Archive for February, 2013

Touched By An Angel in the ATX

I recently celebrated another birthday.  I received numerous well wishes via social media; a phone call or two from close family, a great meal followed by cake and presents with the wife and kids; and three birthday cards delivered the old fashion way via the US Postal Service.  While all of those things were meaningful, there was one of those old school birthday cards that had an extra special message.  That special birthday card was from a soup kitchen.  Yes, a soup kitchen.

The special card was sent by Angel House Soup Kitchen.  Angel House is located in downtown Austin.  Since 1990, the kitchen has been serving a hot lunch meal to the homeless and economically disadvantage seven days a week.  Today the number of people receiving this life sustaining service averages over 300 each day.

My oldest daughter and I have volunteered at the Angel House several times.  The volunteering involves assisting with the preparation of the meal, which always includes a huge pot of soup, and also serving the meal to the long line of people queued up when the doors open each morning at 11a.  A day of volunteering takes 3-4 hours; a small amount time that makes a big impact in the community.

Now back to that birthday card.  The message on the card:

Our prayer for you on this very special day –

The day that God created you in His image –

Is that it will be all that He wants for you!

A day to rejoice and be glad.  It’s your day!

 

I recently wrote about trying to be joyful each day.  Receiving a message to “rejoice and be glad” felt like a great reminder to find happiness in each day – not just on your birthday.  Receiving the card was also a good reminder that it probably time to arrange another volunteer day at the kitchen.  All too often we get caught up in our busy lives and forget that we need to find time to give back to others around us.  This birthday card made me stop and remember that we need to share our blessings with others.

If you are interested in learning more about the Angel House Soup Kitchen or want to arrange a day to volunteer or want to make a small monetary donation to a great organization, you can find out more at:  www.angelhouse-abc.com

The Day the iPad Died

A long, long time ago
I can still remember how that music used to make me smile
And, I knew if I had my chance that I could make those people dance, and…
Maybe they’d be happy for a while
But, February made me shiver with every paper I’d deliver
Bad news on the doorstep – I couldn’t take one more step
I can’t remember if I cried when I read about his widowed bride
Something touched me deep inside the day the music died

For those under the age of 40, these are the opening lyrics to Don McLean’s 1971 song about the death of Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens and the Big Bopper in 1959 – also known as “The day the music died.” Years ago, I had the opportunity to go to the Surf Ballroom in Clear Lake, Iowa and see the last place those rock-n-roll legends performed. If you love rock-n-roll and find yourself in Iowa, stop by and see it.

Today’s thoughts are not about the death of music. They are about, at least for me, the passing of a device that much like Buddy Holly and Ritchie Valens had an extremely bright but short flame.

I became an “i” guy out of necessity soon after the first generation iPhone hit the market. Our CEO at the time called me up and told me that he wanted an iPhone to use with his work email. I attempted to explain that the iPhone would not work well with our older version of Lotus Notes and that the experience would not be one he would like. As CEOs are apt to do, he did not want to hear that and insisted that I go get him an iPhone and make it work.

So off I went to the Apple store to buy one and set up an ATT wireless plan. With a few days of tweaking and testing, we were able to get mail flowing, but no calendar synching, no access to our corporate directory, no synching of his contacts, and no access to any of our internal systems. It was a far cry from what could be done at the time with Blackberry devices. I delivered the device to our CEO along with the long list of things it could not do within our corporate environment.

Three days later, the CEO called me and told me the iPhone was not what he expected – for all the same reasons I had tried to tell him before ever purchasing one. He told me he was sending it back. So there I was, with a $500+ device and a 2-yr service commitment on a personally-liable account. So for the next two years, I carried that iPhone as my main device and dealt with the pains of Lotus Notes in an ‘I” world. As technology progressed and we moved to a new email platform, the iPhone became a more powerful and useful device. While I flirted with other devices – various Andriods and even a WinMobile – I stuck with the “i” world.

Towards the end of 2011, I told people that the work laptop I was currently using would be the last laptop I ever used. As I became further immersed in the ‘i” environment, I set my sights on the iPad. I had a vision of the iPad being the end of the Windows-based laptop. I tried for over a year to make the iPad be THE work device for me. I bought “Office-like” apps for spreadsheets and word processing. I leveraged cloud storage to have access to needed files. I downloaded apps to enhance my Sharepoint experience. I forced myself to not take my laptop on trips so that I was solely reliant on the iPad.

While I was able to survive with the iPad, I never felt completely comfortable. The “Office-like” apps were not full featured and clunky to use. I yearned for my Excel and my Word. I was also apt to forget to send files to the cloud, so I was always looking for that one file that I really needed. Yes, I felt cool carrying the iPad, but I never could pull the plug on my trusty laptop.

That all changed in mid-January. As part of the CIO track at DellWorld, I was offered a free Dell Latitude 10 Windows 8 Professional tablet. My first thought when I was told I would be receiving the tablet: “here’s another toy to play with for a week or two.” I did not have any expectations that this device would be a game changer.

When my Dell account executive delivered the Latitude 10 to me, we opened up the boxes and I causally glanced at the tablet, but did not jump right in to firing it up. Hours later, I finally turned it on and the revolution was on. I had in my hands a one and a half pound 10” laptop in tablet form. I had the familiar Windows operation system (once I got past the tiles), my trusty Office apps, all my files that I shamefully keep on my local drive, and a long lasting battery in the palm of my hands. The next day I had our desktop team join the device to our domain. Soon thereafter, our desktop management tool was pushing down apps just like it does with any other Windows based computer. Finally, there was a tablet that could be managed with our existing tools. It also came with a handy docking station for easy connection to a full screen monitor, mouse and keyboard.

After three days of using the tablet, I shut down my workhorse Thinkpad laptop for the final time.

A week later, I had to ask myself where I left my cool iPad. It was right where I left it the day I got my hands on that Dell tablet. I had gone 7 days without using the iPad – a device that previously felt like I used every 7 seconds.

For me it was “The day the iPad died.”

It’s 2013: Be Joyful

Joy to the world
All the boys and girls, now
Joy to the fishes in the deep blue sea
Joy to you and me

I might be a little young for early 70s rock, but I do love me some Three Dog Night.

New Year’s Eve is a special day in the Neill house. In addition to the obvious, it is also the day we celebrate the Lovely Mrs. Neill saying “I Do” to spending a lifetime with a slightly dorky accountant back in the mid-90s. Due to this, my oldest daughter has insisted from a young age that NYE is a family occasion – not one to be celebrated without her and her sister’s presence. NYE 2012 was no exception.

Now how we celebrate each varies and in some years plans don’t gel until the day before or day of NYE. 2012 was one of those years. We had some friends over on the 30th for dinner and they mentioned they were having a little get-together the next night at their house. So the next morning, we pulled together our celebration: NYE Vigil Mass, a nice diner out, and a swing by our friend’s gathering. Well when you wait until the morning of NYE to make dinner reservations, you don’t always get the exact times you want. We ended up with a dinner reservation time that made it impossible to make it to our local parish’s Mass, but we found a time that would work at a neighboring parish.

While selecting a Mass time based on dinner reservations is probably not ideal, sometimes things just work out for the better. The priest at the parish we ended up at was the priest that had guided me through the conversion to Catholicism a decade ago. He always had a way of delivering a message in his homily that resonated with me and his NYE homily was no exception. I am not going to go into the biblical / theological aspect of his homily but his message was one that should hit close to home for most of us.

In two words the message was “Be Joyful.”

We spend too much time in our daily lives focused on the negative and worrying about the bad things going on. We are bombarded with “the negative” from all sides. Our news outlets are constantly hitting us with bad news about death and destruction. Our work days are filled with pressures to perform better on an individual and collective basis. Business leaders are faced with the demands to continually grow revenue and income less face the consequences of falling stock prices. Kids in school are faced with the daily pressures to exceed expectations in the classroom, the playing field, and in the hallway. With all these pressures and negative news, many of us find ourselves not enjoying life. We are constantly worrying about the potential negative things. We are alive, but we are not living.

The message on NYE was simply to enjoy life. Celebrate living each day. Use the talents you have been given to make the world a brighter place. Now that is certainly easier said than done, but I made a commitment right then and there to make it a priority to be thankful each day for having the opportunity to be alive. While I have no doubt that “bad” things will happen in our world and some of those things will hit close to me, my goal is to find joy in each day.

Think what our world would be like if we could all do that every day.

Robertnotbob.net: A Look Back at Year 1

It’s been a year since I had the crazy idea to start a blog.  During the following 12 months, I cranked out 24 entries.   Not all of them were widely read, but I got something out of writing each of them.  In fact I found writing those entries to be therapeutic.  It allowed me to bring together random thoughts that were bouncing around my head.

As I approached the 1 year anniversary of RobertnotBob.net, I decided to look back at the activity on the site.  One of the most surprising statisitics was the number of different countries represented by the visitors to the site.  There were visitors from over 30 countries.  While most were from the good ole US of A, the United Kingdom, India, Belgium and Australia were also well represented.   Heck, I even had a visitor from Qatar, and I don’t even know where that is in the world.  I guess I can now legitimately say that I am an internationally known and read author.

It was also interesting to see how people ended up on the site.  While most clicked through links I posted on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn; there were numerous visitors that ended up there via search engines.  The most popular search string that pointed to my site was “The Jerk” or some variation of references to that classic Steve Martin movie.  You may recall I had a post titled “Have a Little Respect: Don’t Be the Jerk.”  And somehow a handful of people reached RobertnotBob.net after searching on “Aretha Franklin.”  I am not sure how I ended up connected to Aretha, but you can’t complain about being attached to the Queen of Soul.

That brings us to which entries made a big splash and which ones failed to wow.  Out of the 24 entries, the most read was the above mentioned “Have a Little Respect:  Don’t Be the Jerk.”  I have to say that I too like that entry.  Other popular entries were:

1)      What’s Love Got to Do With It – which touched on Jesuit teachings, Conscious Capitalism, and one of my favorite CEOs  Kip Tindell of the Container Store.

2)      Lessons From the Course:  A Reflecting on Golf and Business – which tied together my time on the golf course with my daughter and the importance of planning and execution in the business world

3)      What’s in a Name? – the entry that started it all.

I also had some posts that just fell flat.  These included “The Love Train” which was a follow up to “What’s Love Got to Do With It” and “Where Did You Go JFK? – a little off the wall rambling about the fifty-cent piece.  I actually liked both of these, but based on the stats it was obvious that people from over 30 countries thought differently.  I guess some thoughts might just be better off staying in my head.

I am not sure I will hit 24 entries in 2013, but I will certainly keep blogging.  It’s cheaper than seeing a therapist.  Not that I have a reason to see one and not that there is anything wrong with seeing one.

And one more thing – for all those that have read my blog, even if just once, THANK YOU!