DIY is Your Friend -(originally published on Ravepubs.com)
One part punk intelligista , one part pagan ritual, and one part musical rapture, Shaken liberally with a twist of technorotica and a jigger of ADD
DIY is Your Friend -(originally published on Ravepubs.com)
we mock our northern neighbors, take one for team , have serious moment -(ha' who we kiddin?) #avtweeps
Episode 10 of AV Week brings new blood with Adrian Boyd, Matt Scott returns as our international correspondent, and George Tucker joins us.
We talk about AV Week, the InfoComm industry celebration of all things AV. Cheryl Regan from ICIA gives us some tips and ideas on how to promote the industry where you live.
Crestron has killed a long beloved product; we mourn the passing of the Adagio line. How would you like a control system you can control with your brain? We’ll explain. Also, George explains how to build your very own satellite. Plus, we have the next big market for you integrators… senior citizens.
http://www.avnation.tv/avweek-episode-10-oh-canada/
This post orginally appeared on Gary Kayye's RavePub Site on August 2nd, 2011
Are you useless? I am and proudly so and I think you could do with being so too.
I’ll let that sink in for a moment before we proceed -- you should strive to be useless and leading by example, encourage your staff to be the same.
Useless adjective \'yüs-l?s\
1. Not fulfilling or not expected to achieve the intended purpose or desired outcome
In reality useless is usually based on a simple frame of reference, or in the colloquial -- one man’s
garbage is another man’s treasure. For an install company, tinkering is a useless endeavor, a wasteful process of learning as you go and where results are not always what one expected. Having a staff of useless tinkerers is not just terrible for your business, much worse; it is the best thing that can happen to it.
Do you remember back to when you were six or seven years old and the concept of chemistry or at least the idea that a mad scientist could hold such power with a simple set of beakers and surgical tubing held so much sway? Back then, you mixed shampoo with wood chips, hair gel, milk and orange juice half waiting for the, mostly inert, mixture to start moving of its own volition. These experiments were mostly harmless but if you were like me the ‘failures’ never dulled the excitement of the possibilities -- ‘if I could just find the right ratios!’ <cue cute-evil laugh>. Then again you could have had a mom like mine who occasionally would provide me with bottles marked ‘ingredient X’ - <Vinegar> and ‘Mystery Powder Y’ - <Baking Soda>. That particular experiment had me wide eyed and standing atop a three-legged stool as the resulting reaction covered the floor of my room. Did I mention that I also became really good with a mop?
I want to see your staff doing more of the above. No, not the mop - the wild-eyed fascination of deconstructivism. Wasteful, you might say. Absolutely devastating to project deadlines and company profits one might argue. Horse Hockey! I say. (With apologies to Sherman T. Potter)
The process of tinkering provides lessons in how stuff works, it is demonstrative and practical, and there is great value in opening a box and figuring out just how they did that. An even greater benefit can come from forceful misapplication-creating wondrous new functions or in letting the genie out.
I am a big fan of something called Circuit Bending which is the process of opening up consumer electronics - mostly kids’ toys - and modifying the circuit boards to create new sounds. The cult community of circuit bending is part heath kit hacker, part pyromaniac musician and part serious electronics debugger. Modifying a toy is not nearly as simple as it might appear -- these units’ electronics are often undocumented; the process of figuring out just where to connect jumpers requires patience and research. It also requires a willingness to fail.
Failure is constructive.
Are you allowing your staff to fail?
If you still think that I am full of it just take a look at what 3M™ does. 3M has a long standing policy (since the 1920’s!) of allowing employees - regardless of project schedules - to dedicate up to 15 percent of their paid work hours on personal projects. What possible benefits could a policy which wreaks havoc on deadlines and product to market schedules have? Not much really -- just the development of whole new markets in adhesives, recording mediums and of course the ubiquitous Post-it-Notes ®.
What untapped solution are you missing out of by holding your staff back? Where would we be without the invention the iPad typewriter? For me it would be a sad, sad world.
Walking the floor at ICIA's Infocomm 11 trade show
“Space is big. You just won't believe how vastly, hugely, mind- bogglingly big it is. I mean, you may think it's a long way down the road to the chemist's, but that's just peanuts to space.”
Douglas Adams, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
Infocomm is huge this year. From the entire show floor to the second level of classes and demos and breakout rooms throughout it just seems to never end.
It has been twelve years since I last had the chance to see the show as an attendee and not a booth builder slash floor barker and perhaps this has altered my perception of space at the show. When you work the booth for a major manufacture there is little chance to wander from your post and explore - one eats sleeps and yes poops the product(s) with little chance of getting beyond the immediate parcel of show floor . The universe is indeed a very defined area during these days.
As attendee, well, it is like being transformed from Sisyphus into David Bowman , complete with wide eyed expression and a multitude of lights reflecting in them.
Being here at the show is a must, having a physical relationship with the products and people cannot be recreated by reading press releases or wandering the halls of a ‘Virtual Tradeshow’. Only when you can touch a device, turn it over in your hands and look into the -proverbial- eyes and look directly into the - real- eyes of the company employee does one get a connection with the possibilities.
This is not to argue against virtual connections. In addition to seeing the gadgets, gear and goodies in action I am excited to finally meet, face to face and beer mug to wine glass, the fine folks of #Avtweeps. We are a group of Audio Visual folks who have gathered a tribe on social media, more specifically Twitter. The daily and sometimes hourly conversations are extremely constructive and I could hardly imagine a day without ‘hearing’ from the group at least once a day.
Truth is that I have sought out the company booths of the folks who regularly chat, chide and console each other via the avtweeps association because I trust them. And in turn I am more likely to trust the products - or at least give them the benefit of doubt.
As I head out to dive into day two of the show, my feet still ache and my knees feel as if someone put them on backwards I am determined to see as many demos and presentations as possible.
Coming from the cloistered world of working for one major manufacture has me learning anew and re-submerging myself into an industry I had taken a short sabbatical from.
See you on the show floor, say hi and join me for a coffee and nosh at the Infocomm Lounge.