May 10, 2007

LinkedIn Continues to Improve

LinkedIn is listening. Today, the business networking site added a new feature that lets you see how many visitors you have had to your profile, and their titles, should they choose to reveal that data. (TechCrunch: See Who's Reading Your LinkedIn Profile)

While some don't see the immediate benefit to that feature, it falls directly in line with requests I made in February, (See: How to Make LinkedIn Even Better) where I said LinkedIn should act more like a social networking company, by listing:

1. How many times your personal profile has been visited
2. Who has recently visited your personal profile
3. Who has similar profiles to yours
4. Who has similar profiles to your connections


Consider numbers 1 and 2 checked off. Nice job, LinkedIn. The new service is considered to be in beta, so I'd expect they consider this under evaluation and may tweak it over time. Maybe requests 3 and 4 are coming...


Example: From My LinkedIn.com Front Page Tonight


Want to visit my LinkedIn profile? Visit my profile now.

May 06, 2007

ANtics Episode 3.11: Lineup Shuffle

Cross-posted at Athletics Nation...

They say sometimes you can't tell the players without a program. In the case of the A's the last few weeks, I doubt even the program gets it right. Exit Kielty. Enter Putnam. Exit Swisher. Enter Langerhans. Exit Langerhans. Enter Snelling (DOYLE!). Exit Piazza. Enter Cust. Or something like that. And we called up Melhuse again. I'm sure I missed something. Is Harden still on our team?

But don't look now, the A's are only 1 game out of first. Something must be going right...


Click to See Larger Comic


All Comics

Colorado Childhood, 20 Years Later

This morning, my wife and I set off to Littleton, Colorado, where I had attended 1st and 2nd grade way back in the 1982-84 timeframe. We plugged in the old address into our rented Audi's GPS and sure enough, we eventually found ourselves in front of the home where my youngest brother was born and where I had engaged in many a memorable snowball fight during the winter or mudfight in the summer, if my other brother and I were let alone in the backyard with the garden and the hose for too long.

After parking, Kristine and I walked the perimeter of the property, taking a few pictures, and I tried to explain to her how the floorplan of the home was, simply by pointing and gestures. But as we were doing this, the current owner stepped out and curious, inquired what we were doing. I sheepishly explained I had lived there 20-plus years ago and was just visiting. Rather than being annoyed with us and shooing us away, he and his family invited us in to revisit the memories I had from childhood.

Though I had not given them warning, the family invited us into their home, let us venture into the backyard, as we exchanged stories, and even into the bedrooms where we had once had bunkbeds at age six in 1983, and later, where the baby, with his crib, had shared a room with me in early 1984. We walked down to the basement and relived stories of how I had emulated the pole vaulters in the Los Angeles summer Olympics with a simple broom handle, or in a more destructive time, how we had smashed our toy Tonka trucks against the cement walls of the basement.

Our visit also filled some gaps for the family, who has been at the address since 1990, only 5 or so years after we had moved on to California. I told them how during one particularly fierce thunderstorm, the basement had flooded, fatally damaging my dad's LP records, and other heirlooms, including photo albums. I told them of how the backyard fence looked, and how my mother had planted irises around its entirety, or how we had always managed to have spots of snow in the darkest shady areas, from October to May, where the sun never completely outdid the cold.

We exchanged pleasantries, and left on our way, grateful to their trust, openness and hospitality. Our next stop? Lewis Ames elementary school, where I had attended first grade. Though my memories are hazy of much that happened that year, I could have walked from home to school without trouble, and showed the playground, and the wall where I had once tossed a jean beanbag onto the roof in an effort to show off my six-year-old arm strength.

For my wife, the visit serves to help her better understand my own background, to put pictures in her mind to match my stories, and understand the occasional struggles my family went through, or the fun times as well. A California native practically her whole life, the novelty of having a "big" 100 foot by 100 foot backyard is jaw-dropping, as was the low price of some area homes, dipping into the mid-$200,000s to $300,000, where they could easily price for 3 to 4 times that in the Bay Area.

We took a few photos of both stops, as well as the LDS Denver temple, and a trip up to Boulder to see the University of Colorado campus. As soon as we synch up the camera to the computer and post the pictures, we will make them available. We've got one more day in our three day weekend before we head home.

May 05, 2007

Spiderman 3: A Tangled Web of Stories

So, we eventually made it to Denver. We landed about 2 hours beyond schedule, but in one piece. The hotel is nice (it has free Internet, so what else do I care?) and we got a sweet Audi convertible from Hertz. Figured we might as well splurge and get the fun car, complete with Sirius Radio and GPS navigation. So now we just have to hope the weather gets good enough at some point to take the top down, and that we can drive it around a bit before going home Monday night. But on our first night here, we've already had fun - with dinner and a movie, joining the millions of others who saw Spiderman 3 in its opening weekend.

The Spiderman franchise, like Batman and Superman before it, is a must-see in the theater. We've now seen all three. And while I could easily poke holes in the individual actors' roles and speaking lines, or the intermixing of shallow plot twists, it was still fun to see. I still think MJ (Spidey's love interest) serves no purpose but to scream and be a damsel in distress, while the two (two!) villains didn't get developed to the level that I either felt for them or feared them.

The film was full of action, almost blurry at times, to the point you knew there was a good guy and a bad guy somewhere in the middle, but not much else. And when there were victims falling from buildings, they were in the air much too long versus the number of stories they had to cover before hitting the ground. But as we should try and remember, for comic book adaptations, one must suspend belief. The love twists? Sappy, and distracting. But worth seeing.

If you have the patience to wait until it leaves the theater, then give it a shot, but there's something to be said for taking in an action film on the big screen instead of the little one. I'm glad we did.