FAS Talk

"When you go looking for anything at all, your chances of finding it are very good." -- Darryl Zero

October 18, 2009

Mt. Rainier Wonderland Trail Photos | August 2009

All 221 camera and iPhone photos, unedited, from my hike this year around the Wonderland Trail.

Mt. Rainier from Pinacle PeakThis summer (like most), I took some time out for a solo hike around Mount Ranier's aptly named Wonderland Trail.  The 95-ish mile trail circumnavigates The Mountain and offers incredible views, wildflowers, wildlife, time for contemplation, and a great workout (as it climbs, and then descends, over 28,000 feet of elevation.)

I always manage to take enough pictures to bore my friends silly yet I never seem to capture the true grandeur or the beauty.  This year's collection of photos is no different and I've not found time to edit or annotate them.  Still, you may find them fun to browse.

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October 15, 2009

Google Wave Security Gotcha!

The Google Wave UI makes it really, really easy to accidentally publish information to the wrong people.

Google WaveI've been using Google Wave seriously for a few weeks and I really like it.  But, right now anyway, its a very scary place to do anything important.

Wave is real-time.  Instant messaging (IM) seems downright sluggish by comparison while e-mail seems positively glacial.  Wave is a communication and collaboration power tool.

But wave is in its infancy.  Doing real, mission critical work in wave is like driving a fast car or carrying a loaded pistol before safety belts or trigger locks were invented.

One of the ways you shoot yourself in the foot with wave is you can invite the wrong participant into a wave.  Very easily.

Suppose you are collaborating with a peer via wave on an negotiation strategy for a potential technology acquisition.  You're weighing the pros and cons of various negotiation tactics and how the other party might react to each.  Once you're settling in on a strategy you think will work, you decide to invite your CFO into the wave to get her take on the overall plan.

But...

By unhappy coincidence, the other party's lead negotiator's name is alphabetically close to your CFO's and you accidentally double click his name in wave's Add participants dialog box.  Bang!  Gaping hole right through the middle of your foot.  Your wave appears in his wave inbox.  No confirmation prompt; no undo; no recovery.

I'm sure this is something that Google will fix.  And there will be other wave clients with even better UIs.  But for now, there are no safety belts or trigger locks.

Bottom line...

I love Google Wave.  I think it is an important nascent communication paradigm and underlying protocol.  But everything about it is so new that you should expect hiccups.  If you like being on the bleeding edge, I recommend that you give it a try, keep an open mind, and be very careful (even slightly paranoid) every time you see the Add participants dialog box.


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