Sunday, February 3, 2013

Why liberal arts education matters - Chad Dickerson's blog

When I did the Pando Monthly interview last week, I was asked to talk about the one thing I believe that almost no one else believes. I said that a liberal arts education is as important, or even more important, than a math and science education (here?s the clip).

Some people thought that I was taking a shot at math and science, but not at all. I just think that being successful in a modern society requires a broader understanding of humanity and people, and the liberal arts and humanities are important ingredients (Before the interview, Sarah Lacy and I talked about how you could learn everything you need to know about personal relationships in failing startups by reading Shakespeare?s King Lear). There wasn?t much time left in the interview, and my job was to give a pithy answer, but a number of people have asked me later why a liberal arts education matters to a CEO. I had an experience this week that illustrates why in a small but important way.

I spend a lot of time thinking about company culture, and talking with other people about the topic. Culture is critical. In his book Who Says Elephants Can?t Dance, former IBM CEO Lou Gerstner wrote: ?culture isn?t just one aspect of the game ? it is the game.? As you probably know, Gerstner is credited with one of the great company turnarounds with IBM in the 1990s. One question I hear and think about often is: how do you change aspects of your culture if you?re not satisified with them? As I thought about the topic, I was reminded of a quote I?ve seen attributed to Peter Drucker:

Company cultures are like country cultures. Never try to change one. Try, instead, to work with what you?ve got.

If you search Google for the quote, you get 128,000 results. It?s a great quote. The implications of the quote are absolutely profound for anyone leading a company or a team. Does he mean you should simply accept the culture wholesale? Was Drucker suggesting that culture change was a hopeless endeavor, or was there some other context to the quote? How did he define ?culture? anyway? I wanted to read the primary source material that surrounded it to understand why Drucker said it. I?ll admit I was surprised to have never come across this quote in all the Drucker I?ve read over the past few years. I set out to find the original source material.

What I learned is that it doesn?t appear Drucker ever actually wrote or said those words. I started my research by asking my Fancy Hands assistant to find the primary source for the quote. (Fancy Hands could be the most useful service EVER on the Internet, but I?ll save that for another post.) The assistant came back with this article, which attributed the quote to The Daily Drucker, a compendium of Drucker readings for each day of the year. In the article, the author writes about how he gave his nephew a copy of The Daily Drucker, and asked him later to list some of his favorite quotes, which included the culture quote. I have a Kindle copy of The Daily Drucker, and it turns out that the quote doesn?t actually appear in the book. (This made me laugh. The nephew clearly conned his uncle by not reading the book and doing a little Googling for quotes while saving the rest of his time for other pursuits.)

That aside, even if the quote had been in The Daily Drucker, it wasn?t the primary source material, so I asked the assistant to dig deeper. Awash in 128,000 meaningless Google results, she picked up the phone (gasp!) and called The Drucker Institute at Claremont Graduate University. Very quickly, she was on email with Dr. Joseph A. Maciariello, Director of Research and Academic Director of the Drucker Institute. When asked about the quote, Dr. Maciariello pointed us to a piece Drucker wrote for the Wall St. Journal on March 28, 1991 with the title: ?Don?t change corporate culture: use it,? on page A14. I won?t go into the hoops we had to go through to get a copy (it is surprisingly difficult for a regular person to buy articles from the WSJ archives). I read the article. Drucker writes about ?cultural change? as the latest management fad and the need to change behaviors to achieve desired results. But he said that shouldn?t be confused with changing culture. Here?s the closest I could come to the quote in the actual written text:

What these [business] needs require are changes in behavior. But ?changing culture? is not going to produce them. Culture ? no matter how defined ? is singularly persistent. Nearly 50 years ago, Japan and Germany suffered the worst defeats in recorded history, with their values, their institutions and their culture discredited. But today?s Japan and today?s Germany are unmistakably Japanese and German in culture, no matter how different this or that behavior. In fact, changing behavior works only if it can be based on the existing ?culture.?

The sentiment of the quote is roughly the same as the one that has been incorrectly attributed to Drucker 128,000 times but the power of the actual writing and ideas is in the nuance. In particular, the examples of Japan and Germany are uniquely powerful. (The rest of the piece goes much deeper on this but unfortunately it is not linkable). As I read the text, I had a moment of much clearer understanding where Drucker?s point on culture resonated in a way that the misquote simply didn?t deliver. As Gerstner wrote, matters of company culture trump just about everything else when you?re running a company, so this insight is incredibly important to the work I do on a very practical level. It explains why ?Code as Craft? resonates so strongly in Etsy?s engineering culture, even though there was near-total change in how the team operated over the course of a few years. The actual text provides thoughtful, inspiring, and tangible examples (post-war Germany and Japan), whereas the misquote is negative and even defeatist (?Never try to change one? and ?work with what you?ve got.?)

It?s a little disturbing that so many people could misquote Drucker for so long without any of the quoters realizing it, and I?m sure this quote has been bandied about in board rooms to justify all kinds of plans. I?m certain I have engaged in the same practice with other quotes if only because it takes a lot of work to find the original context, as this experience demonstrates. Misquoting is particularly rampant on the Internet and I?m not the first to write about it by any means ? see ?Falser Words Were Never Spoken.? But each time we do it, we lose the opportunity to really understand what the person being quoted was really trying to say. We lose the deeper lessons of the text and only get the relative emptiness of a pithy headline that may have removed the insight of the original author. Taking a critical stance on that quote and having the tools to dive down into the primary source material took me from simply having a snappy out-of-context quote to a much deeper insight on a critically important subject.

When I got the first email from my Fancy Hands assistant pointing to the reference to The Daily Drucker, I wasn?t satisfied. I remembered how my professors emphasized the importance of correctly citing primary source material, and I became a pro at using the library and information sources in general. I learned how to look deeper into the text and ask the right questions to really get to the heart of an idea. I ended up with more questions, but much better and more informed ones. These are all skills I learned from my liberal arts education, and they are essential to the work I do every day. That?s the point I was trying to make.

Side note: Two blog posts in a few days? Having a kid has rearranged my schedule and my commitments so thoroughly that I?ve found a little time for writing. I hope to be writing more.

Source: http://blog.chaddickerson.com/2013/02/03/liberal-arts-matter/

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Saturday, February 2, 2013

Wall Street Journal, Washington Post disclose Chinese attacks

Following the New York Times' revelation earlier this week of a massive Chinese attack upon its computer systems, a security analyst told TechNewsDaily that disclosing such attacks might become a "badge of honor" among media companies.

The statement by Sean Sullivan of Finnish security firm F-Secure was quickly proved right.

On Thursday afternoon, less than a day after the Times' story was posted online, its ideological rival the Wall Street Journal revealed that it, too, had been attacked by Chinese hackers.

On Friday, the Washington Post, following a scoop by a former staffer, was forced to admit that its networks had been penetrated for years.

The Journal provided fewer details than the Times, but said that "in the most recent incident," hackers had managed to break into computers in the Journal's Beijing bureau in mid-2012.

From there, the Journal said, the intruders were able to access the Journal's worldwide computer network.

"A number of computers were totally controlled by outside hackers," the Journal said.

[Why Most Companies Won't Admit They Were Hacked]

Brian Krebs, who covered computer security at the Washington Post and now publishes his own Krebs on Security blog, was contacted by a former colleague who had been an information-technology staffer at the newspaper's headquarters.

"We spent the better half of 2012 chasing down compromised PCs and servers. [It] all pointed to being hacked by the Chinese," Krebs' source told him.

"They had the ability to get around to different servers and hide their tracks. They seemed to have the ability to do anything they wanted on the network."

The pattern described by Krebs' source fit those described by the Times and the Journal ? an initial break-in to a few machines, followed by an exploration of the entire network and the installation of malware that guaranteed further access.

The Post's own story provided few on-the-record details, other than to confirm the broader outlines of Krebs' story, as Post officials were unwilling to confirm much to their own reporters.

A company spokeswoman denied the assertion by Krebs' source that the newspaper had turned over a server to the National Security Agency for analysis.

The Post's reporters had better luck with an unnamed tech-industry official, who told them, "If every company reported when it was hacked and who it was hacked by, it would be harder [for China] to get away with it."

At least one media outlet seemed to welcome the news of massive Chinese network infiltration.

"The Onion would like to once again affirm our commitment to providing the Chinese government with our employees' passwords and personal information with total and unquestioning cooperation," the satirical newspaper said in a piece posted Thursday.

"The Onion aims to be on the right side of history, and towards that end, China is also welcome to our employees' Social Security numbers, home addresses, and medical and voting histories if ever they would like to see them," it said. "When our Chinese overlords colonize this crumbling land, The Onion will be glad to have been of some modest service."

Copyright 2013 TechNewsDaily, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/technolog/wall-street-journal-washington-post-disclose-chinese-attacks-1B8219492

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Vacancy: English Language ..., Jubail, Saudi Arabia ... - TEFL.com

?Posted: Fri 1st Feb 2013 14:26 GMT ? Add to My Jobs' FolderAdd to My Jobs' Folder
English Language Educational Technology Specialist
Booz Allen Hamilton
Location Jubail, Saudi Arabia, Saudi Arabia
Deadline --
Experience 3 years
Details
Key Role:
Provide English Language Training (ELT) classroom instruction to military personnel on naval bases in Saudi Arabia. Apply conventional teaching techniques and computer-based instructional materials to enhance classroom training, with the American Language Course of the Defense Language Institute as the core curriculum. Participate in the development of computer-based supplementary materials, as needed. Provide management or administrative backup for the ELT team leader.
Qualifications
Basic Qualifications:
-3+ years of experience as an ELT instructor
-Experience with developing student communicative skills
-Ability to provide creative classroom delivery in a well-managed classroom
-Ability to obtain a security clearance
-BA or BS degree

Additional Qualifications:
-Experience with teaching in the Middle East region
-Experience with instructing students in military programs
-Experience in academic administrative roles
-Experience with maintaining and troubleshooting computer operating systems and applications
-Experience with Learning Management System (LMS) deployment and administrative in local server environments and across the Internet
-Ability to speak a second language, including Arabic
-Ability to apply educational technology, instructional techniques and enhancements in the classroom
-Ability to create Flash and Sharable Content Object Reference Model (SCORM) objects based on the American Language Course objectives
-Possession of excellent oral and written communication skills
-BA or BS degree in ESL, EFL, Languages, Educational Technology, or a related field of study preferred; MA or MS degree a plus
-TESOL Certification from a resident program, including CELTA, Trinity TESOL, or DELTA

Clearance:
Applicants selected will be subject to a security investigation and may need to meet eligibility requirements for access to classified information.

This position is employed via ASE, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Booz Allen Hamilton.

Integrating the full range of consulting capabilities, Booz Allen is the one firm that helps clients solve their toughest problems, working by their side to help them achieve their missions. Booz Allen is committed to delivering results that endure.

We are proud of our diverse environment, EOE, M/F/D/V.

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McLean, Virginia
22033 - United States
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Fax 703-905-3022
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    94% Zero Dark Thirty

    All Critics (217) | Top Critics (42) | Fresh (203) | Rotten (14)

    Chastain makes Maya as vivid as a bloodshot eye. Her porcelain skin, delicate features and feminine attire belie the steel within.

    No doubt Zero Dark Thirty serves a function by airing America's dirty laundry about detainee and torture programs, but in its wake, there's a crying need for a compassionate Coming Home to counter its brutal Deer Hunter.

    While "Zero Dark Thirty" may offer political and moral arguing points aplenty, as well as vicarious thrills,as a film it's simply too much of a passable thing.

    From the very first scenes of Zero Dark Thirty, director Kathryn Bigelow demonstrates why she is such a formidable filmmaker, as adept with human emotion as with visceral, pulse-quickening action.

    A timely and important reminder of the agonizing human price of zealotry.

    Not only is Zero Dark Thirty one of the year's best movies, it's an inspiring one to share with your daughters. That is, if they're old enough to deal with explicit torture scenes.

    Following on from the great acclaim of The Hurt Locker, Bigalow's shaky cam and tough talking characters once again take us to the dark side of modern warfare.

    In the absence of cinematic grandeur and didacticism, we're left as empty and as lost as Chastain's agent as she boards a symbolically empty plane for an uncertain future. Just what are we to think of the so-called War on Terror?

    The viewer needs to stay sharp to stay on top of the details of the labyrinthine search, but Bigelow tackles the complex story with the same muscular urgency and incisive intelligence that won her an Oscar for The Hurt Locker.

    Exhilarating cinema that makes you want to forget all the questionable issues of representation that have come before it.

    This is a fascinating film, and Chastain's wonderful performance has something in it of the tragic sense of life.

    So overwhelming is the momentum that it proves possible to live with the intelligence that the protagonist is complicit in ground-level fascism.

    Blistering writing, directing and acting hold us firmly in our seats as this procedural drama snakes its way to a riveting action finale

    Terrifically good, propulsive film-making ...

    Remarkable and engaging piece of filmmaking considering the outcome of the story is well known. A sign of the times we live in and the processes put in place to wrangle the people that choose to live outside the realm of civility

    Not what you'd call crowd-pleasing, this is fascinating - if occasionally harrowing - in its realistic depiction of the intricacies of CIA operations.

    Against all the odds, Kathryn Bigelow's powerful story of the hunt is a taut and searing action thriller that keeps you gripped.

    A silly, at times despicable film that never remotely deserved an Oscar nomination. Compared with this, Team America: World Police was a think piece.

    We get all imaginable views of the witchy pentacle that is covert US military politics.

    It haunts and lingers long after the lights go up.

    Bigelow has crafted a riveting, entirely convincing procedural that shows us the long, frustrating pursuit of bin Laden through the eyes of Jessica Chastain's dogged CIA agent.

    For much of its three hour running time, Zero Dark Thirty moves like a police procedural: it is rigorous, pared-back and analytical.

    We all know this story ends but Zero Dark Thirty's finale is still gripping and action-packed.

    It's an effective thriller - uninterested in anyone other than the home team.

    A step by step depiction of what went into the hunt for and discovery of Osama bin Laden. The characters are surface view only.

    In Kathryn Bigelow's masterful thriller, the manhunt for Osama bin Laden is the ultimate no-win scenario: a battle neither side can afford to lose with a prize that may not be worth the fight.

    Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/zero_dark_thirty/

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    Friday, February 1, 2013

    UN panel: Israel settlers must leave West Bank

    Ahmad Gharabli / AFP - Getty Images

    A Palestinian activist fixes a flag near a proposed new encampment in the West Bank on Jan 20.

    By Alastair Jamieson, Staff writer, NBC News

    Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank violate Palestinian human rights and must be withdrawn, United Nations investigators said Thursday -- a move described by observers as ?unprecedented.?

    An international report by the U.N. Human Rights Council said Israel is ?committing serious breaches of its obligations under the right to self-determination and under humanitarian law.?

    All settlers must begin to withdraw from the occupied territories, the report said. It echoed the earlier claim of Palestinians that the the practices of settlers could be considered possible war crimes by the International Criminal Court.

    Israel, which did not cooperate with the investigation, dismissed the document as ?biased? and said it would ?only hamper efforts to find a sustainable solution to the Israel-Palestinian conflict.?

    Tel Aviv-based Haaretz said the ?unprecedented? conclusion was the U.N.?s ?harshest condemnation of Israeli policy in West Bank since 1967.?

    About 250 settlements in the West Bank have been established since 1967 and they hold an estimated 520,000 settlers, the U.N. said.

    Palestinians claim the settlements hamper Palestinian access to farm lands.

    The report [PDF link], led by French judge Christine Chanet and summarized in a news release in Geneva on Thursday, said:

    "Israel must, in compliance with article 49 of the Fourth Geneva Convention, cease all settlement activities without preconditions. It must immediately initiate a process of withdrawal of all settlers from the OPT (occupied Palestinian territories).

    These violations are all interrelated, forming part of an overall pattern of breaches that are characterised principally by the denial of the right to self-determination and systemic discrimination against the Palestinian people which occur on a daily basis.

    Since 1967, Israeli governments have openly led, directly participated in, and had full control of the planning, construction, development, consolidation and encouragement of settlements, the report states."

    Asma Jahangir, one of the authors of the report, said: ?We are today calling on the government of Israel to ensure full accountability for all violations, put an end to the policy of impunity and to ensure justice for all victims.?

    Israel?s Foreign Ministry issued a statement refuting the findings, according to the Jerusalem Post. ?The Human Rights Council has sadly distinguished itself by its systematical, one-sided and biased approach towards Israel. This latest report is yet another unfortunate reminder of such approach,? the newspaper quoted the ministry as saying.

    Hanan Ashrawi, a top official with the Palestinian Liberation Organization, told Reuters: "This is incredible. We are extremely heartened by this principled and candid assessment of Israeli violations...This report clearly states the Israel is not just violating the 4th Geneva Convention, but places Israel in liability to the Rome Statute under the jurisdiction of the ICC."

    Related:

    Israel faces European backlash over decision to expand settlements

    US slams Israel's decision to expand settlements

    Israeli court throws out family's lawsuit over death of US activist Rachel Corrie

    Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/01/31/16789933-un-panels-report-israel-must-withdraw-all-settlers-from-west-bank?lite

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    Will the Mormons knife the Boy Scouts if gay ban is lifted? (Americablog)

    Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

    Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/281827459?client_source=feed&format=rss

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    Caixin Online: How China?s Huawei became a mobile phone giant

    By Tan Min

    BEIJING ( Caixin Online ) ? Huawei Technologies Co., well-known as a provider of telecoms network equipment and technology solutions, is enjoying impressive results in its mobile handset business after years of low-profile development.

    Market research institution International Data Corp. (IDC) says Huawei sold 10.8 million mobile phones around the world in the fourth quarter of 2012, third behind Samsung /quotes/zigman/189458/quotes/nls/ssnlf SSNLF +1.85% ?and Apple /quotes/zigman/68270/quotes/nls/aapl AAPL -0.31% .

    Many people are not surprised by Huawei?s quick growth in handset sales considering its continuous development of smart phones and close relationship with international telecoms operators.

    ?About Caixin
    Caixin is a Beijing-based media group dedicated to providing high-quality and authoritative financial and business news and information through periodicals, online and TV/video programs.
    ? Get the Caixin e-newsletter /conga/story/misc/caixin.html 61611

    Huawei sells its products in more than 140 countries. In the early days, its handsets were mainly sold with contracts or as part of special offers, but the phones lacked clear branding. Such deals gradually cultivated customers in many countries.

    The rise of 3G wireless service has changed the structure of the global telecom market and granted more say to operators. Its close relationship with global telecom operators has been a boon to Huawei.

    The year 2010 was important to Huawei?s mobile phone business. The company adjusted its business strategy to meet growing domestic demand for cheaper smart phones. Since then, it has put more emphasis on mobile phone development and marketing.

    Global giants such as Samsung, Apple and Nokia have long ignored the lower-end market. Meanwhile, many of China?s domestic phone makers lack advanced technology. This provided Huawei with an opportunity.

    Its first 3G mobile phone designed for China Telecom, the C8500, sold over 1 million units in its first 100 days. By the end of 2010, Huawei had sold 20 million 3G phones in partnership with China Telecom /quotes/zigman/313142/quotes/nls/cha CHA +0.40% ? /quotes/zigman/26108 HK:728 -0.95%

    Can Z10 make BlackBerry sexy again?

    Simon Constable and Engadget editor-in-chief Tim Stevens discuss BlackBerry's prospects for its new phones, and David Wessel checks in on the state of the U.S. economy. Photo: BlackBerry.

    Huawei soon took this domestic strategy overseas, winning considerable market share among low-end smart phone users, especially in Africa and Latin America. A source from the company?s mobile phone operation says its overseas phone sales were now greater than in the domestic market.

    Clearly, Huawei has pursued the right strategy. However, competition has grown fiercer. Domestic phone makers such as Coolpad are eyeing overseas expansion, and international players like Blackberry /quotes/zigman/18534/quotes/nls/rimm RIMM -12.01% ?and Nokia /quotes/zigman/162154/quotes/nls/nok NOK -2.85% ?are adjusting their strategies.

    Huawei could start developing higher-end products, while strengthening its share in the low-end market. Meanwhile, the company, which mainly relies on telecom operators for phone sales, may also need to consider building its own sales and supply networks.

    In addition, Huawei has also shown an interest in developing its own operating system because it now uses Android.

    Read this report on Caixin Online.

    /quotes/zigman/189458/quotes/nls/ssnlf

    US : U.S.: OTCBB

    Volume: 110.00

    Jan. 29, 2013 12:00a

    Market Cap

    $202.54 billion

    /quotes/zigman/68270/quotes/nls/aapl

    US : U.S.: Nasdaq

    Volume: 14.63M

    Jan. 30, 2013 4:00p

    Market Cap

    $430.34 billion

    /quotes/zigman/313142/quotes/nls/cha

    US : U.S.: NYSE

    Volume: 60,821

    Jan. 30, 2013 4:04p

    Rev. per Employee

    $139,053

    /quotes/zigman/26108

    HK : Hong Kong

    Volume: 28.60M

    Jan. 31, 2013 11:59a

    Market Cap

    HK$338.30 billion

    Rev. per Employee

    HK$1.08M

    /quotes/zigman/18534/quotes/nls/rimm

    US : U.S.: Nasdaq

    Volume: 222.79M

    Jan. 30, 2013 4:00p

    /quotes/zigman/162154/quotes/nls/nok

    US : U.S.: NYSE

    Volume: 45.08M

    Jan. 30, 2013 4:00p

    Rev. per Employee

    $322,698

    Source: http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story.asp?guid=%7BA2C10B4A-6B42-11E2-AC0D-002128040CF6%7D&siteid=rss&rss=1

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