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Gryphon's Grumbles

Observations on reality as I see it. Your mileage *will* vary.

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Name:Bill Kubeck
Location:Wilton, New Hampshire, United States

Full-time husband, part-time philospher, occasional poet and writer. Oh, yes, and I have a day job.

Sunday, July 16, 2006

Rewriting my resume – and my life

I'm rewriting my resume in a way that reflects the profound change in my outlook about livelihood. I've finally figured out what matters to me, and I'm putting that at the top of the page. It's all about the people, you see.

I've been looking at my current job and thinking about what I like and don't like about it. I realized that I get the most satisfaction from helping people grow. My team isn't very big, but it's good. That's partly because I had good material to work with, but partly because I've worked very hard to give them every chance and every resource to become great at what they do. I try to teach and encourage at every opportunity, and it shows.
That pleases me. I feel like I've made a difference there. That matters more than the cool machines I get to run and the fascinating engineering behind it all. I see happy people doing a good job, and that makes me feel better than anything else I've ever done.
So that's the new focus. I don't really care what industry I work in or what line of work I do. I just want my purpose to be guiding a group of talented people to do more than they realized they could.
-= Gryphon =-

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Saturday, July 01, 2006

Admin post - ignore

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Sunday, June 11, 2006

This blog has moved

All posts from this blog have been merged into my new WordPress blog, "Gryphon 2.0 Beta." See you there !

-= Gryphon =-

Sunday, January 01, 2006

Setting a course for the New Year


I don't do New Year's resolutions in the normal sense because I make resolutions as I need to throughout the year. Nonetheless, New Year's Day is an excellent time to pause, take stock, and think about broad goals for the coming year.

One old tradition says that on New Years Day you should be sure to do a little of anything you want to be a regular part of your life in the coming year. I'm working on that today and here's the current list:

* I will write in my journal.
* I will write or edit some creative piece.
* I will post a blog entry.
* I will work on the budget and bookkeeping.
* I will clean up and organize my room in some small but definite way.
* I will clean up and organize the rest of the house in some small but definite way.
* I will think about the energy flow and workflow in our home, especially in my room, and plan changes to improve that.

I've kept the goals small so I can be sure to get them all done today. I've already written in my journal and you're looking at the blog post right now. I'll probably rummage through my slush pile and pick an essay to work on next. Later today, I'll go over my list again and make sure it really has everything on it that needs to be there.

Life is a continuous process and plans must change, so any choice of markers is arbitrary. But we need to make plans and set goals. To me, New Year's Day feels like a threshold, so this is where I will set my course for the next year.

-= Gryphon =-

Thursday, November 24, 2005

Technology is great when it works


We had an interesting experience with our DSL connection this week. That’s interesting as in the old Chinese curse “May you live in an interesting time.” The whole episode demonstrated a few essential concepts about technology and the risks and benefits of depending on it. Here’s the story:

Our DSL connection pooped out Tuesday morning. There was no warning; it just died. I found out about this when Folkcat called out to me that “the network died.” Now I know when she say this that she doesn’t mean the local network. She’s telling me she can’t get on the Web.

I verified that in fact we could not go anywhere on the Web. I unplugged the DSL modem for a minute, then plugged it back in. No joy there. I did it again. Still no connection. “Houston, I think we have a problem.”

I looked up the number for Tech Support and called. Despite “unusually high call volume” I waited on hold for no more than about 5-10 minutes. I explained my problem to the support person.

The good news is that the support techs for our ISP (TDS Internet Services) are all quite capable of distinguishing their elbows from other well-known body parts, and are quite professional. The bad news is that they have to follow their scripts, even when they figure out that you know as much about the business as they do. The end result was 30 minutes of walking through “Is it plugged in?” questions with a tech who was just as happy as I was when we decided that the modem had just died.

Okay, fine. He issued a trouble ticket that requested a new modem. I went down to the local office (which is about two blocks away from where we live) in the pouring rain and gave them the ticket number. I got a new modem. Problem solved, I think to myself.

Well, maybe not. I plugged in the new modem, configured it, and it still won’t connect. Damn. I try all the obvious things and call Tech Support again. I get a different tech, but no problem. I give her the original ticket number and she can see everything the first tech tried.

She tries other things. No luck. We still can’t connect. It looks like the DSL modem is physically connecting, but falling on its ass when it tries to confirm the user name and password. After about 20 minutes of pushing every button she can, the tech concludes that the replacement isn’t working and orders a replacement replacement modem.

It is still raining cats and dogs. I drench myself again to the local office. They don’t have another modem of the same model, so they try to call the field office at the other end of the street. No one is in. Not surprising. These guys spend the day on the road fixing and installing stuff. Okay. I leave my cell phone number and get a promise that a tech will call me. Sounds good.

About 4PM, I’m at work and my phone beeps to tell me I have a message. Goody, I think. It’s the guy from TDS calling to arrange the delivery of the new modem. NOT! It’s Folkcat, calling to tell me that she heard a voice in my office and realized it was someone leaving a message on the answering machine for the home phone we never use. It was the TDS tech, calling on the number we told them NOT to call, telling us that they had tested the first modem we returned, found it perfectly fine, and asking what they could do to help.

Folkcat was pissed off and so was I. I was expecting to hear that the new modem had been dropped off so I could hook it up overnight, and now we’re stuck until the next day. I decided that I’d just walk down to the field office in the morning and work something out. That meant dealing with Folkcat’s bad mood about the whole mess, but it was all I could do.

I walked down to the field office as soon as I was up and dressed Wednesday morning. I got lucky and caught nearly the whole bunch of them in the office. I explained my problem, and they pounced on it, with one taking the lead and the others providing support. It was impressive to watch. In less than ten minutes, the lead guy had decided what he needed to do to solve my problem, and told me he’d go into the switch building to do that as soon as he dealt with something else. I confirmed my cell phone number to him and left so they could all get to work.

Less than an hour later, the tech called my cell and told me he has solved the problem. He confirmed that I was at home and walked a new modem up to my apartment. I promised to check it out right way. I plugged in the modem, configured it, and it worked. The tech called about 15 minutes later from the road, and I was able to give him the good news.

So what was wrong? The port needed to be reset. Somehow, a setting had changed itself and screwed up my ability to connect. Now the remote tech in Madison was able to reset the port, but only through software. That was like pressing CTRL-ALT-DEL in Windows. The local tech physically unplugged that port card, waited a minute, then plugged it back in. Whatever was wrong in the port card had to be cleared by a “hard” reset, and that’s something you have to do in person.

This experience clarified a few truths about DSL connections, and technology in general, at least in our town:

  • The centralized tech support works amazingly well. The techs in Madison, WI were able to figure out a lot about my situation and do a lot by pushing buttons on their computers. They are also online 24/7, which local techs can’t be.
  • The centralized tech support can’t do everything. The problem was finally solved by local techs with local knowledge going into the local equipment rack and physically resetting an interface card. Nobody on the far end of a wire will ever be able to do that.
  • Fast Internet connections are a modern necessity. Losing our fast connection drove home just how much we use it. It hit Folkcat a lot harder than it hit me, because my daily work doesn’t require always-on net access. But she could hardly make a move all day without tripping over the fact that she had very limited access to the ‘Net.
  • We don’t know how good we have it until it’s gone. We were able to connect using a dialup connection while the DSL was out. We got 52K-56K connections, and they were painfully slow by comparison to the DSL. They were, in fact, so slow as to be pretty much unusable. I remember when a 56K connection felt like faster-than-light travel. Now that we have a DSL line that almost as fast as a T1, any dialup is like crawling. If nothing else, this fiasco has made me appreciate just what we get for $30 a month.
It’s rather scary, actually. The DSL connection costs less each month than our other utilities, but in subtle and critical ways, we need it more urgently than we need the others. If I had to make hard choices, the ‘Net connection would probably rate up there right behind the electricity I use to run the gear.

-= Gryphon =-


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Monday, October 31, 2005

Moving at the speed of life

The speed of life often exceeds the speed of thought. Not much to be done about it but hang on for the ride.

I am falling
But that’s okay.
You must fall to catch the wind under your wings.

I am burning
But that’s okay.
You must burn to give off light.

I am dying
But that’s okay.
You must die to be reborn.

-= Gryphon =-

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Wednesday, September 28, 2005

Another odd stop on the thought train


I was reading news bits from New Scientist this morning and my eye was drawn to an ad for a statistics package that promised, among other things, to insure that I was using the right statistical method to analyze my data. My thoughts flashed back to my high school and college days when I was the teacher’s pet in chemistry class.

I really liked chemistry, but hated the math that went with a lot of it. Quantitative analysis was a royal pain; qualitative analysis was fun. My fondest memory of college chemistry is of the day the teacher handed each of us a sample of a clear liquid and said, “Tell me what you have there. You all have something different.” We all set to work. I finished well ahead of the rest of the class, and I was quite confident of my result. As a reward for finishing quickly, I was allowed to confirm my result by testing the sample on the infrared spectrophotometer in the professor’s personal lab. I was right. The juice was indeed toluene.

Looking back, I can see what factors made that day memorable. I got to play with exotic tools. We know I love to do that. I got to solve a puzzle by applying a process. I like that, too. Most important, I had to focus on the qualities of the subject rather than the quantities. I needed to learn the identity of my sample. The amount of it was irrelevant, and its other measurable properties were likewise irrelevant. I did not apply the fancy measuring tool until I knew what I had and wanted measurements to show others.

I realize now that I have an intuition for the qualities of a thing and that this is a key factor in my thinking. The big reason I finished first that day was that I just knew how to divide my sample and which tests to try in which order. I can’t explain how I knew, but I know that I knew.

Qualities have always meant more to me than quantities, so I have spent my life focusing on the qualities of everything. No doubt, that unconscious bias is the source of my intuition. I had then, and have now, a mass of knowledge that lies below conscious awareness. When I turn my attention to the qualities of something, I tap that knowledge.

At a time when I am trying to grow, and to discover my strengths and my purpose, I need to remember this hidden knowledge and where it came from.

-= Gryphon =-

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