the ‘intel’ from the ground. Our troop of foot soldiers were asking anyone they passed if they had seen a black Labrador with a red collar with white bones on it. Again, information by text started to filter through to HQ. We could clearly track her movements with approx times on our map and therefore pre-empt which way she was heading. As more of our friends returned from work on the Friday, the bigger and more viral this went. It seemed that everyone was reposting our plea on their Facebook pages. Dog-loving friends of friends of friends were getting in touch with sightings. Teenage friends of friends of friends’ sons were posting sightings!

We tactically moved the ground troops to where she had most recently been sighted and ahead of this point in every direction possible by road / fields / through gardens etc.

At approximately 2030 - Voila! Out she popped. Unfortunately, she was so spooked at this point that the sound and site of one of our friends shouting excitedly at her and running towards here made her run in the opposite direction (dumb dog) and straight in to the path of a white van on the main road. Thank you whoever you are for your lightning quick reactions and ability to swerve in time to miss her. She disappeared in to the darkness once again.

This particular night was cold and wet. Many of our friends had been out since 4pm with no food or drink and many with their children in tow. The sightings dried up. We think at this point that our poor dog was traumatised and tired and instinctively found somewhere safe and dry to curl up and sleep. We started to urge our brave foot soldiers to return home. However, the search continued with many of our friends returning later in the night to the area she was last seen to have one last look around. We had Facebook postings (all fruitless) and text messages coming through well in to the early hours.

We booked seats on the 1st flight home to Manchester on Saturday morning. Above all else we wanted to get home to the children who were broken hearted at the loss of their pet. During this sleepless night we did manage to eat and drink the entire mini-bar (my afore mentioned meltdown). Macadamia nuts, spirits and all! An achievement never before accomplished. And one which we shamefacedly confessed to the hotel staff in the morning. They were anxious that we were leaving so early and in the confusion of the pigeon English and worse still our scratchy attempt at Italian that I think they thought we had had a family bereavement and waived the charge. Charming lovely people. We must have looked dreadful.

It was whilst in the taxi at 0730 returning to the airport that we received a call from our good friend Scott. This time with decidedly better news. He had driven back to the spot where she had last been seen (playing with a white van) when she ambled out from someone’s garden to come and say hello to Scott’s dog, Pasha. Grab. Click on a lead. Safe.

We erupted in the back of the taxi. We laughed. We cried. We hugged each other. Who said the English are suppressed and lacking in emotion and passion? That Italian taxi driver must surely have a different opinion of the stiff-upper-lip English stereotype. And of course he probably thought we were complete weirdo’s too.

So. What did we do next? Well, of course we texted, we posted and we telephoned. Instantly broadcasting the good news. The search was off. Put your wellies away. Go back to bed. Re-post. Put it on your wall. We still came home. Rome remains unconquered.

When speaking to friends in the days that followed our return. These are some comments we picked up:

When quizzing passers by if they had seen a dog fitting Lola’s description – some had actually responded ‘is it the same one that’s lost on Facebook?’

My father in law (boldly) approached a gang of ‘hoodies’ who ordinarily he would cross the street to avoid. They said that they were already out looking for her because they had seen a post on Facebook that she had been sighted on their road ‘Well I love dogs, me. I had one when I was little. And we had nothing else to do, like. So we thought we’d have a look’. They had even taken a note of our mobile number.

One friend nipped in to a couple of local pubs to ask around and the locals already knew.. you guessed it. Their teenage children had told them or they had dogs themselves and someone had posted it on their Wall.

Interestingly I had also tweeted the news about our dog and had no response whatsoever. This has further illustrated to me that my usage of Twitter and Facebook are very different. Facebook is mainly local and personal. Despite the ability to connect with friends all over the world. Twitter is certainly more national and to a degree international, but mainly ‘regional’ ie north west. But this is very different to communicating in a 10 mile radius of where we live. Plus I really only use it for professional purposes.

As well as being a big deal for us in terms of having a pretty awful experience in life, it has also been a fascinating social media exercise. Without knowing it we launched a targeted social media campaign aimed at teenagers and dog lovers. They did the work for us. We lit the touch paper and off it went, lighting up the homes and streets of a small area on the outskirts of Bury in Lancashire. And although super hero Scott was the one to scoop the prize, our friends, family and acquaintances all linked by the web and the mobile phone network made it happen and for that we are truly grateful. Without the human element, the technological side couldn’t have happened, so maybe Facebook didn’t actually find my dog – but would we have found her without it?

Tuesday, 8 February 2011

Technical support ... gone mad!

Technical Support ... gone mad!

It might be the web, IP, analytics or the code
It could be the template, layout, host or the mode
It’s possibly the Ajax, anchor, browser or curser
Or even  HTML, program, bandwith or server
Have you checked the CDI, CMS, CDF and CData
Or the FQDN, HTTP, XHTML, SEO or text editor ...
...the XML, CSS, Applet, metatag or LAMP
Oh and don’t forget the breadcrumb and MAMP

Not fixed the problem ? then please do not fear ...
 ... I will put you through to customer services directly from here!

Thursday, 3 February 2011

Bite Back ...as our economy changes and the cuts start to bite we need to find a way to bite back!


Businesses have had a tough time over the past couple of years and just as things seem to be improving the government has introduced huge cuts which undoubtedly will have further impact.  In addition, the coalition would like to see commercial businesses leading the growth of the economy.  Ummm sounds perfect doesn’t it? But surely the economy needs to be stronger and businesses need to be supported to make this ambition a reality?  The dramatic contraction in growth domestic product (GDP), which in the 4th quarter fell by 0.5%, coupled with the hundreds of thousands public sector job losses will undoubtedly shake the confidence and the ability of the private sector to pick up the expected slack in the economy. 

Businesses need support and guidance to ensure that they can support economy growth and realise government plans, without it they will simply batten down the hatches and ride things out.  The coalition does have some plans and with the closure of Business Link they have committed to a new online business support service ... which sounds great, but it’s not a new thing, business link have been providing an online service for years ... and it will be interesting to see how the new and improved one can compensate for the lack of face to face support. According to recent research undertaken by The Launchpad

99% of digital, media & creative companies want face-to-face business support

Although it is good to have a central location to access general business information, this doesn’t account for regional and sector specific issues and demonstrates a lack of communication with the business owners themselves. The coalition may argue that they plan to introduce 40,000 business mentors who work in business and will provide their services for free.  Great ... job done!  Surely this cannot be the answer?  Firstly, how 40,000 volunteers will come forward to work with other businesses for free when their own businesses are facing challenges is beyond comprehension and secondly who is going to monitor the quality of mentoring being given? It is crucial for businesses to receive appropriate interventions to enable growth.

The Launchpad has been set up to give businesses in the digital and creative sector an opportunity to access the support they require.  The services on offer will be delivered by professional people with business, mentoring and advisory experience.

“We have developed a range of affordable, relevant and bespoke packages to suit different budgets and needs” says Nancy Dykins co – founder of The Launchpad “but we also want to encourage a move away from expecting free support as this is simply not going to happen in the way it has done before. We are driven by improving the bottom line and expect our clients to view working with us as a short term investment in order to achieve overall long term success”.

As our economy changes and the cuts bite we need to find a way to bite back.  And as business owners we have no option but to diversify in order to survive.  In short there are many things we cannot change but we can choose how to approach the change!

By Michele Bentham