kdmurray.blog

The crossroads of life and tech

Jott Launches Local Canadian Numbers

JottMessaging and “GTD-ish” service Jott has just launched new local numbers in many major cities in Canada. The service has gone from one local number in Toronto, to twenty nation-wide.

Here is an excerpt from the email sent to Canadian Jott users today:

In an effort to protect your privacy, most Canadian mobile providers have blocked caller ID information from being passed to toll free numbers. This leaves the alternative of using local access numbers across the country, so that everyone can send Jott messages without having to pay long distance fees.

Here are the new Canadian local numbers

CITY NUMBER
AURORA +12898020110
CALGARY +14037751288
EDMONTON +17806287799
HALIFAX +19024828120
HAMILTON +19054819060
KITCHENER +15199572711
LONDON +15194898968
MARKHAM +12898000110
MONTREAL +15146670329
OTTAWA +16136861502
QUEBEC CITY +14189072209
SAINT JOHNS +17097570047
SHERBROOKE +18193401636
TORONTO +16477245365
TORONTO +14168001067
VANCOUVER +17787868229
VANCOUVER +16044841347
VICTORIA +12509847093
WINDSOR +15198000031
WINNIPEG +12042728154

I’ve been using Jott off and on for the past couple of months, and with the addition of local Canadian numbers, I can definitely see this becoming a regular part of my GTD arsenal.

Justifying Chill Out Spaces

Cross-posted with Miss604.com

So much in today’s world needs to be justified with numbers showing us that there is a quantifiable value for every decision. When a company spends money, more often than not they want to know how spending that money will make them more money. This is the concept of return on investment (ROI). How to spend $1 and make $2 as a result. (OK, finance lesson over with).

But not everything is easily quantifiable, or measurable. How to measure employee satisfaction or my personal favourite “engagement” with verifiable, hard numbers? These are by nature qualitative measures.

Photo credit: SqueakyMarmot on Flickr

With a new generation of employees moving into the workplace, the so-called Millennials (Gen Y), that values a balance between work and their personal life, companies are having to adjust. In areas where younger workers are the norm, or at least make up a significant percentage of the population steps are being taken to introduce an atmosphere targeted at attracting and retaining talent. By providing games tables, comfortable seating or in some cases refreshments to employees as a “perk” of the job, some companies are aiming to make work a more fun and balanced place to be.

But if you’re wanting to get some leather recliners or a foosball table into the office, how do you justify the benefits of this to the powers that be? Where are your numbers? There is precious little in the way of hard facts to “prove” the beneficial nature of these perks. There is, however, mounds of anecdotal evidence to show that happy and relaxed employees are more productive and more creative during the hours that they are performing their duties.

This is one of the intangibles that make up a balanced work culture and lead to a more relaxed and creative workforce. By providing a “chill-out space” something with comfortable seating and (god forbid) maybe a television, your hard-working employees have a place to recharge their batteries mid-day and continue to deliver for the company until late in the afternoon.

Photo credit: tojosan on Flickr

I’m not saying that companies should employ masseuses, or servers to cater to employees while they’re on the job (as alleged by 60 minutes), but provide some benefits that help to enhance the experience of going to work. Why does work need to be dull and boring? Invest some money. If even one employee stays instead of leaving for another company, it will be worth your time. The return on your investment comes in the form of not wasting productive hours training yet another new employee (probably another millennial).

So in an effort to collect some more of those anecdotal stories, and maybe even some hard numbers, tell us about your workplace. Do you have a “chill-out space” to use? Does it help? Is it something you would look for in a prospective employer?

Flickr Fight Doesn’t Attribute Photos

Pouring through my ever overflowing RSS reader tonight I came across a post on AppScout by Alan Henry about Flickr Fight.  This is a site that allows you to search for two terms, and then determines how popular the term is based on the number of hits returned in a Flickr search (Google Fight knockoff??).  Along with the search result is a grid of photos for each of the terms.  Compare Coke vs. Pepsi, Angelina & Jennifer or whatever else you like… or better yet, don’t.

The one major thing missing from Flickr Fight is it’s lack of attribution for any of the photos it displays.  It simply links to the images stored on the Flickr server and doesn’t bother to provide a link to the photo’s page in flickr, or credit the photographer/owner of the image in any way, shape or form.

This is the kind of IP violations that make posting legitimate content online a risky venture.  If people don’t consider copyright violations of online material legitimate, then how will these forms of content distribution ever be considered good, legitimate viable sources??

Shame on Flickr Fight, and shame on AppScout for not picking up on this glaring omission.

Dave Brubeck, “Take Five”

Thank you Wil Wheaton.

For several years now I’ve wondered what the name of this song is.  It’s been used in countless soundtracks, commercials, movies, well the list goes on.  And I’ve never been able to find anyone who knows who wrote it, performed it or what the name of it was… until now.

I found this post through my RSS reader tonight (I’m a bit behind on some of my blog reading….).  As I was catching up on the latest from “wwdn: in exile” I found a post entitled joe morello  is a god.

[youtube:http://youtube.com/watch?v=DDOgYw5-pNs&feature=related]

Now I know that the song is called Take Five, from an album called Time Out. The YouTube clip pictured above is the Dave Brubeck Quartet from 1961.  I was trying to find different clip from the one Wil already posted, but it really does appear to have the best audio of all the original Dave Brubeck clips.

Now I’m a Published Photographer!

[[Welcome to this, the 200th post on kdmurray.net!]]

I got confirmation today that the folks over at Schmapp have selected one of my photos for inclusion in their 2007 Los Angeles travel guide in the “Best of the Beach” section.

The photo is one I took of the Santa Monica pier when we were in LA last fall.

I’m proud to have had a photo selected.  I (and hundreds of others) had our Creative Commons licensed photos found on Flickr and were asked to submit them for consideration.

The original image, and all of the other shots I took on that trip are up in my Flickr account.

Warner Brothers Backs Blu-Ray

On Friday executives at Warner Brothers announced that they would be committing to support the Blu-Ray format for HD movies and would be ceasing production of movies in the HD-DVD format at the end of May, 2008.

Though the battle is far from over with technology giants like Intel and Microsoft backing the Toshiba-led HD-DVD format.  Disney and Fox have both committed to the Blu-Ray format.  WB has been producing movies in both formats until now.  With the decision to move to the Blu-Ray format, this tilts the scales in the direction of the Sony-backed format quite significantly, particularly for movies.

One possibility we may see is Blu-Ray being adopted for movies, and HD-DVD being adopted for the video game industry, particularly given Microsoft’s support of the format in it’s XBox 360 console.

Hidden Details in OS X Leopard

I found an interesting bit of hidden text in OS X.  The icon for “TextEdit” actually contains legible text if you can enlarge it enough to read.

This is in addition to the other little “hidden gem”… Those cute kids in Cupertino thought it would be cute to paint every non-mac computer with the Blue Sceen of Death… funny… Cobalt (seen below) is running Ubuntu 7.10…..

I wonder what other hidden gems might be waiting for me… a working flash player perhaps?

Moving In…

Well, I’ve finally made the switch and moved the blog over to its new home at kdmurray.net. The reasons for the switch are mostly personal, and partly practical. Suffice to say I like the new name better, and it’s a much shorter URL. ;)

Please enjoy the new site, let me know what you think, and don’t mind the dust as the tweaking continues over the next while.

For those of you subscribing subscribing to the blog, please use the Feedburner feed: http://feeds.feedburner.com/kdmurray as it will insulate you against silly little things like my changing the domain name. :D

My new Camera

Well, I took the plunge and picked up a DSLR. I chose the Nikon D40x mainly because it fit my hand better than the Canon Rebel XTi.

In my very brief review from the other day, I mentioned that the two cameras carry nearly identical specs, and at the end of the day both of them are going to take excellent pictures.

I’ve posted some of my (very) early efforts up on flickr. Comments welcome. :) As I get more time with the camera I’ll post some more about my experiences with it.