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  • Think and Grow Rich
    Think and Grow Rich
    by Napoleon Hill
  • Buddha: A Story of Enlightenment
    Buddha: A Story of Enlightenment
    by Deepak Chopra
  • How To Win Friends and Influence People
    How To Win Friends and Influence People
    by Dale Carnegie
  • The Wisdom of Crowds
    The Wisdom of Crowds
    by James Surowiecki
  • Purple Cow: Transform Your Business by Being Remarkable
    Purple Cow: Transform Your Business by Being Remarkable
    by Seth Godin
  • The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People
    The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People
    by Stephen R. Covey

Entries in microsoft (3)

Friday
Jul302010

It's not what you know, but how it's organized!

As I continue my pursuit to find a way to put my years of experience, and the expertise I have accumulated, to it's best possible use, I have been asked the following question more times than I care to admit...

"Tell me about yourself."

I am a skilled and successful sales person. I am a technologist, an inventor, a philosopher, an entrepreneur, a musician, a son, a father and a husband. I have published articles, have performed on stages to the applause of thousands. I have created businesses from nothing, and have watched them return to the nothing from which they were created. I am, clearly, a person blessed with many gifts. However, does this really tell you "about" me?

When I think about "me," I believe I am primarily defined by what I know (or think I know), and, conversely, by my internal voice that is always pushing me to know more. My "superpower," it turns out, is not all that I know, but a deep internal appreciation for that fact that I know almost nothing.

The following words from Napoleon Hill, published in his book "Think and Grow Rich" (which I am in the process of re-reading) are remarkable for many reason and, in a sort of scary way, are perhaps more relevant today than they were in 1938 when they were first published.

THERE are two kinds of knowledge. One is general, the other is specialized. General knowledge, no matter how great in quantity or variety it may be, is of but little use in the accumulation of money. The faculties of the great universities possess, in the aggregate, practically every form of general knowledge known to civilization. Most of the professors have but little or no money. They specialize on teaching knowledge, but they do not specialize on the organization, or the use of knowledge.

KNOWLEDGE will not attract money, unless it is organized, and intelligently directed, through practical PLANS OF ACTION, to the DEFINITE END of accumulation of money. Lack of understanding of this fact has been the source of confusion to millions of people who falsely believe that "knowledge is power." It is nothing of the sort! Knowledge is only potential power. It becomes power only when, and if, it is organized into definite plans of action, and directed to a definite end.

This "missing link" in all systems of education known to civilization today, may be found in the failure of educational institutions to teach their students HOW TO ORGANIZE AND USE KNOWLEDGE AFTER THEY ACQUIRE IT.

--Napoleon Hill [1938] - "Think and Grow Rich"

Can you say Google? Microsoft? Bing? WolframAlpha? iPhone? Android?

Who would have thought that Napoleon Hill, back in 1938, was writing the business plan for the current information age.

It's not what you know. It's not who you know. It's how you organize what's known.

I can't tell you I completely understand the subtleties of Hill's words, but I'm sure going to try to figure it out.

Thursday
May272010

When hell freezes over? Maybe it has...

Rumor: Microsoft cameo at WWDC keynote

Wouldn't it be absolutely amazing if Apple/Microsoft came together to compete against Google/Adobe?

  1. Bing becomes the default search engine on the iPhone.
  2. Bing maps becomes the default mapping engine.
  3. Silverlight becomes "native" to the iPhone.

Stranger things have happened. Stay tuned. These are amazing times.

 

Tuesday
Apr282009

Phishing, with a side of Swine Flu

I just read the following on the MSNBC web site:
(http://tinyurl.com/msnbc-phishing-swine-flu)

Phishing with Swine Flu as bait


Phishers and spammers have caught Swine Flu fever and are exploiting fears around the outbreak to try to sell pharmaceutical products or steal information, security experts said Tuesday.

The e-mail scams have a subject line related to the Swine Flu and typically contain either a link to a phishing Web site or an attachment that contains malicious code, the US-CERT said in an advisory. (Read More...)


Stuff like this reminds me how evil some people can be, and how ubiquitous email has become. Let's be clear, these types of attacks always happen through email. Not through websites. Not through your fax machine. Not via instant messaging (IM), or SMS. These attacks don't reach you via your cell phone, and these attacks don't arrive via FedEx or UPS. Its ALWAYS via email.

For the last decade companies like Microsoft, Cisco, Symantec, Google, McAfee, Trend Micro, Sonic Wall, Barracuda Networks, etc. have made (and spent) billions of dollars trying to convince us they know what they are doing when it comes to the security of our email. How much longer, and how many more exploits like this one, is it going to take before people realize that email, the original social networking application, deserves to be secured the same way Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, AIM, and Plaxo are secured?

Isn't it time, once and for all, for authenticated email to take the main stage? What is everyone so afraid of? Threat free email is available, today, and is currently in use by millions of people and thousands of companies around the world.

It is time to stop the insanity. Continuing to do what you've always done (filtering your email) will always yield the mediocre results you are seeing today.