THE POLICE

 

A few weeks ago we caught the police at Twickenham Stadium. We trained there and enjoyed an amazing evening as it is an open air stadium and the weather was beautiful (cloudless, 22 degrees).

I had been looking forward to this concert for a while and enjoyed watching the Police swan song but I did notice a few things:

  • Sting did not seem as into it as the other 2. Maybe going from the cerebral songs and his ‘art’ to singing ‘do-do-do, da-da-da’ is demoralizing.
  • They altered the music too much. I know, you are artists, you are showing your flair and how much you have evolved. But, we came to hear the songs we loved not some flaky rendition which candidly brings the song down. I don’t want to hear some random 6 minute guitar solo that never existed before.
  • The demographics were clearly 35 and over. Looking around – that was obvious. Felt bad for the starter band, no one showed up and it was clearly not their demographic. And they were good to …

I had heard that the reason why they were coming back is that they felt that The Police was not getting its due as a band that helped shape rock history and this is their attempt to ensure that The Police goes down in the history books as one that shaped rock music.

Whatever the reason, it was fun. I just wish they would have stuck to the original sheet music (smile). Below are a few awful pictures from my cell phone. Enjoy.

The Police Twickenham (4) The Police Twickenham (5)  The Police Twickenham (11) The Police Twickenham (14) The Police Twickenham (16)

HARVARD GOES HALO

 

Massachusetts Institute of Technology has a long history of pranks (or hacks, as they call them) both on their own campus and at other schools.

The students marked the launch of Halo 3 by augmenting the statue of John P. Harvard at Harvard University. Note the Spartan helmet (with "Master Chief in Training" written on the back) and a Halo assault rifle.

On the Halo front, Halo 3 is now the largest entertainment launch in the history of business, beating any movie, book or other form of entertainment. More than 1.3M people went online to play Halo on the first day. Imagine the network load … that is scale. That load beats any mainframe load, even on a bank run day.

       http://www.blogsmithmedia.com/www.joystiq.com/media/2007/09/metalchief.jpg

MAKING THE AVERAGE GREAT

 

I heard an interesting philosophy recently which can be paraphrased as ‘What you do will have very little impact on the superstars, with or without you, they will be successful. Our job is to make the average great – to help them hit the next level’

Very interesting thought. I have been thinking about it in this manner – what are the things that make sales leaders great and how can I (as a leader) make those things programmatic in the business to help the broad team raise their performance? A few thoughts come to mind:

  • Great account planning. Ensuring that each team has a great plan – without that, how can you attain your goals?
  • Programs that drive relationships. Help the team keep in touch with their customers and partners in a meaningful way. Often these programs are taken from the superstars .. who did them on their own.
  • Clarity: Make sure that everyone understands what is expected internally and that those demands are minimized. Free them to sell while ensuring that they know exactly what is required to meet corporate reporting goals (This really relates to forecasting and the like)
  • Recognition: Make sure that people say thank-you to their customers and that they are thanked for going that extra mile. It is easy to thank for the big things, it has impact when you thank for the little things.

Interesting thought.

WINDSOR FESTIVAL

 

This weekend I had a ‘thankful’ moment as I looked around and marveled at that which surrounded us.
Every weekend we do one outing to experience beautiful Britain. This weekend we headed to Windsor for the Windsor festival and a children’s classical concert.

The concert itself was amazing. The elastic band was a full orchestra with oboes, flutes, violins, cellos, a bass section and on …. The conductor was suitably wacky for the kids interjecting humor and fun into Strauss, Mozart and one of my personal favorites Souza (and he spoke of the marches he wrote which I fondly remember playing as a kid). Souza had quite the interesting childhood:

John was born in Washington, D.C., to John António de Sousa and Maria Elisabeth Trinkhaus. His parents were of Portuguese, Spanish and Bavarian (German) descent; his grandparents were Portuguese refugees. Sousa started his music education, playing the violin, as a pupil of John Esputa and G. F. Benkert for harmony and musical composition at the age of six. He was found to have absolute pitch. When John reached the age of 13, his father, a trombonist in the Marine Band, enlisted his son in the United States Marine Corps as an apprentice. John served his apprenticeship for seven years, until 1875, and apparently learned to play all the wind instruments while honing his mettle with the violin.

And what topped it off was that it was held in a minor hall (think old, small performance room with tiered seating for perhaps 200) at Eton, one of the most prestigious boys schools in the world (Founded in the 1400s). My moment came as the music played and I looked out the window at the church … Amazing.

Sorry, no pictures from me. I forgot the camera in the kitchen (smile).

Windsor Festival 2003

CORPORATE CULTURE

 

I have been having conversations about corporate culture and rules a lot lately. It seems to me that as time goes by, the rules build up and people need to be encouraged to challenge the norm and help the corporate culture evolve. If this is not being done, the culture becomes repressive and the rules and processes that guide that culture begin to dominate and hurt the culture. My personal favorite set of books on this topic are Asimov’s Foundation Series:

The premise of the series is that scientist Hari Seldon spent his life developing a branch of mathematics known as psychohistory, a concept devised by Asimov and Campbell. Using the law of mass action, it can predict the future, but only on a large scale; it is error-prone for anything smaller than a planet or an empire. Using these techniques, Seldon foresees the fall of the Galactic Empire, which encompasses the entire Milky Way, and a dark age lasting thirty thousand years before a second great empire arises. To shorten the period of barbarism, he creates two Foundations, small secluded havens of art and science, on opposite ends of the galaxy. The focus of the trilogy is on the Foundation of the planet Terminus. The people living there are working on an all-encompassing Encyclopedia, and are unaware of Seldon’s real intentions (for if they were, the variables would become too uncontrolled). The Encyclopedia serves to preserve knowledge of the physical sciences after the collapse. The Foundation’s location is chosen so that it acts as the focal point for the next empire in another thousand years (rather than the projected thirty thousand).

What caused that collapse? One of the biggest reasons was the layers upon layers of complexity within the society which became so heavy that the society folded into itself and collapsed.

In my mind, there are 2 types of rules that guide society or a culture: rules that are absolute and rules that can be challenged:

  • In the category of the absolute we have the moral and ethical (think 10 commandments). Don’t cheat on your spouse, steal, lie or when you are slide 241 of someone’s 358 slide presentation – resist the urge to jump up and beat them with the laser pointer. Those need to be obeyed or we face chaos and a morale decline (which one could argue we face today).
  • The other types of rules are what I would call evolutionary. These are the rules that have come into existence for a purpose that is point in time based. One that comes to mind is segregation, which was a rule put in place by a group of people at a point in time which slowly because unacceptable and was changed. These rules can and need to be changed by people who want to make things better.

With the second class of rules people need to be asking why did the rule come into effect? Do the conditions still apply which make the rule valid? Does it apply in this situation?

If we do not ask those questions, then the environment can quickly become repressive as we work within the confines of rules that may or may not be relevant.

I actively encourage my team to challenge rules, to ask those questions and to push boundaries. It is only through this type of mentality that we make mistakes (which shows that we are trying to innovate – do things differently) and break new ground. A few good examples come to mind of where this has worked:

  • Our procurement team has a very fixed buying process, buy from approved vendors. I did not like the approved vendors and their selection so I bought somewhere else and got the product I wanted at a great price. Procurement came after me:

‘You can’t do that’.

My response ‘I already did’.

‘You can’t do that’

My response ‘Oops, I did it again’.

‘Stop that’ they exclaimed.

‘Ooops, did it again and I think the guy next to me did it too’ was my response.

‘OK, you need to stop that. Let us get a quote for you from the approved vendor’.

‘Sure’ was my response.

‘Uh, our vendor is $20 more per unit (I knew that). We have approved your vendor. Would you like to be on the RFP selection committee?’

  • We were hiring a student. The first student turned out to be a flake so we never onboarded him and we quickly found ourselves with no pipeline of candidates because the last really good one had been hired to another company. I asked:

‘Has anyone called him and asked him if he wants to work for us or tried to incent him to come work for us?’

The answer was ‘no, we don’t do that. Someone else hired him’.

‘Why not?’

‘We don’t do that’

‘Why not? Go get him’

In the end, the student wanted to work for us – it is a cool job – he starts next week.

  • This also applies to external vendors. I love the notion of thank-you cards. Not enough people say ‘thank-you’ these days and I know that only a small fraction of people in the sales business send out thank-you cards. This is a personal choice and I have found this amazing vendor in Seattle that makes very tasteful cards. Emailed them ‘I would like to order in a few cases of cards for my team’. The response, ‘Sorry we don’t ship to the UK’. Making a long story short, we found a very interesting way to get them shipped here and get around their ‘We don’t ship to the UK’ rule.

In the ends, all of this comes from years of selling where all I ever heard was ‘no’. I have a personal philosophy that it takes ‘5 NOs to make a YES’ and apply it both professionally and personally. After all, it is up to us to make things better.

 

‘Beneath every NO lays a passion for YES that has never been broken’  

Stevens ‘Esthetique Du Mal’, Collected Poems

MEDIA CENTER ADDS SLINGBOX LIKE CAPABILITIES .. and more

 

I was reading through Engadget yesterday and came across this article on the addition of Slingbox like capabilities to the Media Center. After reading up on the WebGuide it became clear this is significantly more:

  • You can stream video, pictures, recorded TV and music content from your Media Center to devices on the web (think mobile phone, laptop in a hotel room …)
  • You can control your Media Center and do standard stuff (i.e. set it to record programs)

So, I set it up and it works great. When you set up the software, it creates a web ID that is tied to your router. Simply click on the web address, add in your credentials and you have access into the box.

By itself, that is pretty cool. But, if you couple it with HD cable cards or an HDMI capture card, MP4 compression and support, the mobility angle and the XBOX extender, that is techno nirvana. Almost there ….

BIG BANG: HALO 3

 

The biggest entertainment event in history was Halo 2 with $125M in single day sales, beating any movie, DVD or other entertainment launch in history. Next week, the last in the series launches .. Halo 3. It is expected to displace Halo 2 as the biggest every entertainment launch with Microsoft shooting to beat the biggest movie weekend (Spiderman 3) of $155M in 24 hours.

Check out the trailer here. Read about the midnight mania here.

Check out these pictures of the IMAX in London below. No doubt about it, Halo 3 is the game for Christmas 2007.

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SOCIAL MOBILITY

 

It is interesting to see the remnants of a feudal society so prominently embedded into modern day culture, the concept of Lords and Ladies, the monarchy and the associated class system (which may be taboo to speak of .. not sure). I broached the subject the other day with a question ‘Do the British see the wealth which the monarchy has accumulated as taken from them, built on the backs of the labor of the common man or as a proud part of history and theirs?’

The response after an awkward silence: ‘The Queen protects those estates and wealth for us’.

To date the monarchy is worth an estimated £2.7Bn and cost the taxpayer £88m a year. The Center for Citizenship has some very interesting views on the monarchy and why it continues to exist:

The wildest excuse for the existence of the monarchy is that "it interprets the nation to itself!" If that is so, we are a dysfunctional people, who lack the confidence needed for self-government, and prefer inherited status to success achieved through talent and hard work.

The monarchy also is commonly said to be a unifying force.

This argument is in part based on the idea that a head of state who is not elected is, therefore, non-partisan. An elected president, it is said, would not have the support of those who voted for another candidate. She would be unable to act as a unifying force therefore. This argument has always lacked force for republicans in particular as they are necessarily alienated by an hereditary head of state. Monarchist law bars them from parliament, the judiciary, the police and some military posts.

What credibility was left for this part of the monarchist case was eliminated in September 2002 by none other than the heir to Britain’s chief public office, Charles Windsor. It was revealed that he had been making determined efforts to use his status as the monarch’s son to persuade the government to change a number of its policies to match his beliefs. He had taken partisan positions on such issues as human rights laws, government regulations and the proposed ban on hunting foxes. The idea that as head of state when his mother died he would united the people of Britain as no politician could was shown to be invalid.

Monarchists have also claimed that the monarchy holds together the nations that make up the United Kingdom

Monarchical Britain has in fact been coming apart at the seams for some time. Scotland has successfully demanded its own parliament and may be moving towards independence. Wales has a strong nationalist movement. And Northern Ireland spent many years until recently in a state of near-war because of the desire of many of its people to unite with the republican majority of Ireland. During the weekend of queen Windsor’s 2002 jubilee celebrations her most loyal followers in Northern Ireland were rioting and shooting at the police.

Read the rest of the article here – fascinating stuff. The site goes on to speak about the components of the British democracy that are decidedly undemocratic. As a Canadian this is not unlike that which I hold in the lowest of regard and the highest of contempt – the home of nepotism – the Canadian senate:

The early Americans said that "All men are created equal" but failed to live up to the ideal. The British, with their European cynicism, have never really believed that an ideal was worth aspiring to. Although they like to think of themselves as presenting a model of democracy, their characteristic mistaking of "class" for quality has left them satisfied with something well short of perfection.

The highest public office, that of head of state, is open only to the members of the Windsor-Mountbatten family, the "royal" family. Although Britain now has large numbers of citizens of Caribbean, African and Asian origins, no Briton of African or Asian ancestry may become head of state. The monarchy is, quite simply, a racist institution.

The British like to refer to the British Parliament as the "mother" of legislative bodies. They mean to imply that the democratic legislature is their country’s gift to the world.

But that is far from being the truth. Britain has no written constitution to guarantee the rights of the people. And in fact Britain’s Parliament is so grossly undemocratic that the truth is hard to believe. Its structure reflects not the spirit of government of the people by the people but the ancient division of British society into "commoners" and aristocracy.

The legislative chamber for the democratically elected representatives of the people is known significantly as the "lower house," or the House of Commons. The "upper" house, the House of Lords is unelected. The government of Britain is thus divided between the common people and the Lords. And the House of Lords is really composed of people who call themselves "Lords." They believe that they are entitled to privileges of esteem and power. And they are recognised by the law of the land as having them!

None of these so-called lords have been elected to their positions in the legislature. Some were put there by the ruling party of the time. Some, incredibly, inherited their seats in the legislature from their fathers, who sat there before them!

No prize for deciding whether a country that tolerates this at the start of the twenty-first century can make any claim to be able to teach the world about democracy.

It is true to say that when the House of Lords gets too out of line with the wishes of the Commons, its decisions may be over-ruled, with some time and trouble. Nonetheless, here is a crew who have no right in a democratic society to any special say in the legislative process. A crowd whose presumptions would rule out them of consideration in any society with a truly democratic spirit. Yet in the "mother of democracies" they are allowed to initiate legislation as if they had been elected by the people. And to amend, obstruct and delay the laws proposed by the representatives of the people.

Not even in its elective government is Britain free from the power of inherited privilege. Every member of Parliament (like every police officer) must swear an oath of allegiance to the monarch. Republicans whose sense of honour will not permit them to lie about whom they owe their duty to, are thus excluded from representing the people.

While all of this carries on, the BBC bemoans the decline of social mobility, where the rich are getting richer and the poor are getting poorer despite efforts to prop up the lower class who remain very much ‘classed’.

Social mobility is on the decline in Britain despite the expansion of higher education, says Tory David Willetts.

The shadow education secretary says opportunities have increased for middle-class women but not for the poorest in society.

In a speech to the National Extension College, Mr Willetts said the best way to help social mobility would be to get all primary children reading well.

He also stressed the importance of vocational training to encourage boys.

‘Reversing trend’

Explaining his fears about social mobility, Mr Willetts said: "Of course it is right to widen opportunities for women, but paradoxically at the same time this has strengthened some of the forces passing on income and wealth from one generation to the next.

"Increasing equality between the sexes has meant increased inequality between social classes."

Fascinating and perplexing personally. But that is why I am here, not to judge but to learn.

MINI SELECTION

 

The selection of a 2nd car has been an interesting process. We settled on our first car easily – it is a company car and I decided to take one for the team as we needed something big to get around in when we toured the country side. I went for the BMW 525d Estate – great car that is easily capable of hitting 120 (mph).

The 2nd car was a much tougher decision. What is needed for getting around town? Big or small? After testing a few different cars – BMW 1 Series, Audi A3, the mini was chosen for a very simple reason: size.

Over here the roads are VERY tight and the parking spots even tighter. A small car is amazing. Plus, this is a really cool car and the 25 degree – sunny weather they are having here (since July!) doesn’t hurt either ….

Out at brooklands museum 2007-09-15 001

CREAM

 

As I have stated, in most shops if you buy a coffee you can only get milk. I truly DETEST milk in my coffee. In the coffee shops in my office (which include a Starbucks), all they have is milk. Truly a single big gripe for me.

I had a breakfast meeting in the Ascot Starbucks this morning before an all day meeting and I asked ‘Any chance you have pouring cream for my coffee?’ She smiled and provided a magical answer ‘Yes’.

Made my day. Milk in coffee sucks (smile).

A UK COMPANY PICNIC

They don’t call it a picnic, they call it a ‘family fun day’ and they don’t have it at the local park, they have it AT WARWICK CASTLE! How cool is that?

The castle was founded in 1068 by William the Conqueror:

Legend has it that the first fortification of significance on the grounds of Warwick Castle was erected by Ethelfleda, the daughter of Alfred the Great, in the year 914. This almost certainly replaced older wooden fortifications which had proven ineffective against marauding Danes who sacked the town during the reign of her father. This fortification was part of a network built to protect the Kingdom of Wessex.

The remains of this ancient fortification can still be seen on Ethelfleda’s Mound, a mound of earth at the southern end of the castle’s courtyard. As intriguing as this legend is, the majority of the remains date from the period of Norman rule.

After the Norman Conquest of England in the 11th century, William the Conqueror appointed Henry de Newburgh as Earl of Warwick. During this time of change, a Norman motte-and-bailey fort was erected.

2007 September 2 Warwick Castle (45)

The castle is amazing because it is owned by an event company who has converted the site into a tourist attraction. You can climb the walls and towers, visit the dungeon, go through the Ghosts Alive Exhibit (which scared the pants off me), explore the apartments and interior of the castle .. it is amazing. Then, you walk out to the company common area and enjoy food, drink, a hands on circus area, falconry demonstrations, train as a knight and try out armor and weapons of the era. Now .. that is a company picnic!

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A picture from the top of the mound.

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From the top of the highest tower – Guy’s Tower c. 1395:

Towers were the mainstay of a castle’s defensive system. Because they projected above and out from the wall, they gave archers a clear view downwards and sideways.

Guy’s Tower was built in the 14th century. It is twelve-sided, stands 39 metres high and has five storeys.

The first four storeys consist of a central stone-vaulted chamber with two small side rooms – one a gardrobe (toilet), the other probably a bedchamber.

The fifth storey is a hexagonal guardroom. During the Civil War the windows here were enlarged so that they could take small hand-held cannons.

To get to Guy’s tower you go on a 530 step journey that involves a crazy climb up the steepest steps I have ever climbed (Think of circular steps that wind around a very tight circumference for 39 metres .. tighter than this because the step goes from wide on the outside to tiny on the center).  They have this big warning sign (which I should have photographed about health – i.e. if not healthy, don’t do this. I am sure they lug 1 or 2 people down a month) …

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The jousting .. and I thought Medieval Times was cool ….

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Inside, lot of armor and bad pictures because I was using my uber compact and handy Xacti (which I love)

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Another from Guy’s tower. Imagine climbing up there in armor! As we were standing on the battlements I also commented to the family – imagine being up here, fighting a battle, with no railing behind you, blood and chaos around. We then looked over edge (i.e. if you were to fall backward into the center of the castle). It was 30 feet up .. a long, long, back breaking way.

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From the conservatory, a playful peacock.

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Breath taking stained glass is everywhere in the UK.

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I have the bridge covered.

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If you can read this, it is commenting on a display of Churchill who spent time in his youth at the castle.

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Explore the history here, and a ton of great photos of the castle here.

MEDIA CENTER EXTENDERS

 

Now that the house is settled, I can finish those last tasks – specifically finalizing the media configurations in the house. One significant frustration has been broadband access through the house. In the UK, they build houses the old way (our townhouse is 10 years old) – with plaster. The pro to plaster is that the house is sound proof and from room to room you get very little noise. The downside – good luck with wireless.

So I have been futzing around with wireless extenders and various options but my DSL provider does not like if you have a 3rd party router on the system and adding a wireless router attached to the DSL router has been complex to say the least (adding it to the DMZ did not work and on and on).

FINALLY I came across broadband over power. Very cool stuff. Plug the one end into a power adapter and the router, plug the other into the remote device and VOILA we have a network that is running at 200 Mbps and it is very reliable. This is key to me for streaming content from my Windows Vista Ultimate box (Where I keep all media – pictures, videos, etc.) to my living room where the XBOX 360 acts as an extender (Watch the video – it is very funny).

Personally, this is one of the coolest technologies I have. Complete access to my music, pictures and home videos from the living room. We will often sit there with music in the background and our pictures playing on the TV. People are always amazed and want it when they see it.

The next evolution of that is streaming video content which I am ripping to the machine – the problem? No DIVX support. Well – no more … Engadget writes about Media Center support for DivX and XviD here and here. ZUNE software already supports it which means XBOX can’t be far behind and a rumor is that it is before Christmas (wink).

If you are interested in the extender idea, you can read about it on the XBOX site or here. Dead simple and totally cool … and yes, it actually looks like that on my 52" Aquos (smile).

PRICELESS

 

The price to fill my car? £60. That is $132. I will never complain about Canadian gasoline taxes again. Thank goodness for the company gas card (I love Europe).

The price to get the boy’s hair cut at the Aveda salon down the street last minute? £50 or $120 CDN.

Seeing The Police at the open air Twickenham Stadium last night? Priceless.

MY CAR IS HAUNTED

 

A few weeks ago my new corporate car was delivered, a BMW 5 series (I love Europe). I went for diesel (because everyone does) and have been enjoying it until I realized … it is haunted.

Whenever I am driving the radio will randomly come on. One moment it is quiet, the next moment some local radio station is blaring the traffic. I shut it off. A few minutes go by, it comes back on. Or I am listening to my Zune (there is an auxiliary in jack) and all of a sudden it will switch to a radio station blaring the traffic.

With a new car, this is particularly annoying as I thought it was broken. The guys in the office had a good laugh when I told them about my haunted car. Turns out that the UK has a system called the RDS (Radio Data Systems):

RDS: The Radio Data System

The development of RDS started some 20 years ago in the European Broadcasting Union, EBU. The developers aimed at making radio receivers very user-friendly, especially car radios when these are used where a transmitter network with a number of alternative frequencies (AF) are present. In addition listeners should be enabled to see the programme service name (PS) on an eight character alpha-numerical display and the transmitter frequency information, displayed on non-RDS radios, is then only used, in the background, by an RDS radio. All this has become possible by the using, for many years, microprocessor controlled PLL tuner technology, permitting a radio to be retuned within milliseconds. During this process the audio signal is muted which, because of the short time, is usually not detected by the ear. Thus, the radio is able to choose the transmitter frequency, among a number of alternatives that gives the best reception quality. It is also ensured that the switch-over is made to exactly the same programme service by performing a kind of identity check using the programme identity (PI) code.

Travel information with RDS is possible using the Travel Programme (TP) and Travel Announcement (TA) flags. Information is broadcast for motorists, identified in parallel with the ARI system with the corresponding RDS features TP/TA. But ARI is now being replaced on a European scale, and its operation ceased in 2005. Although there are still some ARI stations in operation in some parts of Germany, this will no longer be so in 2007.

RDS is also used for the digitally coded Traffic Message Channel (TMC), which is introduced all over Europe within funded European Union projects.

Once a radio is tuned to a programme service broadcast within a network, using the RDS feature.

Enhanced Other Networks (EON) additional data about other programmes from the same broadcaster will be received. This enables the listener, according to his choice, to have his radio operating in an automatic switch-mode for travel information or a preferred Programme Type (PTY, e.g. News) and this information comes from a service that, at a given time, does not necessarily contain such travel information nor broadcasts the desired programme type.

The RDS travel information – which keeps taking over my radio is described as:

Travel Information. A very useful bit of information sent, is something called the ‘TA flag’. Standing for Traffic Announcement, this can be switched on when a radio station starts a travel report, and switched off at the end. The practical upshot of this, is that your RDS radio can switch to a station carrying travel news, or in a car, pause a cassette or a CD, when local travel news is broadcast. For more, see below.

Now, if I could just figure out how to turn this government funded service off!

ROYAL HOLLOWAY SANITARIUM

 

Everywhere you go in England you see something interesting, consider the Royal Holloway Sanatorium, which is viewable from my home (we actually live on these grounds):

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Built in 1885 by Thomas Holloway for ‘mentally afflicted persons’ and designed by W.H. Crossland who also designed the Royal Holloway University of London, it was founded at his wife’s encouragement to do good works with his money.

It is now the center of a housing development with apartments and gym facilities – but remains well maintained, the benefit of a very strict heritage program in the UK. Of interest, Bill Bryson who’s humorous books on travel to the UK and Europe are famous met his wife while working at the sanitarium

How did Thomas make his money? He was a salesman ….

Holloway had made his fortune from the sale of his pills and ointment, both designed to cure all ills. Where Holloway differed from other ‘quack medicine’ vendors was that he was one of the earliest entrepreneurs to appreciate the value of advertising. He spent huge amounts of money promoting his cures throughout the world and, as a result, reaped huge rewards. Holloway was also a man with a conscience and he spent a considerable portion of his fortune on ‘good deeds’.

The inside of the building is breathtaking …. Amazing and now part of our daily life.

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THE ALGARVE

 

A few weeks ago we found ourselves in that awkward in-between time during a move. We were in our new home with rental furniture, had unpacked the things that were air shipped over, were awaiting the arrival of our container and were exhausted from the last 3 months. We therefore decided to go on a quick vacation.

From the UK, you can go anywhere quickly. Surprisingly enough, Egypt and Dubai are only 4-5 hours away (That will be the spring destination). We landed on Portugal and the Algarve as it was close, hot and has beautiful beaches. We were not disappointed.

Thinking back on the trip, a few key things come to mind about Portugal:

  • The beaches are beautiful and the scenery spectacular. There were towering cliffs, beautiful sunsets and long beaches with soft sand. We spent hours exploring every nook and cranny of the cliffs, rocks and trees. The boys loved it: washed up crabs, shells, unique rocks, really cool bugs and hermit crabs …. 

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  • The water is very, very cold. There is only one strategy – run in.
  • I learned about the blue flag beaches (a quality standard for beaches in Europe) and that many of Portugal’s beaches are public. It was busy on our beach, but it provided interesting insight into the culture as the locals emerged with their families to hang out on the beach. It was refreshing to see so many families playing on the beach together …

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  • My sandcastle strategy failed due to the tides. In the Algarve the tides go out in the morning and come in dramatically through the day (changing the beach landscape by 40 or 50 feet) making it almost impossible to build a castle that would last the day .. so I got my exercise.

I will miss the gelato (which we had 2X a day) ….

WEIGH THE PIG

 

A colleague mentioned this British saying in passing yesterday. The phrase is used to refer to efforts that are made that do not progress toward a goal.

It was explained to me in the context of useless meetings where no decisions are made. The meetings simply acquire redundant updates or ‘weigh the pig’ each time but never do the real work that makes progress such as fattening the pig, making the pig healthier or solving big issues.

Good saying. I hate weighing the pig, I get testy in those meetings …. and am testy quite a bit these days (smile).

THE SCAM

 

As part of the move we sold a few thing and used a site called ‘The SuperShopper’ which is this great site which publishes a weekly booklet for you to peruse. Less efficient than eBay, but great as it is localized (Ontario). While selling, I almost got sucked into a scam that went like this:

1. Scammer sends me money for the item via moneyorder from MoneyMart. Turns out these can be acquired with a fake check. So, they can buy them with a check, send me the order and bounce the check – never giving MoneyMart the money.

2. Pondscum scammer ‘accidentally’ sends me too much money then asks for me to cash it and send back the balance – removing my fair share and a little for my trouble.

My wife picked up on what was going on (I was going to deposit them, let it all clear my bank and then follow the steps). In the rush to move, I did not even really notice. But then we dug in and it became clear.

I could see how they can prey on people who are greedy (trying to take some of the money) or naive. Interesting experience. Of interest, there is a hotline to report this stuff – but they never returned our email or calls. I guess this is really common.

The thread is below .. enjoy …

hello

we saw the pictures  and that is what i want for my kid brother  , do you have more pictures to send and since when have you been using it

we are presently on pilgrimage to Jerusalem but that is no problem

as we will get the payment for it  to you before friday this week so that you can besure we want it, we are relocating  to quebec to resume  to our new missionary posting so we will be  leaving  from here but we still have our belongings stored in a warehouse in  ontario  they will all be moved soon so we want it moved with our  things to quebec,

$400 is a good price

we can have can have our associate send you the full payment via money order this week before friday  if we can have the name and the address where the money will be sent to , thanks

 ,

God bless

robert & mary

hello

sorry for the delay,you will be getting the payment today via ups or tomorrow , so as  soon as you get the payment take it to the bank and cash it ,when you cash the payment withdraw the cash from the bank and send the remaning money to the moving  agent that will come for the pickup via MONEYGRAM, you will be given a reciept there,

Pls my associate contacted me that his seceretary  sent more money  than i told you that you will be getting she sent $2000 , she was suppose to send it to the warehouse where our things are  stored and also for the shipper  and the dog home but she sent all to  you, the balance is for the shipper and the same shipper  will be moving our stuffs  as well to Quebec from the warehouse and do from the dog home , he will have to pay them there before he can move our things , pls  deduct  the money for the cabinet which is $400 and also deduct  $100 for your  gas to the moneygram’s outlet where you will be able to send the remaining money to the mover

Here is the infomation of the shipper

Name MR JOHN TURNER

Address..441 Hargrave Street ,

             Winnipeg Manitoba ,Canada R3A 0X5 

HERE ARE SOME MONEY GRAM LOCATION NEAR YOU  WHERE YOU CAN SEND THE MONEY VIA MONEYGRAM TO THE SHIPPING AGENT.PLS TAKE THE CASH DOWN TO  THIS LOCATION  AND HAVE IT SENT BY MONEY GRAM, PLEASE DEDUCT THE MONEY FOR GAS AND OTHER CHARGES , NARDA kindly make sure the money is sent to the mover via moneygram

UNCLE BUCKS

27 DUNLOP ST W

BARRIE, ON  L4N 1A1

Tel: (705) 737-0038

Services Available:

Send MoneyTransfer

CANADA POST OUTLET #131229

524 BAYFIELD ST

BARRIE, ON  L4M 5A2

Tel: (705) 722-1163

Services Available:

Send MoneyTransfer

CANADA POST OUTLET #015814

320 BAYFIELD ST

BARRIE, ON  L4M 3C1

Tel: (705) 726-8830

Services Available:

Send MoneyTransfer

CANADA POST OUTLET #265969

128 PENETANG ST

BARRIE, ON  L4M 1V6

Tel: (705) 728-5407

Services Available:

Send MoneyTransfer

CANADA POST OUTLET #021083

279 YONGE ST

BARRIE, ON  L4N 7T9

Tel: (705) 739-7063

Services Available:

Send MoneyTransfer

ETHNIC SHOPPING

69 DUNLOP ST W

BARRIE, ON  L4N 1A5

Tel: (705) 792-6952

Services Available:

Send MoneyTransfer

Receive MoneyTransfer

 Hours

we are really sorry for the mix up , kindly make sure the money is sent to him via moneygram  because that is the only way they acept payment if one is not there to pay in person and don’t mail by post  the money to him or any other services because he moves around and they have an account with moneygram.

when you get  to the address above ask them that you want to wire the money by money gram money transfer,money gram money transfer is a eletronic money transfer when you give them the cash they will give you a reference number for that transfer , the reference number  is what Mr TURNER  will use to receive the money at any money gram location closer to him because he moves around alot. make sure the money is sent my moneygram ONLY today .

thanks