Archive - September, 2007

When off is not really ‘off’

definitions of ‘off’:
1. to a state of discontinuance or suspension [turn off an engine]
2. out of operation or effective existence

This has always bothered me. I turn my television off, yet the red light stays on. I turn ‘off’ my PDA, but always wonder is it really off? If the alarm is set then when you turn it off it says “turning off till xx time”. It can’t be ‘off’ or it would not be able to turn itself on.

I think that off should be off. And I’d even go so far as to make it a legal requirement. When a device is in ‘off’ mode then it is truly off — not processing, not checking for updates, off. Just as if the battery is removed. If this is not the case, then don’t call it off, call it ‘sleeping’ or ‘in standby’ or ‘power save’. Off in these cases is wrong and mis-leading. I’ve heard the arguments that systems keep time, TV needs to be on to accept commands from the remote control and other similar arguments so it can’t truly be ‘off’. I’m o.k. with that. Just don’t call it ‘off’. It’s not off.

The new apple iPhone when it is ‘off’, still performs syncing with your e-mail as this person found out when they received a $4800.00 bill from AT&T.

http://theinquirer.net/?article=42235

Personal LinkedIn Policy


Recently, I have been getting requests from people that do not know me to add them to my LinkedIn profile. Although I am pleased that people are interested in connecting with me, many times I do not know these people. In most of these cases, I expect they do not know me and have never met me, but are sending out connection requests based on some criteria that my profile has matched on. I haven’t investigated this, and do not intend to.

As a personal policy, I do not add people to my LinkedIn profile that I have not personally met and worked with. This isn’t just meeting at a conference once or twice, or one or two e-mail conversations. I want to be able to be able to comment on the personality and work of the people on that list. For me it is not an address book of my contacts (I have a contact manager for that), but rather a subset of contacts, that are individuals I have worked with either on projects, research or know very well personally.

Please understand, I am not trying to be difficult or unfriendly, but I always want to be able to know the people on my LinkedIn profile with a good degree of confidence and understanding.

Page 2 of 2«12