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Posts Tagged ‘Hudson Valley’

GUI

Monday, February 22nd, 2010 by John Mallen

On Feb 19th my GUI — that’s digiterati for “graphic user interface” — blew out. The blow out was not on the part of that big HP screen at my desk.  It had to do with the enormous headache and frayed nerves triggered by a tsunami of SPAM and God knows what other malicious code I could not see, firing at minigun speed in the aftermath of changing from one ISP to another, making concentration on any one topic emotionally impossible!kingston-meetup-2

Let’s just say that by the time I arrived at The Beahive, kind of an open-source workspace operated by Chronogram in Kingston, N.Y., I was reverberating from an afternoon of swatting at spam like you’d flail at yellowjackets at a summer picnic.  Adding to the static, as I approached I was pleading with customer support to see if they could do something to jump start stalled Internet service on my iPhone.

“Okay, now just take a deep breath,” consoled Ric Dragon, one of the event organizers, a partner in our Web 2.0 initiatives at JMC , and a good friend.  Did that.  Once calmed, I found myself in what a chamber of commerce would call a ‘mixer,’  ready for diving into an evening of cyber-meetup disinhibition.  And from this time my  gratuitous observations follow.

–  People are social. There wasn’t much Web jargon among these digital cowboys and cowgirls.  Mostly it was a pleasant social meetup, providing  great opportunities to  catch up and meet new people.  If these attendees are at all representative of the ’social’ in the Social Web, then we’re in for more enrichment of the notion of community, especially when we get the opportunity to gather in person. Natural law: you cannot take people out of “social.”

–  When today’s business people gather you hear a Clinton-era redux, “It’s the economy!”  At least in the conversational circles I wove into and out of that was the case. Most participants were small business owners or independent contractors and consultants. While to a person, each represented a significant unique value proposition, the conversations frequently turned on the theme of the general economy.kingston-meetup

–  The notion of pricing pressure — downward — cuts across the professional disciplines. Clients are refusing to accept even the prices of the recent past.  They want them lowered and we’re doing that!   Personally, I hope this is not a theme suggesting that we are on the economic path of disinflation that has affected Japan for the past two decades. Alas, the lag on inflation (meaning inability of companies to get prices up) is a major theme in the current “Weekend Wall Street Journal.”  And it’s further expounded upon in a review of general economic and policy scenarios in “SuperCycles:  The New Economic Force Transforming Global Markets and Investment Strategy,” a book just out written by former Citi economist Arun Motianey.

–  Fixed office space is an endangered species. Witness those attending the meetup who are making Chronogram’s Beahive  their business base as a validation of this tenet. In the not too distant past, moving into business  entailed a search for an affordable office  with a respectable address. That seems to have given way to the challenge of finding a shared, though still respectable, home-base location, which is one step beyond the home office and one step below having significant overhead of, say, a leased space in the Acme Building. What we are seeing, and I sense at a more and more rapid clip, is the assembly of service groups comprising independent contractors, consultants, and contract employees.  Heck, we’re just providing professional service firm expertise on a formula that now represents a quarter of the American workforce — 26 percent of workers in non-standard jobs.

Themes aside, I enjoyed the people the most.  I also enjoyed the fried green beans with dipping sauce hors d’oeuvres, which was contributed by the husband of Claudia D’Arcy,  director of social media for Dragon Search, a top-drawer photographer finding success in covering events including weddings in New York City.  A mystery delivery of a great pie from Vincenzo Pizzeria & Restaurant across the street, added warmth. K.J. McIntyre,  the most charming, dedicated and committed professional in the area, was busy linking the unconnected with the connected. Chad Gomes from Port Ewen appeared, freshly emancipated, as a ready, willing and able entrepreneur.  Friend, former JMC team member and colleague Roger Rosenbaum was recounting tales about his great-looking son, smart as a whip, and ready for kindergarten next fall.kingston-meetup-3

Others appeared as well, all of them with Twitter handles:

@RicDragon, @McIntyreKJ, @DragonSearch, @Beahive , @FauxClaud, @designicu @SleepJunky, @theasphere, @jmcopenmic , @AmeriBag , @KJMRealtor, @sDialogue, @Etela, @b2engt , @McIntyreOn, @kpsourcerqueen, @JohnnyKickall, @bluehwyflaneur, @UlsterMadness, @digsart, @jenwdragon, @tomhoffay, @ivanlajara, @Ingwaem, @uccomptroller , @mediaman1, @MountainSean, @jenwdragon

And our very own hashtag: #HVMavens.

Oh, and as to the curse of the spam — I am assured the solution will be dropping Microsoft Exchange and migrating to Google. Google?  Yes, Google. Well if they are going to copy all the literature on earth, what’s to say they can’t keep all the spammers on earth at bay? Maybe Google can fix the economy too?

When The Lights Go Out!

Thursday, February 18th, 2010 by KJ McIntyre

We forget how dependent we are on technology — until the electricity goes off. This part of the Hudson Valley – Ulster County — is a relatively rural area, so we’re subject to outages in storms as tree limbs interfere with electrical lines. The utility company generally responds within hours so outages can turn into a fun break, a time to get the family together telling scary stories with candles flickering, or a time to meet the neighbors.

Sometimes the outage is more isolated, as in this afternoon’s WordPress.com outage. Since WordPress itself is affected you can’t “Dial Home” to find out what’s happening. And it’s companion WordPress.org is missing the opportunity of playing helpful neighbor and informing WordPress.com clients what’s happening. Fortunately, this site is hosted elsewhere so it is still up and running. But I have three of my own sites on WordPress.com. I caught an early tweet so I knew what was going on, but still it is disconcerting.

I went to one site in relation to a project that I’m working on — it’s supposed to be the communication site for the new joint venture of our two major hospitals. On some tries I get a straight error message: <em>The webpage at http://www.healthyulster.org/ might be temporarily down or it may have moved permanently to a new web address.</em> But alternately I’m directed to a GoDaddy! site that says it’s parking the site and offering links to diet sites. While smart keyword association by GoDaddy! this is probably not what our hospitals had in mind.

Okay, it’s now over an hour. Time for the lights to come on! And just as there’s a spike in generator purchases after major storm outages, looks like I’ll be backing up differently or changing my hosting arrangement.

No News Hits Home

Friday, February 13th, 2009 by John Mallen

Taconic PressWith all that’s being written about the economy and the current struggle of mainstream media, the plight of what we’re looking at really hit home this week.  

Part of our business has long been to help clients find their way into articles in the media. During the past week, among many clients with stories to be placed in the media is Birchez Associates, an affordable home developer. They held a ground breaking ceremony attended by a host of community leaders from Rep. Maurice Hinchey (D-N.Y.) to our new, and first, county administrator Mike Hein. The event was well attended, covered by two local media reporters, a pre-event radio talk show and a post-event radio/print news interview on the Mid Hudson News network.  All good and more reports being developed.

During all this our inveterate media director Sandy Frinton fed back some sad news. A regional weekly and magazine publisher, the Taconic Press was rumored to be closing down. It did! A regional television network said it was no longer covering stories across the region. Word came down that one of our daily newspapers and a regional business journal (not the same ownership) are close to being shuttered.

For all the complaints any of us may have about the local-regional media, even worse is the prospect of having none!

2009 Year for Entrepreneurs

Thursday, January 1st, 2009 by John Mallen

New Year’s Eve Dornoch Scotland  

SuccessNew Year 2009begins with attitude and burgeons with innovation and action. If you’re thinking of business, add in value-creation and you’ve won. I awoke this morning, the first day of 2009, thinking that despite the downhill economic trends and the stormy, even depressing, forecasts, that we are at the threshold of an enormously exiting time. Enormous change will bring about enormous opportunity and with it will come entrepreneurs, the creative destruction of the old structures and the emergence of new ones.

It is gratifying to see a business story in The Times Herald Record, one of our local newspapers, echoing these sentiments in an interview with Gerald Celente, an internationally recognized trends forecaster and founder of the Trends Research Institute, also based here in New York’s Hudson Valley.

My self-appointed mission has been to bring forth communications as a strategic resource and a set of power tactics that when well organized significantly drive success. But, there is a fundamental, upon which which communications — a most ancient art-form now super energized 24/7 by Web 2.0 digital technologies — rests. That foundation is attitude. The change-maker in the economy has been and will continue to be entrepreneurs.

In reporter Christine Young’s piece this morning, Gerald Celente is quoted as saying that in the coming economic shakeup, change will open opportunities which, in turn, enterprising people will seize upon, and do well — indeed making new fortunes. I agree. The entrepreneur asks, “How can I add value? Given the changes taking place, what is needed?” Then her or she moves ahead — creating new ways and leaving the old ones behind. I like the notion of focusing on the entrepreneurial drive and its potential versus hand-wringing over troubled economic waters and gloomy forecasts.The currency of this is attitude – a way of thinking, energy of the spirit, a belief that one is not a hopeless victim but an agent for change. The great part of seeing 2009 arrive is the opportunities that lie ahead and the excitement capitalizing on them will bring. Dan Sullivan, one of today’s leading thinkers about entrepreneurs as well as a founder of The Strategic Coach program, talks about learning from failures, losses as well as wins, to learn from, of making the future always better than the past. I think the lesson for those of us who have been in business a while is to dust off our entreprneural instincts as we march into 2009. As we share the perspective with staff, customers and others, we’ll not only find new opportunities but the energy around us will change. What would happen if this went viral? Photo: New Year’s Eve in Dirnoch, Scotland by John Halsam