Monday, October 8, 2012

New Book: The Human Side of Agile

Posted by Shane Hastie on Oct 08, 2012

Process & Practices
Topics
Introducing Agile ,
Agile Techniques ,
Culture ,
Agile in the Enterprise ,
Agile

Coach, trainer and consultant Gil Broza has written a book focusing on the people factors that are needed for successful agile adoption and transformation in an organization.? Titled ?The Human Side of Agile? the book is aimed at leaders and managers who are guiding agile teams and guiding agile implementations in their organizations.? He provides advice for leaders at every level and leadership role both within agile teams and those setting direction for programs of work.

An extract from the book can be found here.

Shane Hastie from InfoQ interviewed the author:

InfoQ: The title is ?The Human Side of Agile? ? surely Agile is all about putting humanity back into the software process? Why did you need to write this book? What is the problem you are solving?

Gil: Agile means different things to different people. I see it indeed as a people-centric philosophy for developing complex products. But many others think of it as a cheaper, better, faster way to do business as usual. The package of value and principles known as ?Agile? has been around for more than a decade, yet most of the implementations I know about are too focused on process mechanics and moves. With my book, I wanted to paint a vivid picture of what is involved in ?doing? Agile and ?being? Agile, both for leaders and for team members. If you truly want to reap the benefits of Agility, you must address the human side of it.

InfoQ: You subtitle the book ?How to Help Your Team Deliver? ? who are you targeting the book at?

Gil: Leadership in an Agile team context has a singular purpose: to help the team deliver. Agile teams work best when they enjoy shared leadership. Everybody has innate leadership qualities and some level of desire, possibly unexpressed, to lead in some way. So you can lead either from a designated position or as a team member.

Having said that, most of the teams I?ve known in my career could use the help of a designated leader. That is the role I identify as the Agile Team Leader. It is the third role that already exists on so many Agile teams, the first one being delivery or development, and the second being customer or product owner. The primary readership of the book is thus people who are (or should be) in a position of leadership vis-?-vis their teams: ScrumMasters, project managers, managers, senior folks. Other team members are the next circle of readership as well as of leadership: the book helps them express their leadership qualities suitably in an Agile context, and shows them what the dedicated leadership they deserve looks like.

InfoQ: What makes an Agile Team Leader? What are the characteristics of this person, and what are their responsibilities?

Gil: As an ATL, you understand and believe that you?re a servant leader who?s there to help your team deliver. To qualify as an ATL, you need certain skills, behaviors, and attitudes. One of these skills is excellent communication. Some of the behaviors flow from recognizing that you don?t command or control anyone in your team. A necessary attitude is that the team will succeed more when you lead, nurture, and coach people rather than manage their work. It is very much about people skills and people orientation. That?s why the ATL shouldn?t be confused with the technical leader.

The responsibilities fall into four broad categories: people, product, process, and project. Of course, context is everything; the details and ?dose? of each category depend on your team?s makeup, stage of evolution, and constraints:

1. People responsibilities include heading off distractions, providing air cover, and holding people accountable. You?re there to help people do their best work in a collaborative setting.

2. Product responsibilities include ensuring the flow of business value, keeping stakeholders in the loop, and doing a lot of coordination. That means you also help the busy product owner do their work well.

3. On the process side, it?s process stewardship (not ownership), removing impediments, and facilitating team interactions.

4. Two substantial project responsibilities are: ensuring that the team is properly staffed and effective, and reporting needed information to the rest of the organization.

InfoQ: How is the Agile Team Leader different from a ScrumMaster or a project manager?

Gil: If there were a single interpretation of the ScrumMaster and project manager roles, I could give you a straight answer?

See, I know ScrumMasters who behave exactly as ATLs. But I?ve also met ScrumMasters who told me, ?I?m here to enforce the Scrum rules. And book meetings. And monitor the burndown chart. And track velocity.? Those guys focus mostly on the Process category of responsibilities.

It?s similar with project managers. Over the years, many PMs have told me, ?I make sure my team knows what they need to do, and I stay out of their way.? But other PMs believe the fate of their Agile project rests on their shoulders alone. They?re worried, so they end up micromanaging, mistrusting, and focusing too much on artifacts and progress metrics. Those PMs emphasize responsibilities from the Product and Project categories.

An effective ATL looks at all four categories (in particular the People one), and accepts those responsibilities that would matter most to the team. Early in the book, I invite ScrumMasters, PMs, and other ?third role? folks to step into Agile team leadership. They don?t need to be promoted or formally designated as such; rather, it?s about their identity, values, attitudes, and behavior.

InfoQ: Agile teams are supposed to be self-organizing, so why do they need a leader? And what does the leader do to encourage self-organization by the team?

Gil: I wholeheartedly support the ideal that teams should be able to lead themselves. Where that?s possible, you may not need a designated ATL. But in all my years in the industry, I have encountered or heard about only a handful of teams like that. In almost every team, the personalities and behaviors, the complexity, and the organizational context make a dedicated ATL necessary. (Scrum teams are already expected to have designated ScrumMasters, and, as I said before, great ScrumMasters are really ATLs.) Even with a dedicated ATL, by the way, individuals still can ? and should ? play to their own leadership strengths.

Just because you remove the organizational shackles and give a team freedom to self-organize doesn?t mean they will necessarily do that or that they?ll do it well. I see this again and again whenever I lead a workshop or a simulation, which are far less complex than the typical development environment. I have intelligent professionals form groups, and some groups thrive while others stall.

Here are 5 ways a leader can help self-organization:

  1. Rally the team behind meaningful targets, goals, or outcomes. Keep playing those up so members can convince themselves that working together with their particular teammates is worthwhile.
  2. Encourage people to play to their strengths and to discover their colleagues? strengths.
  3. Help the team make clear agreements and set behavioral expectations that match their unique situation and culture.
  4. Coach individuals and the entire team: offer feedback, help with experimentation, give support in difficult conversations.
  5. Ensure that supporting process mechanisms are in place. And make sure they?re actually supportive in the team?s context; there?s really no such thing as ?best practices,? only practices that seem to work well for many others.

InfoQ: How does the leader help when there are dysfunctions, disruptions, and negative attitudes within the team?

Gil: Workers deserve and must have an emotionally safe team environment. Company policy, social norms, and professional courtesy can only go so far. Having a clearly identified, capable leader increases safety not just during team discourse (such as meetings and workspace interaction). Such a leader would also notice emotional behavior, hold regular one-on-one encounters for feedback and coaching, set and clarify boundaries, and use the organization to keep alignment.

By the way, in many other environments managers take on this duty and apply the same tools. I simply don?t think that a capable, genuine leader has to be the boss to get the same effect.

InfoQ: How does the leader protect the team from external organizational dysfunctions?

Gil: The leader can shield the team in 3 high-leverage ways:

  1. Providing ?air cover?: acting as a buffer between the team and the rest of the organization. The leader simply enables team members to do what they are already paid to do. An example would be hiding details of individual task assignment and of micro-progress from those who don?t need to know about it outside the team.
  2. Championing: the leader needs to actively tend to relationships and influences that might adversely affect the team. For example, the greater the team?s reputation for excellence, the more likely they are to be broken up to bolster other teams. They need protection from that, and individual team members can?t usually offer that protection.
  3. Taking a stand for the team (this way may be needed even in the best of organizations). For instance, I?ve seen too many teams receive a verbal lashing from an executive for messing up a sprint demo. The leader would help the team recognize the slip-up?s significance and impact, take corrective action, and prevent recurrence. And she would also have the difficult conversations with that executive and with other stakeholders to demonstrate how they are taking responsibility. These tough times are when leadership is tested, since without a leader the team is apt to quickly descend to blaming and justification.

InfoQ: You title an entire part of the book ?Engage People in Powerful Conversations? ? what are the characteristics of such conversations, and why do they matter?

Gil: Conversations happen in the workplace all the time. Hundreds of them take place daily just between managers and subordinates. But once people form teams and intensely communicate sideways (with their colleagues), that?s an order-of-magnitude more conversations. The trouble is that many conversations at work are downright awful. Misunderstandings, walking on eggshells, unintentional slighting, and unclear agreements are everywhere.

Powerful conversations, on the other hand, are worth having. They result in progress. A powerful 1-on-1 conversation (that?s the focus of one of the chapters) is both delightful and energizing. A powerful team conversation (that?s the other chapter in this part) strengthens the team. When you strengthen the team, you increase engagement, mutual accountability, productivity, and retention. These conversations are characterized by patience, listening, respect, acceptance, rapport, and caring.

InfoQ: What advice can you offer to help make meetings more effective?

Gil: Did you know that some Agile teams out there have a daily standup without knowing why it matters? That?s your first target: know your meeting?s purpose, and make sure the participants know it. My good friend and coach extraordinaire David Spann likes to say, ?If I could change corporate culture with only one sign, I?d post the following on every conference room door: ?If the meeting you are about to attend has no stated purpose, please return to something that does!?? I share this particular message with most of my clients, too.

My next advice: if the meeting requires safety, ensure that it?s really safe. We?ve all attended muted retrospectives where only the obvious, innocuous challenges were discussed. That?s a waste of everybody?s time and goodwill. Dig for the reason and you?ll usually find that it?s safety-related.

My third piece of advice: facilitate meetings. Facilitation involves assembling the right group, helping it set objectives, crafting a workable process so that it can meet those objectives, and then taking the group through the process. If the team leader doesn?t know how to do that, they should get training ASAP. Facilitation is measured by the group?s achievement of valuable results, not by following a process. For instance, it?s about getting value from standups and retrospectives, not about asking three questions or filling two columns with ?Worked Well? and ?Needs Improvement? stickies. Don?t rotate it among team members unless you know what you?re rotating.

InfoQ: How does an Agile Team Leader help teams stay the course when adopting Agile approaches, and when making change in general?

Gil: Change isn?t a one-time thing. It has three stages: first you prepare for it, next you execute the change, and then you make the new situation a habit, a new status quo. Different activities are needed in each stage.

In preparing for change, the team leader can make sure that its necessary conditions are met. One of these conditions is education. The ATL should remind the team that change always involves a chaos period, which can be easily mistaken for failure. Other universal conditions include motivation, bandwidth, focus, and sponsorship. And then there are a host of conditions that are specific to your context.

During the execution of the change, the team leader can manage expectations, protect the team from interruptions that can derail the change, and help install feedback loops for the change?s effects. In some situations, those loops involve metrics.

Having made the change, you now need it to stick ? to become habit and the new normal way of doing things. The ATL can again offer feedback, also known as mirroring, to reinforce the fresh behaviors. He can monitor (informally or otherwise) for bounce-backs and point them out as they arise. And he can keep looking for even further improvement, to prevent complacency.

InfoQ: What happens to the Agile Team Leader when the team has made the transition to being an effective self-organizing group? How does the leader contribute to continuous improvement?

Gil: The more evolved and successful the team is, the less the leader needs to be involved. When teaming has been taken care of, as I like to say, the leader can transition to protecting the team and helping them be even better. She can bring new ideas from the outside, organize learning opportunities, and continue to support individuals? growth. She also needs to keep challenging the team so they don?t rest on their laurels (and do stay motivated). And, on a bigger scale, the leader can expand her sphere of influence to inspire even greater Agility within the organization. This contributes to global optimization and increased efficacy, which may be far more valuable than team-level optimization.

In the last 10 years alone, Gil has mentored more than 1,500 professionals who then delighted their customers, shipped working software on time, and rediscovered passion for their work. Gil has also:

  • Served as a development manager, team leader, and programmer for 12 years, successfully applying Agile methods since 2001
  • Coached more than 40 private- and public-sector clients, large and small, including independent software vendors, custom development firms, and organizations that build software for internal use
  • Written several practical papers for conferences and trade magazines, including the prestigious Cutter IT Journal (Gil also co-produced the Coaching ?stage? at the Agile 2009 and 2010 conferences)

Throughout his career, Gil has focused on human characteristics that prevent positive outcomes in software development teams. These include limiting habits, fear of change, outdated beliefs, and blind spots. In helping teams overcome these factors, he supports them in reaching ever-higher levels of performance, confidence, and accomplishment. Gil offers much-needed services (beyond basic education) to help ScrumMasters and other Agile team leaders grow in their roles. In addition, he provides workshops, consulting, facilitation services, and enablement programs to fix lackluster Agile attempts and support ongoing Agile improvement efforts. He is in high demand by individuals and companies looking to fully realize Agile?s potential.

Want a taste of what makes Gil different? Visit this link to receive Gil?s popular (and free!) ?Something Happened on the Way to Agile? mini-program. Consisting of 20 daily training segments, it will help you break the cycle of Agile mediocrity and move toward the promised benefits of Agile.

  • Other recent content items in this topic

Source: http://www.infoq.com/articles/book-human-side-agile

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Video: Schwarzenegger talks with David Gregory

A Second Take on Meeting the Press: From an up-close look at Rachel Maddow's sneakers to an in-depth look at Jon Krakauer's latest book ? it's all fair game in our "Meet the Press: Take Two" web extra. Log on Sundays to see David Gregory's post-show conversations with leading newsmakers, authors and roundtable guests. Videos are available on-demand by 12 p.m. ET on Sundays.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3032608/vp/49319463#49319463

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Saturday, October 6, 2012

Israeli Arab accused of spying for Hezbollah

JERUSALEM (AP) ? Israeli authorities on Thursday indicted an Arab citizen of Israel on charges of spying for the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah, accusing him of gathering intelligence on security for Israel's president and on army installations.

The Shin Bet domestic intelligence agency said in a statement that Milad Khatib, 26, from the northern village of Majd al-Krum, was recruited in 2009 by a Lebanese Hezbollah operative in Denmark. He was ordered to collect information on Israeli army bases and armories, as well as details on security guards and motorcades of the Israeli president and other public officials.

In August, Khatib allegedly shadowed a visit by Peres to his home town, collecting information on his security detail. Authorities say he intended to pass the details to his Hezbollah operator but was arrested before he could do so. It was unclear what information, if any, he supplied Hezbollah.

Peres' office did not respond to a message seeking comment.

Hostility between Israel and the Iranian-backed Hezbollah runs deep. The two sides fought a bloody, monthlong war in mid-2006 that ended in a stalemate, starting after Hezbollah captured two Israeli soldiers in a cross-border raid.

Israel believes Hezbollah possesses more than 40,000 rockets and missiles capable of striking virtually anywhere in Israel.

Hezbollah has developed into a key political force in Lebanon, holding the balance of power in the country's Cabinet.

Israeli police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said Khatib first made connection with Hezbollah in 2007 in a series of meetings in Denmark, Morocco and Lebanon, and he conducted a second series of meetings in Turkey and Denmark in 2009 and 2010.

A lawyer for Khatib did not reply to a request for comment.

In recent years, Israel has arrested several other Arab citizens on suspicion of aiding the group.

Azmi Bishara, a former Arab lawmaker, fled Israel in 2007 a few weeks before Israeli prosecutors accused him of supplying intelligence to the Lebanese militants. A 24-year-old woman was jailed the same year for making contact with Hezbollah agents she met while studying in Amman, Jordan.

In 2008, a top Hezbollah commander was killed in a bomb attack in Syria widely attributed to Israel. The following year, Israel indicted a 23-year-old Arab citizen on suspicion of passing information on Israel's army chief of staff ? an alleged assassination plot in retaliation for the killing of the Hezbollah commander.

Early last year, Amir Makhoul, a prominent Arab-Israeli activist, was sentenced to nine years in prison after confessing to spying for Hezbollah.

Israel has also blamed Hezbollah and its sponsor, Iran, for a July bus bombing in Bulgaria that killed five Israeli tourists, as well as earlier bombing attempts on Israelis in India, Thailand, Georgia and Kenya.

Lebanon has also arrested a string of suspects it accuses of spying for Israel.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/israeli-arab-accused-spying-hezbollah-123046357.html

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Thursday, October 4, 2012

Why Do Married Men Pay For Sex? | World of Psychology

Why Do Married Men Pay For Sex?This guest article from YourTango was written by Dawn Michael.

He picks up the phone, gives his credit card information and begins to talk to her. His intentions are to get a quick release, and then go about his business.

As he begins to talk to her, she becomes more interesting. Her words are not just sexual but make him feel connected. The phone calls then become more regular and lengthy; some calls don?t even involve him having a sexual release. He finds himself connecting with her, maybe even wanting to see her.

This man may be any woman?s husband who has lost a connection with his wife. He may still be having sex with his wife, but has lost the intimacy involved, the love, understanding and caring.

He is lonely but does not even realize it; this call girl on the other line makes him feel better about himself. She listens to him, compliments him and makes him feel like a man with her intimate words and sexy sweet voice.

In this day and age where marriage often becomes the last relationship that couples work at, it slowly erodes over the years. The couple has children, a job, responsibilities, bills, and no time for the marriage itself.

Women have the advantage over men when it comes to connections in their lives; they have other women to talk to, hug, cry with, and laugh with.

Men on the other hand don?t have those same connections with other men. Often times they have no other person in their life but their wife that they open up to emotionally with.

When a husband loses his connection with his wife, he will begin to feel alone and seek out the emotional intimacy through sex that he will pay for through a call girl, strip clubs or other women.

Many times these encounters are really about a husband needing the intimacy, the closeness, but not understanding how to achieve this with his wife anymore. The responsibility is on both a husband and wife to communicate with each other, and take the time to make the marriage a priority.

If you find that you are a man feeling this way, take the time to work on your marriage, set up a date night with your wife. If you are a wife and feel your husband slipping away, do something about it, take the initiative.

It does not take much to schedule time in your calendar for each other every week, but it will take everything when it has gotten to the point where your husband is paying for sex with a call girl.

?

More related sex content from YourTango:

Contributed by YourTango.com, an online magazine dedicated to love, life and relationships. From dating to marriage, parenting to empty-nest, relationship challenges to relationship success, YourTango is at the center of the conversations that are closest to our over 3 million readers' hearts. With daily contributions from our Experts, we have a little something for everyone looking to create healthier lives. We're excited to offer our contributions to the PsychCentral community, and invite you to visit us on YourTango.com.

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????Last reviewed: By John M. Grohol, Psy.D. on 4 Oct 2012
????Published on PsychCentral.com. All rights reserved.

APA Reference
Experts, Y. (2012). Why Do Married Men Pay For Sex?. Psych Central. Retrieved on October 4, 2012, from http://psychcentral.com/blog/archives/2012/10/03/why-do-married-men-pay-for-sex/

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Source: http://psychcentral.com/blog/archives/2012/10/03/why-do-married-men-pay-for-sex/

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Wednesday, October 3, 2012

UFO case solved in Cincinnati

Lights were sighted in the skies over a Wal-Mart store in the Cincinnati area on Sept. 28.

By Alan Boyle

For a few days, the strange case of the Cincinnati Lights intrigued UFO fans, but it looks as if the person who took the original video has come up with the likeliest answer: The spooky lights floating through the sky are best explained as skydivers doing a show during a football game at a nearby high school.

The Sept. 28 light show was certainly reminiscent of more celebrated UFO cases, such as the Phoenix Lights of 1997 ? but it was also similar to the El Paso Lights of 2010, which were similarly traced to skydivers using pyrotechnics. This time, it was the video shooter (known on YouTube as Galuyasdi) who figured out that a Start Skydiving team was doing a pyro show for La Salle High School's homecoming game at just about the time that the sighting took place. (La Salle lost to Moeller; sorry about that, Lancers.)

Even though this case appears to be solved, echoes of the Cincinnati Lights are still reverberating among UFO fans. It's always harder to track down the likely cause of a UFO sighting than to put up a video and just leave it at that. Hats off to the videographer and fellow investigators who solved their own mystery before it became a full-fledged UFO meme.


More cases from the UFO files:

Source: http://cosmiclog.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/10/02/14188819-ufo-case-solved-in-cincinnati?lite

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Soccer-Fountain of youth dry in Australia, says coach Osieck

MELBOURNE, Oct 3 (Reuters) - Australia's hopes of qualifying for a third successive World Cup must again rest on ageing shoulders because there are few young players pushing for selection, according to embattled coach Holger Osieck.

Osieck, under huge pressure after the Socceroos' stuttering start to the final round of Asian qualifying, has kept faith with Australia's core of World Cup veterans for the Socceroos' crucial away tie to Iraq on Oct. 16.

Captain Lucas Neill, attacking midfielder Tim Cahill, and goalkeeper Mark Schwarzer are among eight players over 30 years old in the 22-man squad and will be relied upon to turn the Socceroos' fortunes around in the searing heat of Doha.

With Australia's seasoned campaigners failing to fire in two draws and a demoralising loss to 87th-ranked Jordan in Asia's Group B, Osieck has come under fire for failing to inject new blood to revive the team's flagging World Cup campaign.

But the 64-year-old German said he had little choice but to back his ageing brigade, given the selection cupboard was bare.

"I'm definitely a supporter of getting in fresh blood, however I can't find it at present. There are not too many young players who knock at the door and say 'I want to come in'," Osieck told reporters on a conference call on Wednesday after naming the team.

"The young ones who are pretty good and promising are already in the squad.

"Right now, there's no real pressure from other youngsters. Those who play in Europe don't make the first team and that is definitely what stops their development in a way."

Australia, currently ranked 25th in the world, sailed through the previous phase of qualifying but have hit a brick wall in the final round, escaping with a lucky home draw against group leaders Japan before scrounging a goalless draw away to Oman.

Their 2-1 defeat to Jordan ended the honeymoon for Osieck, who had hitherto drawn praise for his calm stewardship and emphasis on attacking play, in contrast to the stodgy, defensive game instilled by his unpopular predecessor Pim Verbeek.

The Socceroos farewelled a clutch of experienced players after the team's first-round exit from the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, but the next generation have struggled to fill their shoes while toiling for second-string teams in Europe.

Osieck, a former assistant coach to Franz Beckenbauer during Germany's 1990 World Cup triumph, said Australia's top domestic league was hardly helping his cause, given its scheduling was leaving players rusty and unfit for international duty at the sharp end of the season.

"The players have to play. Look at the domestic league, the break is way too long," he said of the A-league, which kicks off its eighth season this weekend.

"Now, it's already the final quarter of the year and they're just start their competitive playing. If things go wrong and (their teams) don't make the playoffs, their season is already over in early March.

"So in the time in between, what does it do to your development? You need to have a competitive environment and people here in Australia have to make sure they grant this more competitive environment.

"(But) to go to Europe is not the ideal solution if they don't play first-team football there.

"So we are in a kind of predicament here."

Australia are third in Group A with two points behind Japan (10) and Jordan (4).

The top two teams in each group book their places for the 2014 finals in Brazil, while the third-placed teams meet in a playoff before the winner of that tie plays the fifth-placed South American team for a place at the tournament.

(Editing by Greg Stutchbury)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/soccer-fountain-youth-dry-australia-says-coach-osieck-062633457--spt.html

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Why the first debate will be about policy, not values

Fifty-two years ago, in the studios of WBBM in Chicago, Richard Nixon rejected theatrical makeup to cover his dark stubble and opted instead for a dusting of a powdery substance called Lazy Shave. When the cameras went on for that inaugural 1960 presidential debate, John Kennedy projected youthful vigor and Nixon looked like the sinister figure emerging from the political sewer in a Herblock cartoon in The Washington Post.

The mythology surrounding the Kennedy-Nixon debates has underscored the obvious truth of the television age: Visuals matter. But there is also a less obvious debate lesson from half a century ago ? preparation matters as much as looks. A well-rested Kennedy stretched out on the bed in his hotel suite and batted around likely questions with aides as if he were preparing for a Harvard exam. Nixon, exhausted from his campaign travels, spent a few pre-debate hours alone with his yellow legal pad.

For all the hype, presidential debates are not windows into the souls of the candidates nor are they precisely etched character sketches. Instead, they are endurance contests shaped by rehearsal, memorization and salesmanship. It is why debates offer clues about how the next president may make policy decisions in the Oval Office, but provide little new information about the values that animate the candidates.

In reality, there has been only one truly spontaneous moment during the fall presidential debates ? and it reflected badly on both candidates. During the first 1976 debate between accidental President Jerry Ford and unlikely Democratic nominee Jimmy Carter, the audio feed from Philadelphia?s Walnut Theater went off for an excruciating 27 minutes. During the entire time, reflecting a total failure of self-confident improvisation, both over-rehearsed candidates stood awkwardly behind their lecterns as if tethered to the spot.

This history helps explain why the trail is pretty cold when you search for revealing moments from Barack Obama?s and Mitt Romney?s voluminous debate histories. Both men are far too methodical for much free-range ad libbing with the presidency at stake. Sure, Obama during the run-up to the 2008 New Hampshire primary superciliously described Hillary Clinton as ?likable enough.? And, yes, last December the deep-pocketed Romney offered to bet Rick Perry $10,000, which is more mad money than most voters have available for impromptu wagers.

But these are character traits that Obama and Romney have frequently exposed in other settings. For a whiff of Obama?s arrogance, try his July CBS interview when the president suggested that his only real mistake in office was ?thinking that this job was just about getting the policy right.? In similar fashion, the GOP primaries were littered with examples of Romney flashing his bankroll whether he was talking about his wife?s Cadillacs or bragging about his friendships with NASCAR team owners.?

Tuesday night, perhaps in an effort to influence the atmospherics surrounding the debate, three conservative media outlets (Fox News, the Drudge Report and the Daily Caller) ballyhooed a 2007 Obama speech to a group of black ministers as a smoking-gun expos? of the president?s character.

In truth, there is nothing new about the Obama speech since it has been broadcast before -- on Fox News, no less. Obama?s ?shout out? to his now-disowned former minister Jeremiah Wright is a trifle embarrassing. And maybe, in retrospect, Obama went too far in implying that race played a role in the abandonment of New Orleans in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. But if there were indeed a secret Obama agenda embedded in this 5-year-old televised speech, logic suggests that it would have come out during the president?s tenure in the Oval Office.

What Republican and Democratic partisans often fail to understand is that there are no do-overs in presidential politics. Voters judge an incumbent president running for reelection on his time in office ? and not his pre-White House record.

Look at recent history. No one was ridiculing Ronald Reagan as an actor during his 1984 reelection campaign. The Iran-contra scandal dogged George H.W. Bush during his 1988 race, but was almost never mentioned during his ill-fated 1992 drive for a second term. Bill Clinton?s dubious investment in an ill-fated Arkansas development called Whitewater was headline material in 1992, but it was a non-issue in 1996. And ? despite the efforts of Dan Rather to ignite a scandal ? George W. Bush?s stateside Vietnam service in the National Guard did not cost the incumbent president a single vote in 2004.

So it is a safe bet that the two words, Jeremiah Wright, are unlikely to be uttered during tonight?s debate. There will, to be sure, fireworks between Obama and Romney. But their differences are apt to be primarily over their rival policy visions for America. As for lasting character insights, they have never been what presidential debates have been about. And that has been the case since Kennedy and Nixon made political history in a Chicago TV studio on the evening of Sept. 26, 1960.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/why-the-first-obama-romney-debate-will-be-about-policy--not-values.html

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Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Vegas police cite Hilton boyfriend in battery case

LAS VEGAS (AP) ? Police in Las Vegas say the 21-year-old model boyfriend of celebrity socialite Paris Hilton was cited after a scuffle with another man at a Las Vegas Strip nightclub.

Officer Laura Meltzer said River Viiperi was ticketed for misdemeanor battery and released after police were called about 3:30 a.m. Monday to the Wynn Las Vegas resort.

Meltzer says a man complained that Viiperi hit him during a verbal argument. No serious injuries resulted.

Hotel officials declined to comment.

Meltzer didn't identify the complainant, and she says police officers didn't talk with the 31-year-old Hilton, who had been with Viiperi at the club.

Viiperi has appeared in photo advertisements for several international clothiers.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2012-10-01-People-Hilton%20Boyfriend/id-1fffba170de24b6b8d6ac96b70425de0

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Financial aid changes in effect this fall - The Collegiate Live

Financial aid disbursement at Grand Rapids Community College has undergone a change this year that has students receiving half of their aid money during the fourth week of the semester and the rest after two thirds of their courses are completed.

?The federal government has stepped up the pressure on colleges with regards to financial aid,? said Ken Fridsma, Interim Director of Financial Aid. ?That is one of the main reasons the community college is moving to multiple disbursements this semester.?

Fridsma says that a lot of the pressure comes from Congress setting up new rules out of fear that students may be abusing federal funding. He views it as a hot button issue that Congress will bring up. However, he feels that a lot of their rules can be seen as outdated.

?Most students come here to get an education, not to try and rip the government off,? Fridsma said.

Another reason the financial aid office has altered the way money is being distributed is in an effort to help students avoid getting into debt.

Fridsma explained that they are trying to avoid billing students. Past years, the students would get a lump sum of their aid at the beginning of the semester; if they didn?t complete their classes fully, they would have to repay that money. Under the new system, if students change their enrollment statuses, they will receive a prorated amount of the rest of their aid money, or if they drop out, they will have less money to owe to the school.

?Things happen that may cause students to change their status, like getting a new job or personal changes,? Fridsma said. ?For most people, money burns a hole in their pocket. It can be hard not to spend that money right away and then not be prepared if your situation changes.?

The financial aid office has not received a lot of negative feedback regarding any of the changes. The main goal is to make sure students are aware of what is going on.

?I think it?s better than it was. It will keep kids from dropping,? said sophomore Anthony Johnson Jr. ?It seemed like last year we got it two weeks into the semester and students stopped showing up.?

?I think it?s more difficult now,? said freshman Jade Wallace. ?It?s easier to plan out your whole year when you have your money all set.?

Wallace said she faced difficulties in coming up with the money out of pocket, and the delays can make life a little chaotic for her. At the same time, she said she recognizes that the new system will help students who had difficulty managing lump sum disbursements.

Grand Rapids Community College?s default rate is 14 percent. The default rate is the rate of students at the college who default on their student loans. If the college rate reaches 30 percent the federal government can take several actions, including fining the school or even taking away the eligibility to receive aid.

?It can be difficult in financial aid. The rules change every year,? Fridma said. ?With the elections this fall, I?m pretty sure that there will be new regulations for us to have to follow next year.?

Fridsma has temporarily taken over the position as financial aid director until a permanent replacement can be found.? He came from Grand Valley State University with 40 years of experience.

He is only planning to be at GRCC for six more months, and he hopes to help students better understand financial aid and avoid debt. He would like to enact a couple of financial literacy programs at GRCC and be able to help students who are having issues with debt.

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Source: http://thecollegiatelive.com/ne/2012/financial-aid-changes-in-effect-this-fall/

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The man behind the 'MC ?Bama' and 'Real Mitt Romney' videos

Political Punch

Only a political junkie could create smart, high-quality videos satirizing American politics that then go viral on YouTube. And that's just what Hugh Atkin is -- an American politics junkie, who just happens to be a lawyer living in Sydney, Australia.

"I've grown up watching 'The West Wing' and podcasting the Sunday morning shows, so I was always really interested in U.S. politics, and it just sort of rolled on from there," said Atkin.

Atkin rolled to YouTube fame in the U.S. with a video showing then presidential candidate John McCain getting 'BarackRoll'd' at the Republican National Convention, a spoof off the YouTube RickRoll'd meme. More than 3.6 million people have clicked in to watch the McCain video, and 7 million have watched Atkin's BarackRoll video.

This election season, Atkin's video 'Will The Real Mitt Romney Please Stand Up' has 4.5 million views so far. The video takes Romney's words and drops them into Eminem's 'The Real Slim Shady' rap. His latest send up, 'U Didn't Build That by MC 'Bama,' uses mostly the president's words and phrases and drops them into MC Hammer's 1990s hit. The tightly edited video, like Atkin's previous work, includes several clever - and edgy - turns of phrase.

Mr Ryan and his voucher retailin'.
Maybe he's just a brighter shade of Palin.
Mr Romney, and his friends on Wall Street.
What I'm saying is they're SuperPACking Heat.
And here is a woman Mitt killed.
But that was an attack ad you didn't build.

"There's a novelty to seeing Obama singing and seeing Michelle Obama dance, but I wanted to layer in some of the lyrics a few deeper things, or other ideas people could think about and argue about," says Atkin. "And I think it's nice for those who follow U.S. politics quite closely to be able to catch, really, the in jokes."

Either the left or the right could embrace the latest Obama video because it went straight for the joke; viewers could take the charges seriously or just laugh, but either way it worked no matter what their political views.

"I was definitely trying, trying to make fun of the people who take the president out of context and also just the slightly insane cable news back and forth arguing about one particular quote," said Atkin. Taking lots of different quotes to make whole new meanings out of it was in part satirizing the editing that happens in left wing and right wing cable news, Atkin continued.

There have been a range of responses to Atkin's videos, but the best one, he says, came from two American kids "who put on 'The Real Mitt Romney' video on the background and did a whole dance to it."

"It's quite nice to know that you can put a video together and kids could be dancing to it on the other side of the world," says Atkin.

And while the clicks are in the multi millions, Atkin says he does not get paid to do them.

"I just really like ... getting to see something when you put it up online and seeing it spread through Twitter, through Facebook. Seeing people share it with their friends and just seeing the reaction of people," says Atkin.

While he does have a day job, Atkin says, with a laugh, that he would be open to changing careers.

"If Lorne Michaels or Jon Stewart gave me a call that would be great, but I'm quite happy just doing it and writing on the side."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/power-players-abc-news/built-man-behind-mc-bama-real-mitt-romney-105827576.html

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Monday, October 1, 2012

Wal-Mart fires brain cancer employee for using doctor - RiseEarth

A Michigan man was recently fired from his managerial position at a Walmart store in Battle Creek, Michigan, after it was discovered that he had been using medical marijuana outside of work hours in accordance with his doctor's recommendations for treating an inoperable brain tumor. The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) filed a lawsuit against Walmart on the man's behalf, but a federal court recently responded by deciding that this form of medical discrimination by an employer is perfectly legal in the state, even though Michigan law recognizes and protects the legitimate use of marijuana for medical purposes.

When Joseph Casias was first diagnosed with brain cancer, he was offered a gamut of pharmaceutical drugs such as Lorcet, an opioid narcotic, that caused him to suffer severe nausea and various other horrific side effects. At the recommendation of his oncologist, Joseph decided to try taking medical marijuana instead, which he quickly discovered was highly effective at eliminating his pain symptoms and restoring some semblance of normalcy to his life in a way that pharmaceutical drugs could not, while also helping him work more effectively and take better care of his family.

"He had his appetite back, and he was able to interact more with us and our children," said Joseph's wife Angie to the ACLU about her husband's dramatic improvements as a result of adopting the medical marijuana protocol.

Joesph's pain symptoms vanished almost immediately as a result of the marijuana, in fact, which allowed him to perform his job responsibilities more effectively and participate in family activities that conventional medicine had otherwise prevented him from engaging in. Marijuana also allowed Joseph to put back on the weight he had lost as a result of the aggressive chemotherapy and radiation treatments that Western medicine first offered him as his only solution.
Walmart's corporate policies discriminate against medical marijuana use

None of this would have been a problem for Joseph had it not been for a workplace accident that occurred after he began his marijuana treatments, which resulted in him having to undergo a drug test. Naturally, the test came up positive, and Walmart decided to immediately fire Joseph, a faithful employee who had been recognized by the company back in 2008 as "Associate of the Year."

"No patient should be forced to choose between adequate pain relief and gainful employment," said Scott Michelman, a staff attorney with the ACLU, back in 2010 when the issue first came to light. "And no employer should be allowed to intrude upon private medical choices made by employees in consultation with their doctors."

But U.S. District Judge Robert Jonker from the Western District of Michigan apparently disagrees, having ruled that Michigan's medical marijuana law "says nothing about private employment rights." Private corporations like Walmart that are prejudiced against alternative medical treatments, for instance, are not bound by the tenets of the law, which he says "give[s] some people limited protection from prosecution by the state, or from other adverse state action in carefully limited medical marijuana situations."

Joseph's attorneys; however, maintain that no private employer in Michigan should be able to target employees that use medicinal marijuana in accordance with Michigan's "Medical Marihuana Program," which specifically states that qualifying patients shall not be subject to arrest, prosecution, or penalty in any manner by a business, which includes Walmart.

Sources for this article include:
http://www.mlive.com
http://www.aclu.org/drug-law-reform/casias-v-wal-mart
http://www.huffingtonpost.com
Source: naturalnews



Respected Readers:
To help us go ahead with the same spirit, a small contribution from your side will highly be appreciated.

Source: http://www.riseearth.com/2012/09/wal-mart-fires-brain-cancer-employee.html

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These 10 Companies Didn't Need VC Money - Business Insider

Sophia Amoruso bootstrapped Nasty Gal for 5 years to profitability and more than $30 million in revenues.

When you start a company, you have to decide how you're going to get it off the ground.

The question every entrepreneur faces is how to fund operations before money starts coming in the door.

You have three broad options:

  • Bootstrap:?Fund it yourself, or with other members of the founding team.
  • Friends and family:?Ask those closest to you for a little financial help either as a loan or in exchange for a stake in the company.
  • Angel investors or venture capital:?Go to semiprofessional or professional startup investors.

The stories you hear the most about are about the entrepreneurs who take outside capital. For some reason, tech media has a tendency to celebrate the act of fundraising.

It makes a certain amount of sense, in that the dollar figures can be eye-popping, there's a concrete event to write about, and there's built-in controversy: How can this brand-new business be worth so much?

But that's pretty twisted. It's really like celebrating someone going into debt. Even equity investors expect a payback.

"I'm concerned a little bit with the culture of celebrating the fundraise," angel investor and wine entrepreneur Gary Vaynerchuk has said. "My dad taught me that when you borrow money it's the worst day of your life."

Other tech founders agree.

"In the eye of the public, and specifically the tech community, funding is thought to mean much more that it actually does," Ben Kaufman, the founder of smartphone-accessories maker Mophie and manufacturing startup Quirky, has written. "The world views funding as a badge of honor. I view it as a scarlet letter. I?m continually disturbed, insecure, and uncomfortable about what it means to raise money, and what it means to boast about it."

A few startups have become really big, valuable companies without taking outside capital at the start. Some were started by founders who had money to burn from earlier ventures.

But others were really scrappy entrepreneurs who figured out how to to make ends meet.

A few examples of successful, entirely bootstrapped companies:

  • PlentyofFish:?Markus Frind founded one of the largest dating sites in the world from his apartment. He worked for a few tech startups prior to PlentyofFish. His site now has more than 38 million users and has 6 billion monthly pageviews.

    The service is free, but it has made a lot of money from advertising. In July 2003 Frind received his site's first Google AdSense check?and it was for $1,100.

    In 2007, ReadWriteWeb wrote that the one-person company might be worth $1 billion. After that, Frind began hiring a team, but he grew his site to hundreds of million in revenues, investor-free.

  • Gawker:?Nick Denton founded the media company in 2002 after selling an earlier startup, an events business called First Tuesday. Denton's home was Gawker's headquarters for years; he rented a modest storefront for his bloggers before building out a real office in 2008.?Now Gawker Media is worth an estimated $150 million.
  • Storm8:?Former Facebook employees founded this mobile-gaming company in 2009. Storm8's games have been downloaded more than 300 million times on more than 100 million devices.

    CEO Perry Tam worked on Facebook Credits and, after witnessing the success of Zynga's Web-based games, figured mobile games would have a lot of promise.

    Storm8 was one of the first gaming companies to market on mobile devices, and the lack of initial competition helped the company take off.

  • TechCrunch:?Founded by Mike Arrington and Keith Teare in 2005, TechCrunch became one of the most-read tech websites in the world. When AOL purchased it in 2010 for ~ $30 million, Arrington reportedly owned 85% of his bootstrapped company. Before creating TechCrunch, Arrington was a tech lawyer. He also worked for a number of startups, including Achex, an online payments company acquired for $32 million.

Some other startups bootstrapped for a long time and proved their businesses before taking outside capital. Some examples:

  • Nasty Gal:?Sophia Amoruso bootstrapped her clothing startup, which began on eBay, for five years before raising outside capital. She grew her e-commerce company to profitability and mor than $30 million annual revenues. Now Nasty Gal has raised about $50 million. Before NastyGal, Amoruso had a "litany of shitty jobs," according to PandoDaily, such as checking student IDs and standing around in shoe stores waiting on customers.
  • Braintree:?Founded in 2007, the payments company was bootstrapped until 2011, when Accel put in $34 million.
  • Github:?The social coding company was founded in 2007 and bootstrapped itself until earlier this year, when Andreessen Horowitz invested $100 million.
  • Indeed:?Paul Forster and his cofounder sold a company before they created and bootstrapped Indeed, a search engine for jobs. A few years in, the pair raised $5 million. It just had a monster exit last week, selling for an estimated amount?between $750 million and $1 billion.
  • Behance:?The design site was bootstrapped for six years before founders Scott Belsky and Matias Corea raised $6.5 million. 1 million projects were published on Behance in the last 6 months; it took four years for the first 1 million to be uploaded. Two million published projects have been viewed more than 1 billion times on Behance; 75 million views occurred in just 30 days.
  • Thrillist:?Ben Lerer and Adam Rich pretty much bootstrapped the media and e-commerce site for guys until last month. It was founded in 2005. It will generate about $60 million this year. (Full disclosure: Ben's father, Ken Lerer, is a Business Insider investor.)

We'll see more stories like these ones?and maybe we'll pay more attention to them, rather than the startups which take money early on.

"Look at what the top stories are, and they?re all about raising money, how many employees they have, and these are metrics that don?t matter," 37Signals founder Jason Fried says.?"What matters is: Are you profitable? Are you building something great? Are you taking care of your people? Are you treating your customers well?"

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/bootstrapped-companies-2012-10

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Wedding Photography: Essential Knowledge For Taking On Your First Gig

The first paid job for any photographer is always an event of real significance, being prepared for the job will ensure that it goes as smoothly and successfully as possible. There is really no difference between your first professional wedding shoot and any other photo opportunity you have undertaken in the past, except that now you have clients to please. Keeping on top of things and making sure that you have everything you need for an issue free and professional job may seem a little nerve racking, but with an eye on the essentials you should be in pretty good shape.

Just like a non-paying shoot, equipment needs are the most important part of any professional job or photo opportunity. Lacking the lenses, filters and other camera equipment you need to make the most out of every shot can limit your results and leave you with a lackluster album to present to your new clients. Taking backups for everything will ensure that no last minute equipment issues pose a greater problem than they have to, packing a spare camera, battery and even a backup tripod would all be a smart move as you never know when your existing equipment may suffer an issue.

Source: http://www.point-and-shoot.net/2012/09/27/wedding-photography-essential-knowledge-for-taking-on-your-first-gig/

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