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The Importance of Collaborative Development







The Importance of Collaborative
Development

The Importance of Collaborative
Development
04/12/2004 08:48 AM




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The Importance of Collaborative Development

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Glowan Consulting Announces “The
Collaborative Advantage” - Innovative
approach to building collaborative
relationships compliments L3 Leadership
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Glowan Consulting Announces “The
Collaborative Advantage” - Innovative
approach to building collaborative
relationships compliments L3 Leadership
Learning Program
04/18/2005 03:54 AM
The Glowan Consulting Group has introduced another innovative concept in Leadership Development called “The Collaborative Advantage”. Pairs of individuals attend and work with each other and members of the group to develop skills, behaviors and action plans for improving collaboration. Offering real time relationship building processes combined with an in-depth “Collaborative Assessment”, participants experience the advantages of working together collaboratively to accomplish extraordinary things. [PRWEB Apr 18, 2005]

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"talks about the importance "


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The importance of dreams


The importance of dreams 08/22/2004 07:25 PM
I'm back home again; a day later than I was supposed to. With some very interesting tan lines, I might add.

My Thursday night was one of the strangest ever. Suffice to say that I ended up alone, in an Irish pub in Reykjavik, listening to melancholic guitar music and downing a horribly expensive beer. I also had a fever (of which I was not aware of the time), which produced some of the most vivid and strangest dreams I've seen in a long while, when I finally clambered to the youth hostel.

So I dreamed. In one dream, I was crossing a street, and as the traffic lights went green, all of the cars turned to horses and had to be herded away so I could cross the street. In a second dream, I saw myself find an internet terminal, and buying tickets to Oulu for the day that I arrive in Helsinki.

I wake up - still feverish - and recount some of the dreams to my travel companion. She looks at me, with a slightly worrying look, as I start to ponder that the idea from the last dream is not really that bad.

In our hotel, on the last night, I find a free Internet terminal that looks just like the one in my dream. So I buy tickets to Oulu, wondering who the heck gave my subconscious a free reign over my credit card.

For the rest of the trip, I worry about whether I'm going to make the connection, or the inevitable gaping hole that will be left on my bank account, or whether this was such a good idea at all, since I have been doing nothing but travel, and I shall be doing some heavy travel in the near future as well. (Bleargh.)

But Outi meets me on the airport, and one hug removes all doubt and weariness.

Later in the evening, the air is charged with a magical feeling that cannot be described in my crude words. It's as if one touch could set the world on fire; as if the thunder outside came from your mind; as if one look made your heart explode; as if tears and laughter and pain and pleasure were all the same thing. No masks, no hiding behind them. No buts, no ifs. Just...

*sighs deeply* This belongs to poets and songwriters and philosophers; not simple engineers like me. Shutting up now.


TPM on the importance of words


TPM on the importance of words 04/15/2004 10:30 AM
This is precisely the sort of inane mumbojumbo that will -- perhaps literally -- get us all killed. ...The importance of words is a conceit of wordsmiths, certainly. But they are important -- especially when they bleed through into thought and action, which happens more often than you'd think.,

TPM is becoming almost too widely-read to be postworthy, but Josh really puts things into perspective with this post. For an example of what all this jingoistic gibberish can result in, see the post below it.

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The Importance of Place


The Importance of Place 06/17/2005 03:28 PM
Place, the place we call home, the place we belong to, defines us. When we have lost our sense of place, we have lost our soul.
geese
Last Christmas I wrote a piece about homelessness, and suggested that the homeless and the addicted are a perfect metaphor for all of us living in modern civilization. I wrote:

Civilization is our Pusher. It's The Man who keeps us hooked on consumption and debt, The Man who holds the key to our prison and gives us our illusory rush of elation when we buy and use His addictive product. The Man who seduces us back even when we have decided that life in His prison is insane, self-abusive, worse than death. The monkey is our addiction, without which we cannot live. And we wander the streets of civilization's artificial world in a daze, never really home, wondering what is missing, why we feel so lost. Civilization is our ghetto, a whole world of six billion homeless people, setting fires on every corner for warmth, ganging up and stealing everything we can get our hands on to pawn for our fixes, breeding babies already drug-addicted at birth.

So the next time you see a homeless person, or an addict, don't be frightened, angry, or filled with pathos. You are looking in the mirror. It is we who are homeless, and addicted. What will it take before we break the habit, walk away from The Man, and find our way home?

On another occasion I wrote:

Know your place. We are all part of a web, a mosaic, and we all travel, but ultimately we have our own place, our 'home'. If you're not totally connected with everything and every creature that is part of your place, then it isn't your place. If you don't have a place, then you don't yet really exist. A house is not a place, though if it's open it can be part of one. A mind is not a place.

greenturtle

The wonderful books of biologist Bernd Heinrich are about birds and animals, but most of all they are about the places that the creatures he studies call home, and about the importance of those places. In his latest book The Geese of Beaver Bog he talks about another biologist, David Ehrenfeld, who writes about animals and the importance of place to them. I've ordered Ehrenfeld's 1994 book Beginning Again, but I've already read the amazing first chapter from Amazon's 'search inside' page for the book. The chapter is called 'Places' and here is an extract that shook me to the core of my being:

Because the turtles [I was studying in Costa Rica] come out to nest after dark, much of my work was done at night. There was a great deal of waiting between turtles, plenty of time to sit on a driftwood log and think. In the first years of my research I was often the only one on the beach for miles. After ten or twenty minutes of sitting without using my flashlight, my eyes adapted to the dark and I could make out forms against the brown-black sand: the beach plum and coconut palm silhouettes in back, the flicker of the surf in front, sometimes even the shadowy outline of a trailing railroad vine or the scurry of a ghost crab at my feet. The air was heavy and damp with a distinctive primal smell that I can remember but not describe. The rhythmic roar of the surf a few feet away never ceased -- my favourite sound. I hear it as I write in my landlocked office in New Jersey. And then, with ponderous, dramatic slowness, a giant turtle would emerge from the sea.

Usually I would see the track first, a vivid black line standing out against the lesser blackness, like the swath of a bulldozer. If I was closer, I could hear the animal's deep hiss of breath and the sounds of her undershell scraping over logs. If there was a moon, I might see the light glistening off the parabolic curve of the still wet shell. Size at night is hard to determine: even the sprightly 180-pounders, probably nesting for the first time, looked big when nearby, but the 400-pound ancients, with shells nearly four feet long, were colossal in the darkness. Then when the excavations of the body pit and egg cavity were done, if I slowly parted the hind flippers of the now-oblivious turtle, I could watch the perfect white spheres falling and falling into the flask-shaped pit scooped into the soft sand.

Falling as they have fallen for a hundred million years, with the same slow cadence, always shielded from the rain or stars by the same massive bulk with the beaked head and the same large, myopic eyes rimmed with crusts of sand washed out by tears. Minutes and hours, days and months dissolve into eons. I am on an Oligocene beach, an Eocene beach, a Cretaceous beach -- the scene is the same. It is night. The turtles are coming back, always back; I hear a deep hiss of breath and catch a glint of wet shell as the continents slide and crash, the oceans form and grow. The turtles were coming here before here was here. At Tortuguero I learned the meaning of place, and began to understand how it is bound up with time.

Ehrenfeld goes on to describe the cruel and careless treatment of the turtles by local fishermen, and how the witnessing of such atrocities by the President of Costa Rica so enraged him that he took steps to protect the green turtle's Tortuguero breeding ground in perpetuity.

Often, at night, I sit out on the back hill behind our house, overlooking the 1100-acre Albion Hills Conservation Area, with Chelsea the dog, just paying attention to the sounds and the smells and the shadowy sights in the moonlight. I soon forget there is a house behind me, and behind it a community of 34 houses interspersed with wilderness wetlands, and beyond it a city of 6 million that is forecast to grow to as many as 40 million by the end of this century. To us for a few moments there is only the wilderness, the sounds of owls and wood frogs and wind through the trees that have been here for a hundred thousand millennia -- the dogwood and the balsam poplar and the maple and the trembling aspen and the white birch and white cedar and bur oak and ironwood and pussywillow, and the smells of rain and muskrat and decaying leaves. And I long to see and feel how this, my adopted home, this place that has welcomed me and allowed me to be a part of it and to share in its wonders, looked before man arrived to change it quickly and utterly. For even here, where nature is respected and where the actions of conservation authorities and lack (for now) of development stress has allowed some of this land to remain unaltered, and some more to start the slow path back to something like what it was like before we arrived, it still bears little resemblance, to the trained eye, to what it must have been, in the eons of silence and darkness before man arrived with his noise and artificial light and carelessness and altered it beyond recognition.

If I am to believe the biologists, the area I call home once probably looked like these photos:

localforest

I can imagine living in a place like this, but only because I do live in a place vaguely like this. If I were to have spent my whole life living in a city, or even on a farm, I don't think I could imagine it. And even if I could, I don't think I could conceive of it as my place, the place to which I belonged. While this is my adopted home, it is only, naturally, the place of a rare and scattered minority of humans, the First Nations, who learned, in ways that we never have and which I cannot hope to comprehend, to live with the bears and wildcats and mosquitos and black flies and bitterly cold winters and lack of year-round food supplies. Without my protection from these dangers and discomforts, I could never call this place home.

So in order to make places like this habitable to us, as we destroyed the places in the cradles of human civilization that were habitable to us naturally, we had to reform them with our cities and farms, until they became unrecognizable, nothing like the pictures above -- terraformed, civilized, converted to a dreadful sameness all over the planet. These cities and farms were as alien to us as they were to the creatures that retreated in their wake. When we try to imagine how bizarre it would be to live on a space station, or on the moon, we should consider that we have already made a much more profound and barren adaptation here on our suffering planet.

But these cities and farms are not natural places for humans. They are not where we lived and thrived for three million years before their invention. Then we lived in the warm climates of Africa, of South Asia and of the Southern edge of Europe, when all those lands were heavily forested. We were and are, like all primates, creatures of the forest, and specifically of the tropical forest. And while three million years is but an instant compared to the hundred million years that the giant green turtles of Tortuguero have called that place home, that tropical forest is still the place our DNA tells us is our home, our place.

Most of that tropical forest is now destroyed, cleared for cities and farms, and we have been gone from there so long that the thought of returning there even if there was room for us, which there is not, is too terrifying to countenance. So we moved from there to less hospitable and more dangerous lands and remade them into cities and farms as well: Since we could not live in these hostile environments we destroyed them and built ourselves artificial landscapes, vast alien prisons which protected us from the terrors of nature and weather but detached us completely from any sense of place.

So now we are all homeless, six billion of us living in an artificial world of our own making. We have destroyed our own three-million year home and most of the homes and places of every other species on Earth, making them mostly homeless, too, those that we haven't yet made extinct.

I bow my head to the turtles of Tortuguero. They are so much wiser, so much more alive than we shallow newcomers to this planet can ever hope to be. They know the importance of place. They know how to live as part of a world to which all life on this planet once belonged. They show respect for the grand design of our fragile, troubled world, and know their part in it.

While we are merely astonishingly fierce, wondrously adaptable, utterly homeless, arrogant beyond reason, hopelessly lost and addicted to the perpetuation of our own folly.

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At next week's VSLive conference in San Francisco, Microsoft Corp. will be announcing the status of such tools as Visual Studio 2005 Beta 2, SQL Server 2005 Beta 3 and the first Community Technology Preview of Indigo. S. "Soma" Somasegar, corporate vice president of the Developer Division at Microsoft, who is one of the show's keynote speakers, sat down with eWEEK Senior Editor Darryl K. Taft to discuss the company's plans for these tool releases, as well as the developer ecosystem, dealing with open source and more. Prior to his current role overseeing the developer division, Soma served as corporate vice president of the Windows Engineering Services and Solutions group within the Windows Division. Prashant Sridharan, senior product manager for Visual Studio Team System, joined Somasegar in the interview.

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Apple understands the flow-on effect of having Java/.Net developers using their platform. Chris Adamson, was asking whats the benefit of a great java environment from Apple, if there are no Desktop Java Apps. Well, couple of things, firstly some of these guys are writing simple Swing Apps in Java, and its good to know they will work and look good on Macs. But secondly, these developers are making sure software doesn't break when used on Macs.

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The Importance of Information
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The Importance Of The Betamax Precedent


The Importance Of The Betamax Precedent 01/27/2004 02:53 PM
By now, most people are quite familiar with the old Supreme Court "Betamax" ruling that said that a technology was legal as long as it had "substantial non-infringing uses." That's the standard under which many technologies we use today have been developed - and now it's under attack by the entertainment industry. Lawyers for the entertainment industry insist they're not trying to reverse the Betamax precedent, but to just set some limits on it. Supporters of the original decision say the entertainment industry still has always been looking for ways to get around the Betamax decision (and did so partially via the DMCA). What the article forgets to point out however, is the biggest joke in all of this: the entertainment industry that battled so hard against the Betamax decision was, by far, the biggest beneficiary of that decision. The fact that they still won't admit they made a mistake twenty years ago, and that maybe, just maybe, opening up technologies leads to more opportunities to profit shows just how short sighted the industry is. They're trying to kill off a legal ruling that has helped them generate billions of dollars each year.

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The Importance Of ... Law and IT: Apple
v. Real v. Microsoft


The Importance Of ... Law and IT: Apple
v. Real v. Microsoft
09/03/2004 12:59 AM
Corante Sep 3 2004 4:45AM GMT

The Importance Of Interface Text (part
1)


The Importance Of Interface Text (part
1)
03/20/2003 03:17 PM
The words that a user sees on your application's menus and labels are often as important as the code that drives the application. Using the wrong word, or a term that is ambiguous or hard to understand, can often make the difference between an application that is easy and fun to use, and one that is just plain irritating. This article discusses the importance of interface text and offers tips and advice to help you create clear, usable and easily comprehensible text for your application's ...

Labour stresses importance of web for
campaigning


Labour stresses importance of web for
campaigning
09/27/2004 03:09 AM
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The Importance of the Hypertext Document
Title


The Importance of the Hypertext Document
Title
04/17/2004 03:30 AM
WebmasterBase Apr 17 2004 7:49AM GMT

Instant Messaging Taking On More
Importance


Instant Messaging Taking On More
Importance
04/27/2004 11:42 AM
For all the talk of a battle over search and web-based email, not as many people have been paying attention to the growing battle over instant messaging services. Many people spend a lot of time each day in their IM programs - sometimes even more than their browser. Realizing this, Yahoo, Microsoft and AOL are all working to more closely integrate other aspects of their service into instant messaging. I'm still surprised that none of them have more actively turned their instant messaging program into a Friendster-like social networking service - since it seems like a much more natural fit than having to go into a website and list all your friends. With most IM services, you already have your list of friends and there's an actual practical use to it beyond surfing through friends of friends. The article also mentions (as we have before) the idea that Google should offer their own instant messaging client. Of course, the article brushes over the issue of interoperability, claiming that people haven't really been asking for it. That's not true. I've been asking for it for years, and know plenty of others who have as well. While the various services believe they need to stay as separate islands for the purposes of "lock-in," they're simply driving people away. I wouldn't need to use products like Trillian if Yahoo or AIM worked with each other. Just like text messaging on phones and email systems over a decade ago - once people decided to let them communicate across boundaries, they found that everyone did a lot more with them. It doesn't take people away, it makes them use the services more.

Explaining the importance of context in
ID mgmt.


Explaining the importance of context in
ID mgmt.
06/17/2005 04:49 PM
Last week, I asked if an identity needed to be unique, and answered that yes, it does, within a given context. That seems like an excellent segue to a discussion of context and how it relates to identity.

Google Gives Web Page History More
Importance


Google Gives Web Page History More
Importance
06/17/2005 03:39 PM
Stickysauce Jun 17 2005 7:02AM GMT

Motorola centre grows in importance


Motorola centre grows in importance 05/10/2004 09:46 PM
thestar.com.my May 11 2004 1:49AM GMT

IMUs Gaining in Importance for Robots


IMUs Gaining in Importance for Robots 03/06/2004 02:03 AM
A new article at Small Times discusses the growing importance of tiny gyroscopes and accelerometers for use as sensors in the next generation of robots. Together these sensors form an Inertial Measurement Unit (IMU) and provide robots with a sense of acceleration and angular rate of rotational motion in multiple degrees of freedom. An IMU is a must if you're building a Segway-like 2 wheel balancing robot, a dynamically balancing biped, an AUV or any number of other advanced robot designs. The cost of building an IMU has been greatly reduced in recent years thanks to high-performance, low-cost MEMS gyros and accelerometers. Companies like Rotomotion are now able to sell complete IMUs inexpensive enough for hobbyists but of high enough quality for commercial and military applications.

On Collaborative Webl0gs


On Collaborative Webl0gs 05/31/2004 12:33 PM

Collaborative Mapping


Collaborative Mapping 01/07/2004 02:04 PM
Edward Mac Gillavry has a paper on collaborative mapping that comes at the idea from a different angle than does Matt Haughey's suggestion that someone combine a mapping system with a Slashdot-like system to do collaborative routing: Collaborative mapping is an initiative to collectively produce models of real-world locations online that people can then access and use to virtually annotate locations in space. Mac Gillavry points to two aspects of collaborative mapping: 1. Generating maps by mapping with your feet, so to speak. For example, at Waag.org, you can see maps of Amsterdam generated by aggregating data from people carrying...

Collaborative Redesign


Collaborative Redesign 11/25/2003 10:24 PM

Out with the orange, in with the green. As with my last redesign, only the CSS changed. A fun deviation with this one was that it was a collaboration between myself and Natalie over nearly 5,000 miles, using edit styles and AIM to pass each other snippets of CSS and instantly try them out.

I haven't tested it very thoroughly at all so if there are any glaring abominations leave me a comment - I know about the blogmarks looking slightly out of place in IE 6 but I haven't quite decided if I can be bothered to find a workaround yet.


Collaborative Novel Writing


Collaborative Novel Writing 05/09/2004 12:45 PM
The Great Mahakali Write-A-Thon.

The importance of design symmetry in
your Java types


The importance of design symmetry in
your Java types
09/17/2004 08:21 AM
ZDNet Sep 17 2004 12:39PM GMT

EU Commissioner comments on the
importance of eHealth in Europe


EU Commissioner comments on the
importance of eHealth in Europe
12/15/2003 07:01 AM
PublicTechnology.net Dec 15 2003 6:09AM ET
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