Archive for the ‘Work’ Category

Where Do You Work?

Friday, May 7th, 2010

Recently I’ve seen a few blog posts talking about workspace/office/cubicle creativity, and it has me wondering… Does it matter? Personally, I don’t think people are made to be more creative because of a cool workspace, per se. But I do think that a management attitude that encourages workers to express themselves will be rewarded by increased creativity and innovation.

Here are some examples of creative work environments:

Ogilvy & Mather’s Office (Guangzhou)

via 8 Coolest Office Spaces, Ever on Business Pundit

Google (Mountain View, Zurich)

via Google Office on Fubiz

Facebook (Palo Alto)

via Facebook Office on Fubiz

And here is the office where I work. Well, not my desk, but an example nearby:

Yay.  This is actually one of the nicest office spaces I’ve ever worked at.  Sadly this is probably typical of many corporate offices.

St. Louis Innovation Camp

Sunday, January 10th, 2010

I signed up for this the other day, and wanted to help spread the word. It sounds like an interesting event and a good chance to interact with the local community.

From: Alex Miller
Subject: St. Louis Innovation Camp
Date: 09 January 2010 9:36:23 PM CST

Spreading the word. I posted this a few other places as well…. please spread the word!

I wanted to put some info up here about the upcoming St. Louis Innovation Camp. Brian Blanchard contacted me about this last year and has been working hard at putting the pieces in place. This thing is gonna be awesome.

The idea is to bring together all kinds of people interested in startups – business, marketing, developers, whoever for a weekend focused on building new companies in St. Louis. The event will include a training series, an innovator’s cup for the best ideas, and workshops about how to take an idea and turn it into a company.

The St. Louis Innovation Camp will be held Feb. 26-28th at UMSL and the cost to attend is $50. If you’re interested in sponsoring, speaking, or helping out please drop an email to info@stlinnovationcamp.com. If you want to attend:

Register Now!!

Reflections on MPLS 2009

Monday, December 14th, 2009

It has been well over a month since I attended the MPLS 2009 conference and participated in the panel on Emerging Technologies and Business Architectural Impact, and it is about time (over-due) that I posted my thoughts.

Foremost, I should say Thank You to Monique Morrow for organizing such a great panel and inviting me to participate.  I’ve known Monique as a colleague and friend for a while now, and whenever we have chance to meet she never fails to impress me.  In the context of this panel, I was dumbfounded at the quality and breadth of the other participants that she secured.  Monique moderated the discussion such that the panel’s large size was a benefit rather than liability.  As a panel we managed to cover multiple topics with decent depth, and were each allowed to illustrate our different perspectives.  I’ve been told by several audience members that it was an excellent panel, and from my (admittedly biased) perspective I must agree.

As for the discussion itself, I very much enjoyed participating.  Considering the quality of the other panelists, I am honored to have been included; each of the other panelists are recognizable for their contributions and role in the industry.  Given my respect for the other panelists, I tried to enter the conversation prepared and did not hold back any of my significant thoughts during the discussion… for better or worse.

Some of my comments may have included points that were controversial.  For instance, one theme that ran through the entire discussion was the complex balance of cost vs. capacity vs. features in network devices.  I challenged comments from Vijay Gill (of Google) and Donn Lee (of Facebook) which argued in favor of very-large dumb switches. ("dumb" is my word choice, but I suspect they would agree)  From their perspectives, as engineers for large web properties, they need to scale out single-tenant environments to support Internet-scale traffic loads and a simple L2 or L3 switch would enable their topology.  But, I argued, they were "weird" in their requirements, which are unique to large web properties.  Service providers and enterprise environments need more features in order to deal with the complexity and changing "customer" requirements they face daily.

After the panel I had the opportunity to chat with Vijay and Donn, and they had an interesting view of the cost / capacity / features debate.  Their comments deserve some focus, so look for a future post on this topic.

Another topic was the relevance of standards, which wasn’t particularly controversial but which caused some interesting comments.  My point was that standards are critical to the industry, but in the same way that fundamental research is critical to science and technology (broadly speaking).  We need to put effort into standards because it brings people together and promotes the state of the art.  But we also need to recognize that functioning interoperable implementations are what matter, regardless of the standards conformance, etc.  In other words, standards bodies should work diligently but not take themselves too seriously in the process.

Regardless, I hope to be included in future panels such as this one (at the MPLS conference and/or elsewhere) and I’m glad to have had the opportunity at MPLS 2009.  I would absolutely recommend that you attend future panels by Monique, at MPLS 2010 or otherwise, whether I’m taking part or not. Though, obviously, it would be better with my opinion included. ;)

Participating in MPLS 2009

Saturday, October 24th, 2009

I’ve meant to post something about this before now, but I suppose it’s better late than never…

I’m traveling this weekend to Washington, DC in order to attend the MPLS 2009 conference. Specifically I will be participating in a panel hosted by Monique Morrow entitled Emerging Technologies and Business Architectural Impact. The topic of the panel is described as “Cloud Computing, P2P applications, Social Networking and Infrastructure Required to Scale” and also includes a handful of panelists from other interesting companies, both vendors and service providers.

The program for the technical sessions can be found at http://www.isocore.com/mpls2009/program/technical_sessions.htm.

If you’re in the DC area and want to meet up, please let me know. If you’re going to be attending MPLS 2009 then definitely stop by and say hello after the panel.

Benson’s Sarcastic Quarterly Status Report

Wednesday, October 7th, 2009
  • Took on too many projects and under-estimated LOE for most of them
  • Completed in excess of 20 hrs / week of unplanned, ad-hoc, and escalated work
  • Permanently screwed up my eating and sleep schedule
  • Got pulled into multiple sensitive side-projects, consuming unaccounted-for time
  • Lied to numerous friends and colleagues in order to cover-up sensitive side-projects
  • Tripled the number of gray hairs on my head
  • Spent approximately 15 hrs / week chasing info as a result of poor communication
  • Failed to maintain my already-pathetic exercise regime, gaining 15 lbs
  • Increased email inbox backlog by an order of magnitude
  • Spent 50% of all family events on unplanned conf calls
  • Lost touch with old friends and alienated new friends
  • Failed to make progress on any hobby projects
  • Lost interest in life, considered becoming a hobo, but didn’t have enough energy to follow-through