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# Friday, July 21, 2006

While Senator Stevens is still trying to explain how the Internet is a series of tubes (must see: Jon Stewart clip), I'm thinking about a different kind of tube- the kind that you leisurely go down a river in.  The weather is going to be sweltering here today so I'm thinking about going tubing while I'm still on vacation.  A quick search on the 'Net yields few references to tubing in Western Washington so I may just go down the Snoqualmie or Tolt Rivers in Carnation/North Bend and hope for the best. 

Q1: Any suggestions or resources on great tubing/canoeing areas in Western Washington or a short drive from the area?

Q2: Is it time for "Geek Tubing" ala Geek Dinners?

P.S. Apologies to those who were up for a Geek Dinner in NJ, things were just too hectic for me to peel away.  I'll definitely set something up next time I'm in town.

posted on Friday, July 21, 2006 5:16:12 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [3] Trackback
# Wednesday, July 19, 2006

While still on vacation, the 'Net blackout period of my vacation is over - 1.5 weeks with almost no access to the internet, though little Ocean Grove, NJ had many unsecured freely accessible wifi access points available to siphon a little 'nettage off.  The family reunion's soundtrack during happy hour/dinners was powered by Urge's radio stations, and ironically we settled on "Reunion" (Classic rock) as our fave. 

Here's my "Top 10 Things I Learned on Vacation" list:

Top 10 Things I Learned on my Beach Vacation

10.  When getting a 3 year old up at 3:30am for a 6:30am flight, do not tell him the night before he will be going on an airplane in the morning.  He won't sleep.

9.   Learn to Surf.  Yes, at the Jersey Shore.  Go in the AM before the lifeguards arrive and at 5:30pm when they leave.

8.  When in a body surfing competition, tucking your head in so you can't see where you're going may result in injury to you and/or other people who can't see you torpedoing at their legs (but at least you'll win- sorry Jack). 

7.  The guy who does all the grilling and BBQing doesn't have to do too much cleaning.

6.  Always wear sunscreen. At least on your nose, ears, and tops of your feet.

5.  Do not wait in line going around the block for ice cream.  I don't care if it's a $1.50 single scoop that looks like the leaning tower of Piza, just go get some Friendly's at the store.

4.  When two adults volunteer to take two 8 year olds, a 12-year old, and a 3-year old to the Aquarium, Arcades, Boardwalk, Lunch, Games, and Ice Cream on said boardwalk, ask for a third parent to go; you'll still always have two kids in rotation.

3.  Meet the locals.  Even if said local is 12 yo boy called "The Mayor" by the locals for the fact he knows everyone (and can get a 3 year old a tour of the fire station on his birthday making Dad a hero).

2.  When going out to a nightclub at the Jersey Shore with old friends on "Pirate Night", a fake mustache and eye patch can start all sorts of interesting games and conversations.

1.  When it's 99 degrees at 89% humidity, close up the house and crank the window air conditioners up upstairs to the max.  You're not paying more for the power and cool air falls quickly.

I brought a few gadgets along (a Toshiba Gigabeat-S and an iRiver Clix) and both received responses I've never seen.  I had 7 and 12 year olds, 40+ year olds and 50+ year olds all asking me how they can get them saying things like "Cooler than iPod" and "Why don't people know about this?".  I can't speak for marketing budgets.  Rumor has it Apple spends 9 digits on advertising per year.  But what I can say is that the iPod has opened doors because all of that marketing spend is coming back to users now understanding the value, and wanting more features at a lower price. 

Overall this was one of the most enjoyable vacations we've had in years, we'll definitely be doing this again.  Thanks to our local hosts D and J, and to Grandpa for pulling this Reunion together. Grandma was there in spirit and smiling the whole time.

posted on Wednesday, July 19, 2006 4:30:39 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [2] Trackback
# Thursday, July 06, 2006

In my totally unsanctioned but nice to poke have a little fun style, you might recall a month ago I announced a contest to win an iRiver Clix.  The winner is in: Long Zheng's "Feel the Beat" was selected based on its simplicity and spirit in line wiht the player+device+service combo.  Long's second design, "Press the Magic Number" was another top contender.

And for the heck of it, Austin wins the runner up "Nice try and yes, there's some truth there too Award" for his entry I call, "Usable".  Austin gets a cool WMP11|iRiver Clix launch team jacket (with tiny logos) for his entry because it made me laugh.

Congrats to both our winners!

 

 

posted on Thursday, July 06, 2006 10:41:40 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [4] Trackback

After nearly seven years of being in "launch mode" every summer, I'm going on a long vacation - a whopping two weeks! I'll be down at the Jersey Shore with family and friends.  I may try to do a geek dinner at the Jersey Shore- if anyone is interested, send me email at sean@youknowthissite.com

posted on Thursday, July 06, 2006 5:21:40 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [1] Trackback
# Wednesday, July 05, 2006

Check out an interview with the On10 Team and learn more about what it's like to work on this sister-site to Channel9

You can also get a Sneak Peek at their upcoming site redesign.  What do you want to see more of on On10?  Let Jeff and the team know.

One thing to note on the upcoming site redesign is more discoverable support for downloadable versions of their videos formatted for iPod and PSP.  I think this is great- support what the people do en-masse.  Does this surprise you?  It shouldn't. I just hope my Toshiba PMC will also be supported. :)

posted on Wednesday, July 05, 2006 2:11:39 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [2] Trackback

Addressing a question I get often internally and externally at Gnomedex this week.

1.  Yes I blog and have done so for a long time (5+ years)

2.  Yes I work at Microsoft.

3.  No, I'm not Mini-MSFT.  I read his site once a month and find it to be more of a virtual support group for disgruntled MSFT employees unable or willing to effect change internally than a voice for change.

4.  Can we move along now? :)

posted on Wednesday, July 05, 2006 1:21:21 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Tuesday, July 04, 2006

Great tips here from the New York Institute of Photography on how to take pictures of fireworks.  It worked for me even for a small show put on by some friends this weekend.

 

 

posted on Tuesday, July 04, 2006 5:56:59 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Sunday, July 02, 2006

Admittedly I skipped out on Day 2 of Gnomedex knowing I would be able to catch up on what I missed later and opted for some family time.  Inspired by the beautiful weather, we spent some time bumming around Seattle, resulting in what was definitely a "Best Day Ever".  It's nice to get away from the tech side of life sometimes.

More pictures here.

9:30am - Walking down at Alki Beach.

Easy Does It

11:00am - Shopping at Pike Place Market

Pike Place Market Sign

12:30pm - Lunch at XXX Root Beer Stand (Last in America)

Self Portrait by way of Thunderbird

1:00pm - Chainsawing Limbs from the Sycamore in our Neighbors Yard from a Tall Ladder (Too Scary for Pictures)

4:30pm - Finished Cleaning Up after Chainsawing Limbs from the Sycamore.  Firewood is ready for winter.

5:30pm - 4th of July Big Bash at Jaron & Lauren's House

Spinning

9:30pm - Fireworks!

July 4th Fireworks

posted on Sunday, July 02, 2006 8:28:39 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Friday, June 30, 2006

More pictures up on my Flickr site

 

DSC_0006

posted on Friday, June 30, 2006 10:19:58 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback

We're here at Gnomedex at Chris Pirillo just pointed out on his blog that it looks like TechMeme has been hacked?  If you have no idea what I'm talking about. Move along. :)

posted on Friday, June 30, 2006 9:58:55 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
# Monday, June 26, 2006

Brier Dudley seems to agree about the Clix in his latest column in the Seattle Times:

"I'd argue that Microsoft has already developed an iPod challenger, and it's been on sale for a couple of weeks at Best Buy and Amazon.com for about $200... The device is called the Clix."

I was interviewed for this article and got a nice quote.  Brier has more details about the development experience over on his blog.  Just one correction- we didn't specify the silicon for use, but we did provide direct feedback as decisions were being made . 

I also want to call out the amazing work done by the iRiver America team.  The packaging is largely to their credit- we provided critical feedback and encouraged a new, more refined design based on existing packaging in Korea.  The iRiver team did all the heavy lifting and it shows.

At the end of the day, my job was two-fold: As UX (User Experience) PM, to play the part of the consumer end to end- to apply what I've learned working in this space for 7+ years and document our recommendations.  From there, we (the v-team as we called ourselves) agreed on relative priorities w/ iRiver up-front.  We acknowledged where we disagreed without ego or hubris, and worked together on a solution in the interest of the customer.  We were invited to provide input in every meeting on the UX, system flow and regular milestones on naming, branding, messaging, out of box experience and more.  

Shifting gears for a second.  Looking to the development process we used as a case study, Chris Pirillo is still largely right in my opinion about the "User". Except it's users vs. the traditional development process that's the issue- not the developers themselves.  PMs, Devs, Testers, and Marketing are still WAY too silo'ed from their customers and residing in the echo chamber.  I get irate when a PM or Dev tells me they're too busy to go on a customer visit or staff a booth and talk to customers about their product.  I look for these opportunities. But a better requires a multi-disciplined approach working together on a daily basis as well as talking to customers.  That's why we instituted a Scrum Model with "butts in seats at 9:30am accountability" on this project. Our mission statement, "Help our partner build a device we're proud to recommend to family and friends everywhere with WMP11 Beta".  In my opinion, that's what made it work so well this time around.  And the fact that with the U10, iRiver was already on their way to building a great product.  I speak for many within Microsoft when I say thank you to Reigncom/iRiver for the opportunity to work together.

P.S. I'm getting out of my echo chamber later this week at Gnomedex.  See you there.  And a question for the future- where else should I go to further get out of the echo chamber?

posted on Monday, June 26, 2006 11:53:53 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [8] Trackback

I've recently upgraded to a Nikon D200 w/ an 18-200mm lens that took four weeks to arrive off backorder! So I'm running around taking "Happy Snaps" as my Aussie friends like to call them and just loving the quality of the camera.  Any tips/techniques I should be aware of with this particular camera beyond the traditional "learn what ISO is"? 

See some recent shots on my Flickr account.

What I really need to do is take another more advanced class.  Or maybe just follow Thomas Hawk around for a few days in San Francisco. ;)

posted on Monday, June 26, 2006 6:57:51 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [4] Trackback