Saturday, November 19, 2011

Prezumés

For our latest group project, our team decided to use an online presentation tool, Prezi. Prezi is a great alternative to PowerPoint. Our team especially enjoyed utilizing Prezi's collaborative meeting tools.

If you haven't seen or used Prezi, you should check it out. Prezi is not just an online powerpoint, but a completely different way of engaging with your audience.

One of my favorite ways that peope are using Prezi is to post an online Prezumé. Prezumés are a great way to visually present yourself to potential employers. Not only can you list your experience and skills, you can visually show some of your accomplishments--especially great for graphic artists!

Check out how some people are creating there Prezumés.

Friday, November 11, 2011

Snow Shovels

I'm still hurting from the snow shoveling from the last two years. To prepare for the next "worst winter ever", I'm researching my options for snow removal. Check out a few of my favorites:

This beast from Grivel combines the agility of lightweight plastic with the raw ice-breaking power of steel. Verdict: I'll hurt myself.

The Wovel is certainly innovative--but it comes at a price ($150). Verdict: Not manly enough. Too expensive.

The Rolling Shovel sounds too good to be true. Look at that HUGE mountain of snow she's rolling away without even breaking a sweat. Verdict: Yeah, right.

Now we're talking!!! The geniuses at RP Innovations said to hell with manual labor! Enter--the PlowBoat. Why not plow snow from the warmth of your home while sipping a nice hot cup of coffee? Verdict: I'll break it like every other RC toy I've ever owned :(

Who doesn't need a 4WD V8 snowblower? This monster will make short work of my driveway AND my entire street! Verdict: I don't want the EPA paying me any special visits.


Who am I kidding? I already know how my snow is getting plowed this year. Verdict: Another year of back-breaking work.






Friday, November 4, 2011

(Fun) Infographics


I love how the internet has changed how I process data. I like to know a little about a lot--and I sure do know a little!

One of my favorite ways to process and learn data quickly are the ever-popular infographics.

Infographics are essentially graphics used to demonstrate a point or concept. Graphs are always much more appealing to me than spreadsheets. Think: poster--but zoomable and clickable=fun! The infographic above from Lifehacker nearly convinced me to move closer to work.




One of the web's greatest sources of infographics is theoatmeal. Check out their great infographic on how to use a semi-colon. I laugh out loud, but actually learn something too.


Finally, one of the most fascinating infographics I've seen comes from deathandtaxesposter. This clever graphic depicts how our federal tax dollars are allocated. The sizes of each icon (DoD is the biggest) are in proportion to the percentage of tax dollars they receive.


Saturday, October 22, 2011

Clever definition of innovation

I met with Art Hurtado, CEO of Invertix, this week and he gave me a
great definition of innovation: creativity + a sale. What a
fantastically simple, catch-all definition.

Friday, October 21, 2011

No Porn Here

Was brainstorming innovative ideas on how to get more traffic to my blog and
found this nifty "adult" option to enable under Blogger settings.

What better way to generate page views than to offer porn?

I don't suppose this tactic will work with a class of IT grad students. . .

Email Posting

I finally spent the five minutes (tops) required to enable posting to
Blogger via email. Email posts are missing all the glitz of graphics,
but for quick easy postos, it's the way to go.

To enable the feature:
1) Log in to blogger
2) Under Settings, choose "Email and Mobile"
3) Choose a secret email address under posting options
4) Any emails sent to this new address will become blog posts.
Subject line is the post title and the email body is post content.

Happy posting!

Friday, October 7, 2011

Government funded innovation

It's interesting how many innovative gadgets began life in a military laboratory. GPS and the Internet are obvious examples, but the T-Shirt? This wired article touches on many well-known gadgets whose roots were in the military. Often, as is the case with innovation, these gadgets were invented for purposes entirely different than what they are used for today. What's more innovative: inventing a new way to track satellites, or realizing that the tracking technology has commercial navigational purposes (GPS)? Each of these innovations show that innovators aren't necessarily inventors-sometimes they just make good things great.