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Month: April 2010

Things I Learned This Week – #17

On a personal note, I learned that people really don’t know that their hacked email account is repeatedly spamming others unless you tell them, that customer service is still a completely alien concept to some businesses, and that before placing it in the washing machine it’s best to check pockets of running gear for MP3 players, headphones and the like… 😮

http://delicious.com/dajbelshaw/TILTW17
(29 bookmarks)

Tech.

  • Google’s ‘satnav killer’, Google Maps Navigation, has been released in the UK. Shame you need to put on an American drawl to use it.
  • I’ve been playing around with NoteSync, a cross-platform, Adobe Air application that syncs with Google Docs. Genius. I give it until the end of the year before Google actually buys it.
  • The video below was the first ever video uploaded to YouTube (5 years ago this week). So now you know. :-p

Productivity & Inspiration

  • Please don’t annoy Seth Godin. Do these 8 things to be more efficient/less annoying to him (and everyone else) when it comes to email.
  • Scott Belsky’s got some grand plans about how to make meetings better. Here’s 7 of the best. 😀

Education & Academic

Data, Design & Infographics

  • A USB flash drive that can dynamically display what it contains? Now there’s a plan…

  • Revisit is a really nice-looking, flexible way to display tweets:

Misc.

Quotations

The wound that bleeds inwardly is the most dangerous. (Proverb)

Three things cannot be long hidden: the sun, the moon, and the truth. (Buddha)

Happiness is not something ready made. It comes from your own actions. (Dalai Lama)

Oh yes, the past can hurt. But, you can either run from it or, learn from it. (The Lion King)

Today is the tomorrow you worried about yesterday. (Dale Carnegie)

Main image CC BY Prabhu_B

My resumé as a London Underground map.

I’ve seen people use a tube map metaphor for their resumé (e.g. here and here) and always wanted to have a go. Here’s my first effort – what do you think? 🙂

(click to enlarge)

I created it using Keynote 09. Feel free to download the file and create your own! :-p

10 things I’ve learned since starting work for JISC

My 'official' JISC photo

I started working for JISC infoNet on 1 April 2010. It’s amazing how two jobs within education – Director of E-Learning and Researcher/Analyst – can be so different. More on that when I compare and contrast them in a future post. :-p

I’ve learned lots of things since joining JISC. Here’s my top ten:

  1. Virtually nothing is done on an ad-hoc basis. Things are planned, documented and rigorously organized.
  2. Despite the above, they’re flexible. Very flexible.
  3. As in any large organization, sometimes the left hand doesn’t talk to the right hand.
  4. “We’ve had a strong steer on this” means “someone insinuated something that I want you to crack on with.”
  5. Microsoft Outlook sucks. And not just a little bit.
  6. There’s a massive push towards openness – not just Open Source but things like Open Access and Open Educational Resources (check out the draft OER infoKit I helped produce!)
  7. JISC is well-funded (well, at the moment anyway…)
  8. Many things that I thought were innovative in schools are standard practice and well-known in the FE and HE sector.
  9. Wikis are by far the best way to organize internal documentation and plan stuff. Really. (JISC infoNet uses PBworks)
  10. Consultants aren’t that bad. In fact, they’re pretty necessary actually.

So there we are; more updates as I learn new stuff. As I mentioned above, once I’ve settled in a bit more I plan to compare and contrast my work in schools with my new role. There’s pros and cons for both. 😉

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