Posts Tagged ‘review’

Baby netbook: Advent 4213 – 1st impressions

Monday, March 16th, 2009

 

I bought this Advent 4213 on Friday.  It is one of the latest crop of netbooks on the market.  You may recall that I bought the baby that started this trend, the Asus eeepc 701over a year ago.  I thought at the time it was revolutionary, and so much so that they now account for 10% of the market.  This is one of those bits of technology that has the power to change how we work.

It uses the Intel Atom processor (as most of them do now), has a 160 gb hard drive and 1 gb of ram, with a 10″ screen, and uses windows XP.  This means it is a real little laptop, but only weighs 1.4kg.  That is double the weight of the Asus, but I’ll take that trade for sake of the bigger screen.  Also the windows software takes it out of the geek-sphere into computing that I can customise.  I have every application on it that I need, and I’ll be interested to see if it means I no longer use a ‘real’ laptop. 

It is early days yet and I have only just set it all up.  It’s secret weapon is the built in 3g modem that allows you to access internet anywhere.  You can also ‘tether’ it to your mobile phone too via Bluetooth.

So far I am impressed and if you are clever you can pick one up very reasonably (between ?220-280).  This is a clone of the market leading MSI Wind but sells at ?30-50 cheaper for basically the same machine.

Watch this space for real-life field tests!

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The Five Step plan to …

Wednesday, March 4th, 2009

If you google “five steps” you’ll find recipes for fight stressing, finding happiness, getting fit, staying sane and an even great sex!  We seem to live in a culture where increasingly people expect this kind of thing.  I have to say, this seems to be one of the less desirable imports from the US.  It seems to offer such  assurance; it says “These people know what they are doing!”  The other day, I was listening to a reported conversation of someone who had been of a course which would now allow them to go straight to the root of their clients woes.  I can almost guarantee that in a year’s time their teacher will have yet another ‘new improved’ module available which willkill all known germs.

In my experience, life and business are a journey.   Like all journeys one can only see to the next bend in the road.  There are always surprises, both good and bad; there are always things one can not control.  It is oft quoted in military circles that “No plan survives contact with the enemy”, and this is certainly true.  Does this mean that you needn’t plan?  Of course not!  What you do need is a system that frequently reviews if you are on track and if you need to change.  It is often helpful to have someone to talk things through with who can offer a different perspective, hence the rise in popularity of coaches and mentors.

“When it is obvious that the goals cannot be reached, don’t adjust the goals, adjust the action steps.”   Confucius

“It is important to expect nothing, to take every experience, including the negative ones, as merely steps on the path, and to proceed.”   Ram Dass

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Wall Street Crash

Monday, September 22nd, 2008

The recent mayhem on Wall St with the nationalisation of Fannie Mae and Freddy Mac, the crash of Lehman Bros and AIG, are all examples of business change in its most radical, most mordant form.  If you loose sight of the basics about how you add value to your customers and create real wealth rather than paper profits, then sooner or later, people are going to wise up and call your ‘markers’. 

A wise business reviews what it is doing and why it is doing it on a regular basis.  It is important to make the time to question what is being done and challenge established ideas.  It is often helpful to involve outsiders in these sessions to bring in some fresh thinking.

Change is really unavoidable, if you aren’t driving it then the chances are, sooner or later, you’ll end up with its tyre tracks down your back….

“The dogmas of the quiet past are inadequate to the stormy present. The occasion is piled high with difficulty, and we must rise with the occasion. As our case is new, so we must think anew and act anew.” Abraham Lincoln