“No posts to display.” is my new #facebook page message. Weird. But not disappointed about it.
Tags: twitter
Synchronizing posts with Twitter for Wordpress http://bit.ly/twitter4wp
Tags: twitter
I have been working @ Day Software for 1 month, and it has literally flown away. You know that time runs fast when there’s plenty of things to do, and this was the case; again.
As a first approach I met, together with my Italian colleagues, our partners, and started thinking with them about the best for our next collaborations. I could find a very good foundation out there, on top of which to create very strong, efficient and productive partnerships.
One of those partners is, of course, Sourcesense, my former employer; we have already closed a good opportunity with those guys and we are already working on it for a successful implementation.
Spending 4 days in Basel, in our headquarters, made me get the fastest learning pace since when I started meeting Day’s technology. And it’s always so good to work together with such a top quality engineering group (but don’t ever forget I’m in the sales one!
).
Finally, last week, I took part to Ignite 2009, in Zuerich. Ignite is Day’s Customer Summit, where partners and customers meet, from all over Europe, to exchange their experiences, feelings and wishes around CQ5 and CRX.
I really hope that things will keep going in the same exciting, challenging and fast-growing way they did in this first month!
7 minutes! This took me to upgrade Wordpress from version 2.2.2 to 2.7.1. I was a little bit alarmed because I had not been upgrading it for a long time… today I wanted to get a more recent version in order to install the good AddThis plugin… and it was totally smooth!
Thanks WP for being so ‘cheap’ for my time
Today I’ve had the pleasure of a new experience, for me. What my collegues had already had, and not me: a crash with my bobsleigh, down the track.
It was on the second run of the day, when you are more confident, after having passed the first without (say) any problem. They know that corner 13 here is very tough, because it’s the fastest point of the track (145km/h) and 13 is very tight; no error is admitted there, and one error we made.
Being the brakeman, you don’t really understand well what is happening, until your helmet hits the wall and you can hear a bad noise.
We haven’t any big problem apart from:
The most important thing, they say, is not to think about it and go down as soon as possible, to leave phantoms out of your head
The new Skype version for Mac (2.8 beta) provides new cool features, as you can see in the following embedded video.
The one I prefer is, indeed, Screen Sharing. As a nomadic professional, I can finally enrich my remote presence in many sales meetings, being able to talk and show my stuff in very immediate way.
I used to share my screen using LogMeIn, but I think I will switch very soon to Skype 2.8 for Mac (already installed and tested the beta release).
Among other semplifications, the one I prefer is needing anything more than a Skype installation on the audience side, that makes a lot easier to organize remote - and effective - meetings.
Very intersting day, yesterday; for the first time I could challenge myself in bobsled individual tests.
Being a guy who comes from Decathlon and is used to be all by himself during a two-days-race, I was a little bit sick of not having any individual measurement of my performances.
Yesterday the men bobsled Italian team was in Cesana Pariol and we did a 2-pushes test with a 130kgs sled down the indoor track.
I had a very positive feedback, improving my last (that was October) best by 24 cents of a second; I set 7.47 and my best was 7.71. That is good news because I feel I am on the right track to gain, one day, a place on Italy-1.
Today we are traveling to Koenigssee for the next World Cup race (Jan 10th-11th)
After meeting several customers asking for a cheap, effective and easy-to-use tool for Project Management, I’ve created a short presentation on that. I’ve use as info sources the following links:
http://www.atlassian.com/software/jira/solutions/project-management.jsp
http://confluence.atlassian.com/display/JIRA/JIRA+as+a+Project+Management+Tool
You can use Jira by Atlassian as a Project Management tool; it is just about getting the right plugins and to configure it in the way that best fits with your needs.
One of the most asked questions, since when I started practicing bob is: “.. and what does it happen if nobody brakes your bob after the finish line? Are you gonna stop somewhere? Would it be very dangerous?”
Ehi, today I have an answer…. at least for what concerns the Winterberg track. ![]()
No, in Winterberg it is NOT SO DANGEROUS, because you have enough track, after the finish line to be able to stop just going uphill, but please beleive me, it would be much better to brake at least when you are still because it would not be funny to go backward at 100 km/h…
Just to recap in a few words, today we had the second training session before the 4 men bob Europe Cup.
In the first run, pushing the bob, three (yes, all the three brakemen) newbies (me included, in a sense) and the youngest one at the brakes, I was the 3rd, just in front of him.
Before starting, we asked him if everything was ok with the brakes and it seemed to be (really) OK… but it wasn’t. Just a couple of meters after the finish line I got up a little bit outside the bob, just to make his life easier while braking; unfortunately he couldn’t find the handles, went through the parking area, and shouted: “Where are the handles?”… too late.
The worst thing would have been to go back downhill, pass again the finish line in the opposite direction and go up 3 or 4 corners backward :-).
Finally, when we were still, I was able to turn by myself and pull the brake, so we stopped up there, waiting for some men of the track who helped us sliding back to the parking area.
Uhfff… it would have been more dangerous in some other tracks; for the next time I’ll remember to really check if everything is ok and eventually to pull that handle a little bit in advance!
Thanks to Bertrand, who is always on the edge with his presentations ;-), I was able to appreciate this great one.
I learnt about kinetic typography and appreciated the strong power it has in 1 minute messages!