Entries Tagged as 'How to'

Ham Radio: Analog Persists in a Digital World

“Somehow it makes little sense that amateur ‘ham’ radio continues to thrive in the age of Twitter, Facebook, and iPhones,” writes David Rowan of Wired UK.

More than 700,000 people in the United States alone sit before whistling static-filled radios, homing in on friends, strangers, and the occasional royal, according to Rowan.

Their communication is based on codes of numbers, letters, and etiquette; and it includes exchanges of (paper) postcards between ham radio operators.

Wired provides a how-to page to help aspiring U.S. ham radio communicators get started.

Why Write? Roger Rosenblatt Responds

“Why write?” asked interviewer Jeffrey Brown of author Roger Rosenblatt, author of the new book Unless It Moves The Human Heart: The Craft and Art of Writing.

“We write to make suffering endurable, evil intelligible, justice desirable, and love possible.”

Rosenblatt advises students of writing to “strive for anticipation, rather than surprise, imagination, rather than invention,… and to write with precision and restraint.”

Read the transcript or watch the video of this interview on PBS Newshour, January 31, 2011.

Thanks for the pointer, MC.

Tech Gear to Carry on Your Travels

San Francisco Chronicle travel editor Spud Hilton lists the many gadgets he packs for audio, video, communications, Wi-Fi, and emergencies on the road.

The article is in three parts, with listings of essentials, optional but important gear, and high-tech gadgets for the “gear junkie.”

Perhaps the most interesting item on the list is one that doesn’t require electricity: a small roll of gaffer tape: “Easier to work with than duct tape, and has saved me in dozens of situations.”

Source

Spud Hilton, Gadget Junkies Love to Take Technology on Trips (published on paper as “Gadget Junkies Taking It Along”), San Francisco Chronicle, Nov. 10, 2010.

Tech Volunteer Opportunities

Many people want to do something that will benefit others. The open-source software movement has been one avenue for the technologically inclined.

Alejandro Martínez-Cabrera wrote a recent article about three organizations that give people another way to help: the Extraordinaries, Philoptima, and Ushahidi.

“Platforms that use crowdsourcing principles are experiments in using technology to effectively engage people and channel their interests into a cause,” he writes.

Source

Alejandro Martínez-Cabrera, Networks Direct Volunteers to Micro Gigs, San Francisco Chronicle, Aug. 28, 2010; printed in hard copy as “Tapping into Brainpower.”

Related Posts

Kiva.org: Microlending Around the World
Open Source Living: Archive, Community, Source

Using Twitter for Career Networking

Charles Purdy provides seven steps for using Twitter in your job search.

Related Posts

Tamar Weinberg, The Ultimate Social Media Etiquette Handbook
Three Ways to Network Without Getting Sweaty Palms

Now You’re Stylin’

The May 2010 issue of the Editcetera newsletter mentions the onlinestylebooks.com site, where you can research style decisions from more than 50 style manuals.

Thanks to the people at Copyediting.com for the recommendation.

Hey, What Are You Looking At?

The latest issue of Jakob Nielsen’s Alertbox newsletter is about how users read on the Web, whether they scroll down pages, and what kind of attention they pay to particular page elements.

Take a look at the graphics under the heading “Scrolling Behaviors” that show readers’ attention, captured through eye-tracking technology, and particularly at the “gaze plots.”

Note that the final paragraph of the text-heavy Amazon.com page on the left gets a lot of concentrated attention. That shouldn’t happen, if it’s true that people don’t like to scroll down to read long chunks of text on the Web.

Nielsen does not say which of the three pages in that graphic got readers to buy the item(s) in question, rather than just to browse pages about them. That would be even more interesting.

Source

Scrolling and Attention, Jakob Nielsen’s Alertbox, March 22, 2010.

William Zinsser: Writing English as a Second Language

William Zinsser, author of On Writing Well and other wonderful how-to books, tells international students at Columbia University: “As you start your journey…, you may tell yourself that you’re doing ‘communications,’ or ‘new media,’ or ‘digital media’ or some other fashionable new form. But ultimately you’re in the storytelling business.”

Source

William Zinsser, Writing English as a Second Language, The American Scholar, Winter 2010.

Three Steps to Success

Everyone defines success differently, and everyone will get there in his or her own way. How do you define success for yourself? Is it a matter of dollars and cents? Or does it mean some combination of time, money, relationships, and the ability to do work that makes you feel useful and valuable?

Here’s one path that has proved successful for me in several different contexts:

  1. Observe
  2. Connect
  3. Share

1. Observe

When you enter a new situation, whether it’s a social occasion, a job, an online discussion group, or something else, what do you see? Observe the people around you, the ways they do and don’t interact.

How do you feel here? If you’re uncomfortable, is your reaction based on simple fear, or on a sense that the enterprise you’re joining may prove more difficult than you already know how to handle? If the latter, is this a direction in which you want to stretch and grow?

If so, don’t give up on yourself so easily. Stick around and let that stretching happen.

2. Connect

Once you’ve observed, it’s time to connect the dots. What conversations are taking place? Which ones are not interesting for you? Move toward the ones that draw you.

If there are people whose voices and opinions you listen for, move toward them. If the occasion arises, introduce yourself.

Don’t be upset if people don’t respond warmly to you right away. Some will respond like a puppy in springtime, others like a walrus protecting its rock in the surf. You can learn a lot from either type of person, even if the other’s style is the opposite of yours.

Any new relationship takes time.

3. Share

You have something to share, just like everyone else in the group. Perhaps it’s a question that you need answered, some piece of knowledge that you see the others don’t have, or a service that you can provide.

If you stick around and observe, you’ll find a need that you can help fill. Trust that if you find others in the group interesting, someone may find your contribution interesting as well.

Think of your participation as a long-term effort, a way to move closer to the things about this group or gathering that drew you in the first place.

Parting Thoughts

There’s no one way to be successful, but if you know what you’re looking for, this may be a path to finding it. Success is within your reach.

Related Posts

Three Ways to Network Without Getting Sweaty Palms
Getting Things Done: Report on a Workshop

Getting Things Done: Report on a Workshop

These are my notes from a one-day workshop I took in December 2008, courtesy of Sun Microsystems. Many of the suggestions noted here have proved useful in my day-to-day work. Perhaps they will be useful for you as well.

In the workshop “Getting Things Done: Mastering Workflow,” instructor Chris McIntyre began by asking attendees two questions:

  • How productive are you, on a scale from 1 to 10, with 1 as unproductive and 10 as a productive fireball?
  • If you rated yourself at less than 10, what keeps you from doing better?

Surprisingly enough, almost everyone in the room of 20 people rated him- or herself at 7: quite productive, but with room for improvement.

Using the David Allen Company‘s approach, Chris introduced us to some new definitions and concepts.

First, he defined the term work as “anything that needs to be different than it is now.”

Second, he included in that definition things that most of us usually classify as belonging more in the personal category, not work: picking up milk on the way home, calling the dentist for an appointment, and so on.

He classified all of us in the room (all Sun employees) as “knowledge workers,” to use Peter Drucker‘s phrase, not the “makers and movers” (or industrial workers) of previous decades. For a knowledge worker, 80 percent of the job is undefined. You get a directive, then figure out the process: You analyze the parts of the task, define its starting and ending points, and produce.

Knowledge workers also use tools that allow them to move fluidly between work and home, sometimes blurring the lines. Anyone who’s checked that work email account one last time 10 minutes before going to bed and then spent an hour at the computer dealing with it knows about this.

The David Allen company has come up with a five-step process to help knowledge workers get things done (GTD):

  1. Collect
  2. Process
  3. Organize
  4. Review
  5. Do

1. Collect

Collect the to-do or tasks list not in your mind but in some physical place, whether on your paper planner or computer. According to studies, Chris told us, the human mind can hold only 7 items in short-term memory. Typically, when we try to hold any more in there, something else drops out. (“Oops, I forgot to buy milk.”) Even if you pride yourself on your memory, “If it’s in your mind, it’s in the wrong place.”

Chris suggested you get an inbox, a physical box or folder that goes on your desk. Put into it your mail, your grocery list, anything that is occupying mental space and needs to be dealt with. Too many of us just stack things up and then look at the stack only later in a panic. Create a single place to collect the paper that comes in.

Every 24 to 48 hours, process whatever is in the inbox. File the pieces of paper; pay the bills; send off your expense report; put your used event tickets in the scrapbook or the recycling bin. Deal with the incoming stuff on a regular basis. Stop creating stacks of paper on top of stacks, then panicking when you need to find something in a hurry. As Chris put it, “The best practice is to do it when it shows up. The worst practice is to do it when it blows up.” You become addicted to crises and consider yourself productive only when you respond to a crisis. This is exhausting and leads to burnout.

People collect their information in multiple ways, so choose what’s best for you: a physical inbox or folder, paper journals or pads, electronic notes, voicemail, email, dictation tools, jott.com. Whatever you use, go through and deal with the incoming stuff within 48 hours. Read the email all the way through if needed, respond if needed, then delete. Decide what you need to do with your paper note, do what you need to do with the task, and recycle the note. And so on.

The aim is to get the inbox to empty every 24 to 48 hours.

As you work in the coming week, notice when you get to feeling productive. Note what you did to get there, and try to repeat that series of steps. You’ll likely find that you’re at your most productive when you’re relaxing into your work, doing what you know best how to do.

2. Process

Ask yourself these questions as you process a given project:

  • What is the desired outcome of the project? What does done look like?
  • What is the next action that I can take to get just one step closer to done?

Chris defines the term project as anything that takes more than one step. If the project is having a dental checkup, step 1 might be to call for an appointment, step 2 to get to the dentist’s office. If the project is to create a new software application, step 1 may be meeting with the client or manager to figure out the endpoint.

Chris’s point is that in many cases, we need to figure out only one next action. We don’t have to plot out every step of the project before we dive in and get something done. We waste a lot of time freaking ourselves out about all that we cannot get done because someone else owns the next step or is causing a delay. Just work on taking the one step with the part of the project that you can control.

Once you have the answers to those two questions — What is the desired outcome? What is the next action that I can take? — put the answers in a system you trust, whether that’s on your computer or in your planner. Follow this two-step process over and over with every project: Decide and move.

3. Organize

Chris recommended the Mozilla Firefox add-on Lightning as a great way for people in an email-rich company culture to organize tasks. Lightning adds customizable Calendar and Tasks windows to the Mozilla Thunderbird email client.

The Lightning calendar function allows you to track three things: time-specific actions (“meet w/ Gordon at 5″), day-specific actions (“review presentation on Thurs.”), and day-specific information (holiday, colleague’s birthday). The Tasks function allows you to track the tasks that you need to get done, due date and time, and status.

Chris showed us the categories he uses to track his tasks:

  • Agendas: agendas for upcoming meetings
  • Anywhere (remote): clerical tasks that he can do anywhere (make lists, type up notes, etc.)
  • Computer: research to do online
  • Errands: anything that requires going to another space
  • Home: to-do list for home or personal tasks
  • Office: work for David Allen company and clients
  • Waiting for: project in process, his next step waiting for someone else to complete theirs

Not too surprisingly, the “Waiting for” category had the most items under it.

I’ve started to use these tools and am finding them useful. For instance, Lightning has an electronic nag feature that tells me how many hours I have left to get something done and then how far behind I am with it. If you’re like me and need that kind of nudge, this can be very useful.

For email management, Chris suggested first using the 2-minute rule: If you can take care of any email in 2 minutes, process the 2-minute mails first.

Next, sort emails by date, by subject, or by sender. He’s created 2 folders in his inbox, Action and Waiting for, and he drops any emails that he needs to hold on to into those categories. He also has a Reference or Archive folder, in which he files any nonactionable mails that he’ll need to keep track of, typically ones he’s CC’d on. He freely uses the Delete key.

Read an email, process it, and delete it if there’s nothing actionable in it for you. Decide and move on.

If you like keeping paper files, he suggested the following categories for folders:

  • Inbox: process every 24 to 48 hours
  • To Home
  • To Office
  • Bills
  • To Be Filed
  • Action Support: for example, receipts for which you’re going to file an expense report
  • Read and Review: articles, presentations, etc. to read later

4. Review

To get the most out of this system, you have to monitor how it’s working for you and make sure to keep up with it. If you fall behind, you’re likely to go back to old habits and stress out your short-term memory. The system only works if you continue to use it, and that requires taking time to regroup and readjust. The David Allen folks recommend that you do a weekly review at a time that’s convenient, perhaps Fridays after lunch.

In the review, ask yourself:

  • What do you look at in all this and when?
  • What do you need to do, how often, to ensure that this works as a consistent system, freeing you up to think and manage at a higher level?

5. Do

Use the processes outlined here to get things done. They work only if you keep up with them.

Parting Words

Here are a few nuggets of wisdom I picked up:

  • 2-minute rule: If you can respond to someone and get a task done in 2 minutes, do it right away.
  • If you’re saying yes to every project on the job, you’re probably saying no to something at home.
  • Procrastination takes a lot of mental energy and diminishes the limited time you already have. Decide whether to do the task or not. Focus on the desired outcome and decide the one next action needed.

You can find more details about this process in the book Getting Things Done: The Art of Stress-Free Productivity, by David Allen.

Legal Guide for Bloggers

In a recent short article, James Temple of the San Francisco Chronicle gave a pointer to Bloggers’ Legal Guide, published by the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF). The EFF bills itself as “the leading civil liberties group defending your rights in the digital world.”

Source

James Temple, The Tech Chronicles: “Skank Case” Precedent Worries Privacy Groups, San Francisco Chronicle, August 20, 2009.

Ars Technica: Facebook Privacy

Jacqui Cheng has written Facebook Privacy: A Guide, with detailed instructions and screenshots for how to limit who sees what in your Facebook postings and profile.

Here’s the article teaser: “Facebook has decent privacy controls, but most users don’t realize how to take full advantage of them. Ars guides you through Facebook’s privacy settings so that you can be both social and respectable at the same time.”

Source

Jacqui Cheng, Facebook Privacy: A Guide, from Ars Technica, August 14, 2009.

Reading for a Living: How to Get Into Freelance Editing

Here are some suggestions that I’ve put together over the years for friends of friends who’ve asked how to get into freelance editing.

Get Ready

Before I became a freelance editor in 1998, I got ready:

After six months, I had enough freelance work that I gave up the part-time job and went freelance full-time. I also promised myself that I would quit freelancing after 12 months if I couldn’t meet my own goal of minimum annual income: the net pay that I’d received at the last full-time job.

What to Expect

As an editor, if you can specialize in math, law, or the sciences, anything other than the liberal arts, you can make a good living. In the liberal arts, you can make a decent living. Publishers — especially academic, legal, and medical publishers — are still in business despite the bad economy. And students will always need help with their papers and dissertations.

From 1998 to 2006, my clients for freelance work included publishing companies, government agencies, individuals, and high-tech companies. I did most of my work for them in Microsoft Word or plain text, sending files back and forth by email and occasionally shipping manuscripts by FedEx or UPS.

One thing I tell people about editing is that it’s solitary work. If being alone with your computer for six to nine hours a day doesn’t sound appealing, this may not be the line for you.

Do Your Research

Begin by looking at the Bay Area Editors’ Forum site and in particular at the definitions of kinds of editing. A developmental editor, for example, helps writers work out what they want to write and how they approach it. A copy editor (like me) works with what the author has already written and tightens up the prose, fixes punctuation, and makes queries about sections that may need rewriting. And there are other types of editors.

A good book to look at is Careers for Writers and Others Who Have a Way with Words, by Robert W. Bly. It has chapters on book publishing, newspaper work, advertising, and other fields, as well as a chapter on freelancing. Each chapter has a section of very good resources.

If you think you’d like to work at copyediting, I highly recommend a correspondence course offered through Editcetera: The ABCs of Copyediting. Teacher Amy Einsohn is careful and patient and has many years’ experience at both editing and teaching. I took this course after freelancing for several years and was amazed at how much I didn’t know. (Note to clients from before that time: I’m very sorry.) She’s also written a terrific book, The Copyeditor’s Handbook: A Guide for Book Publishing and Corporate Communications.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture Graduate School offers distance-learning courses in editing and other publishing duties, as well as in other fields.

You might also want to sign up as a subscriber to copyediting-L, a listserv for copy editors. It’s a very high-volume list (even digests come three and four times a day), so I look at it only on the Web. One fellow editor uses her email program’s message filters to save each day’s messages into a folder, to read later. (Did I mention that honing your computer skills in at least Microsoft Word and a good email program is essential? It is.) The copyediting-L list has thousands of subscribers around the world, and many are very generous with answers if you ask a question.

If you need a few more resources, just search on editing on your favorite search engine.

A great business resource is Working Solo, by Terri Lonier. I found it invaluable for figuring out all kinds of things, from whether to buy a fax machine to how to learn from more experienced people and give them something back. Another useful book is Small-Time Business Operator, by Bernard Kamaroff, CPA. A small business has quirky requirements, and these books can help you figure out how to think about them.

If you’re nervous about making the leap from a regular job to freelance work, you might like the exercises in the book Feel the Fear and Do It Anyway, by Susan Jeffers. The book was a great help to me.

Parting Thoughts

The freelance life can provide you with some freedom and a type of satisfaction that may be difficult to get anywhere else. When you do a freelance job well and get positive comments from clients, you can feel on top of the world. But when a freelance job does not turn out as well as you or, worse, the client had hoped, that is your signal to examine what went wrong and strive to do better on the next job.

I left freelance work in 2006 when this high-tech company offered me a full-time position as a technical editor. But it’s good to know that I will always have the possibility of freelance work if the company’s fortunes change or if I feel the need to do something different.

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Three Ways to Network Without Getting Sweaty Palms

Three Ways to Network Without Getting Sweaty Palms

You read about an event nearby for people with your interest — be it environmental, professional, social, or political — and you show up for the event because you know you have to network.

When you arrive, the room is filled with people who seem to know each other: talking animatedly, getting food and drink, exchanging business cards. Your palms are getting sweaty. How are you going to break in? Are you really the only one here who knows no one else in the room?

Of course not. If they knew each other, no one would need to exchange those business cards.

Networking is a necessity in our time. Even people with full-time jobs need a Plan B for when the company decides to lay off 50 or 5,000 people. And if you want to switch to a different company or a whole new career, you can benefit from knowing someone who can help you cross that bridge.

How do you break in and become one of the people who seem to be networking with ease? Here are three easy ways to network without getting sweaty palms.

Volunteer to Help

Someone has to find a location for the next group event. Someone has to put out the food and drink. Someone else has to refresh the group’s web site, send out press releases, or write and publish the newsletter. That person could be you. Most organizations are more than happy to welcome another pair of hands, so you can make one good contact by offering your services. And that contact will lead to others, in a way that is less intimidating and less artificial.

Which is easier, volunteering to help with an event or walking up to strangers to introduce yourself with your elevator pitch, while juggling your business cards and your plate of raw carrots and hummus?

The downside: Don’t become so valuable as a volunteer that you can’t break away when your volunteering begins to take more time and energy than it is giving you. You’ll know it’s time to go when you find yourself resenting the very people that you meant to help. That resentment can be apparent, no matter how you school yourself.

Use the Internet

Join email groups such as Yahoo Groups, Google Groups, and other electronic mailing lists for your interest. Track down Facebook, MySpace, LinkedIn, and other social-media pages that will get you involved in the conversations and the communities that you want to participate in. Tamar Weinberg’s Ultimate Social Media Etiquette Handbook has tips on how to use these tools and others.

Lurk for a while and observe the group members’ behavior: Is the style of engagement casual or formal? What topics do people not discuss? Is there a particular political bent?

Introduce yourself to the group online. Add a tag line to your email signature or social-media page that gives your contact info and a one-line summary of what you do: perhaps “Human resources manager,” “Award-winning developer,” or “Pastry chef.” Some people add a slogan: “Creating the finest pastries west of Paris.” Showing a little personality is good, but avoid being too clever. It’s easy to appear self-absorbed.

The downside: You leave an electronic trail of your thoughts, feelings, and attitude toward life. If you act like an idiot on the Internet, someone — and maybe many people — will know that you have. If you’re lucky, someone will tell you about it, and you can either delete the offending post or apologize publicly — or both. (Note: Thank them for calling this to your attention. They have done you a favor, though gratitude may not be your initial response.)

Assume that nothing that you do on the Web is private: Emails can be forwarded and are stored for years in groups; people may remember your name in entirely the wrong light (“Hmmph, some editor, she can’t even spell…”); a search engine can store or cache the web page that you deleted. No privacy setting can assure that your slip-ups don’t travel the world. The Internet is a megaphone. What you say into the mouthpiece will carry.

Do a Good Job Where You Are Now

Build good will, share resources, offer to help. Assume that others you work with are doing the best they can. If you can help them look good, you will look good as well. And if your colleague compliments you on the quality of your work, ask him or her to tell your manager about your good work.

A wise person once said that you should always treat well the people that you meet on your way up the career ladder, because you are likely to meet them again on your way back down. You never know who will help you get that next job.

The downside: Some people will respond to your attempts to help with coldness or suspicion. Check with a trusted colleague to see whether your perceptions are justified: Is this person behaving badly toward you in particular, or is he or she being disagreeable because of a chronically ill partner or child at home? Context is everything.

Monitor how much you help others, and make sure that you continue to fulfill your core functions to the best of your ability. Don’t spread yourself too thin.

See you at the next event, my friend.

Related Posts

Tamar Weinberg, The Ultimate Social Media Etiquette Handbook
Jakob Nielsen’s Alertbox: Write for Reuse
Three Steps to Success

Jakob Nielsen’s Alertbox: Write for Reuse

Usability expert Jakob Nielsen says that readers often find web sites in ways that the writer may not have planned for — through search engines, for example, or links on sites that the writer may not be aware of. How will you write content that can be useful for unknown contexts and unknown users? Read the article.