Friday, December 31, 2010

Bienvenue 2011, Bonne Année à tous

Happy New Year
Bonne Année à tous
明けましておめでとうございます
La mulţi ani
Sretna Nova godina
Szczęśliwego Nowego Roku
Feliz Ano Novo

OK, I think that covers most of the languages of most of my friends, but if I missed anyone, I apologize. What an interesting conundrum that is - what language to wish your friends Happy New Year in. Not that long ago it would not have even been a remote consideration because your friends were always local to you, typically in your own neighbourhood, city, or country. That is no longer the case for many of us who spend our lives plugged into the Internet.

Happy New Year to all of my friends, associates, and family - some of whom I have never actually met in person. Due to the nature of business and the surge of social networking acceptance, many of the people I communicate with every day live in foreign countries and speak a different native tongue. I even have some family I have reconnected with after many years and a few actual relations I have yet to meet in person. 2010 was a very interesting year for the growth of communication in the Internet and evolution of the way we interact with each other. I am looking forward to the changes ahead in 2011.

This will be a fantastic year for creative thinking and emerging technologies to blossom - I can feel that already happening. If you are not comfortable with change, then I suggest you brace yourself now because 2011 is going to rock your world.

I personally will revel in it and soak up every ounce of new information.

Happy New Year!

Sunday, November 28, 2010

Of Sugar Plums and Fairies...

Happy Hanukkah, festive Pancha Ganapati, contemplative Eid ul-Adha, joyous Yule, eventful Saturnalia, but most of all...

Merry Christmas to all my friends, colleagues, associates and readers.

Yes I said "Christmas" - go ahead and call the authorities, write me up, throw the cuffs on. You can haul me away in irons if you want to, but I celebrate Christmas at this time of year and I am not afraid to say so. I do not celebrate "festivus" or "winter break" or "December holidays", I celebrate Christmas as in Christ-Mass, as in the celebration of the birth of Christ.

Whether you believe December 25th is the actual birth day of Jesus Christ or not, and whether you believe that person was/is the messiah or a prophet or just a highly skilled public speaker, is completely irrelevant. There is no doubt that the person we know historically as Jesus Christ lived, taught, and died somewhere in the Middle East about 2010 years ago and he left behind a controversial legacy that still lives on our calendars today.

The fact is that it is highly unlikely that December 25th is an actual official birth date since most of us know that day was stolen from the Celts when the early Catholic Church "purified" that part of the world. Some date in May makes more sense based on celestial regression, but whatever. I still put up the tree, sing Christmas carols, decorate with copious quantities of light and celebrate like a Roman Counsellor throughout the month of December.

I make or buy presents for people who matter to me and I get them something that will make them feel warm and comforted. This is as close as I can get to the gift of life, peace, and joy that all Christians (all people for that matter) should aspire to. If we all thought this way throughout the year, there would be no need for borders, walls, armies or politics. I fill my world with bright lights, shiny bobbles and reflective things that make my house look like something Clark Griswold would be proud of. This is a purely symbolic presentation of "light" defeating "darkness" and all the metaphorical implications that go along with that.

Maybe it seems old fashioned, or quaint, or outdated to some, but I don't care. My Christmas season includes baking gingerbread and decorating sugar cookies with my family. We go to friends houses and sing Christmas carols by the fire with one of us playing an old upright piano and another handing out sheet music. Christmas morning starts with a full viewing of "A Christmas Carol" - the 1938 version - followed by a breakfast of Japanese oranges and an exploration into the depths of the stockings that were hanging by the fire just the evening before. Some time during the holiday, I absolutely must watch Its a Wonderful Life and Scrooge (Alasdair Sim version). My ideal Christmas Eve is spent with friends out for dinner or at a movie followed by a candle light service in a country church surrounded by fir and cedar trees - a little snow on the branches makes that perfect.

I have friends who are Jewish, Muslim, Hindu, Christian, and Pagan and I try to acknowledge their religious holiday's when I know about them. Its never a problem for me to say "Happy Hanukkah" or "Festive Yule", so why do people take exception when I say "Merry Christmas"? I understand the need for a generic "Winter Holiday", but when I say Merry Christmas, that is exactly what I mean.

So I hope my Jewish friends have a Happy Hanukkah and I wish my Pagan friends a Festive Yule. As we approach the 25th though, I want to wish my Christian friends a Merry Christmas filled with joy, peace, light, and hope for more of the same throughout the coming year.

Friday, November 26, 2010

Spear Phishing Attacks On The Rise

I am not usually one to jump on "the band waggon" and parrot what every other blogger is saying, but I am going to make an exception in this case because it is important - really, really important.

Within the high volume mail industry there are companies known as ESPs or Email Service Providers, who provide a platform for others to send mail through. Some of the biggest in the world are clients I work with and they help small to medium sized businesses send valuable mail to their clients and end users. These are not spammers, they are legitimate delivery platforms that provide a valuable service to legitimate clients. If your small business needed to send a product alert to 50,000 end users by email, you would probably use one of these services instead of spending thousands of dollars on your own mail system.

Here is the problem though. Some very bad people - lets call then "organized criminals" - have managed to inject a viral spear phishing attack into about 100 ESPs worldwide. The mail looks legitimate to the ESPs so they transport is as per their contracts. When you receive the mail, you may click on an embedded link that takes you to a third party web site that looks completely legitimate, but in the back ground this site is installing a virus into your computer that is designed to steal passwords and other important data.

I need to stress that this is NOT the fault of the ESPs or their clients, but rather a complex criminal act perpetrated by third parties. There is a very good article on the problem and the background in this following link so I wont rehash it myself in too much detail.

http://krebsonsecurity.com/2010/11/spear-phishing-attacks-snag-e-mail-marketers/

In a nutshell, do NOT click on ANY link in ANY email that you do not know has come from a trusted source. I received one of these myself and it looked like an update from a friend who had just been married and the link was to weddingphotos.net. That site actually looks legitimate, but in the background it tries to install malware that will steal your system passwords and try to install remote control software to your PC.


And here is another:

Dear Tom Mairs,

Stephanie just sent you an ecard from 123Greetings.com

You can view it by clicking here:

http://www.123greetings.com/send/view/2210394848736232

You can also copy & paste the above link into your browser's address bar.

Or if you prefer, you can go to http://www.123greetings.com/ and type your
ecard number (2210394848736232) in the "Search Box" at the top right of the page.

Your ecard is going to be with us for the next 30 days.

If you need any help in viewing your ecard or any other assistance,
please visit our Help/ FAQ section at: http://help.123greetings.com/

We hope you enjoy your ecard,

Your friends at 123Greetings.com
http://www.123greetings.com

We respect your privacy. You will not be receiving any promotional emails from us
because of this ecard. To view our privacy policy, click on the link below:
http://info.123greetings.com/company/privacy_policy.html

Note: This is an auto generated mail. Please do not reply.

If you have any other problem please contact us by clicking on the following link:
http://help.123greetings.com/contact_us.html

This email was sent by 123Greetings.com, Inc., 1674 Broadway, New York, NY 10019.



So please be very careful of anything you get in your email that does not look ligit - it probably is not.

Sunday, September 5, 2010

If I could remember those days, I'm sure I would miss them.

If you are reading this then there is a fairly high probability that you were a teen in the eighties and survived to tell about it. If so then you were born in the late sixties or early seventies and most likely just barely remember the fall of Saigon in April 1975 that signalled the end of the war in Vietnam and the first of the major events that would shape our generation.

I consider myself fortunate to have entered the eighties with an extremely large number of functioning brain cells for if not, I would surely be a vegetable today. As much as our parents wreaked havoc on the "establishment" in the fifties and sixties, we made the nineteen eighties historically memorable for sex, drugs and rock 'n roll. Those "Classic Rock" stations that fill the radio waves today are broadcasting mostly tunes from 1978 to 1991 because it is still some of the best rock ever recorded. Television and film were completely transformed during that decade as were the audiences who consumed them. It was the decade that saw the birth of the personal computer, the collapse of apartheid, and the dawn of a new age in realism. We invented "Grunge", re-invented "Punk", and developed an entire culture around the new concept of "video games" like PacMan and Space Invaders.

The title of this piece is a bit of a mis-label. Aside from a few purple-haze filled months in 1982, I can actually remember most of my teen years and from what I recall it was a blast. We saw the last of the drive-in theatres pass into history, but not without first experiencing Heavy Metal, Cheech and Chong, and War Games on those big outdoor screens long before iMax and Surround Sound. We were the first to have personal portable music in the form of the "WalkMan" and started the whole music copyright controversy. The fees we paid for our theatre passes fuelled geniuses like George Lucas and Steven Spielberg to completely reinvent the film industry with revolutionary works like Star Wars and E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial.

I also remember the fall of the Berlin wall in November of 1989 as clearly as if it was yesterday. With that we saw the beginning of end of the "Eastern Block" and a new era of nation building in Europe. Our generation witnessed the first flight of the Space Shuttle and saw the beginning of what would become the commercialization of space. I remember Black Monday (October 19th 1987), the largest one-day stock market crash in history that saw company values cut in half over night and like many others my age, gained a healthy appreciation for careful financial planning.

It was the end of the cold war and the beginning of the energy crisis. We redefined everything from education to politics to religion. Our music spawned a new level of global communication and social awareness. Student movements rose and challenged governments around the world to listen to the people's voice. Silicon enabled us to explore worlds that only existed previously in our imaginations, and we created them on Commodore 64s and Atari 2600s.

If you read this and you relate, then make sure your kids know....

We are Generation-X and we changed the world.

Thursday, August 19, 2010

The Raspberry Thief

Last year we had a huge crop of raspberries. Large, juicy, tart raspberries by the bucketful. These are great berries and taste incredibly good with ice cream. The berry patch is all mature plants and they have produced volumes for years... except this year. This year we collected five, and I don't mean buckets, I mean five berries.

So who is the raspberry thief and where did they take my delicious berries? That is a darned good question and one that is not easy to answer in a single sentence. The first indication of a problem went almost unnoticed when in the early spring we experienced a long stretch of unseasonably warm weather. The tall, thick raspberry bushes soaked in all the warmth and converted that sunshine in to new buds on the stalks within a few days. I was sure I was going to have a bumper harvest from the number of new buds I counted.

Then it turned cold again - real cold. What followed was 8 weeks of snow, hail, ice and -20C weather - none of which is good for freshly growing plants. When the weather finally warmed up again, the berry bushes had taken a beating and when I was able to get to the plants for the clean up, they had all but completely frozen at the roots. I was only able to save 4 of the plants and even then had to trim them down to 4" stubs to clean out the dead wood. The patch has started to come back now and is prospering, but won't produce a decent berry harvest for a couple of years.

it is somewhat common to have a warm period in the early spring followed by a cold snap, but this year's warm period was unusually long and warm which resulted in the raspberry casualties. The cold snap was also unusually harsh this year. Both of these are indications of global warming, climate change, or whatever you want to call it. To me it does not matter if this pattern change is the result of a man made hole in the ozone or the natural climate shift as the poles move, or if the tectonic upheavals recently have altered weather patterns permanently. If these climate changes continue to alter crop heath, we will need to start being very careful about what we plant and where, not to mention when.

My raspberry thief was a disappointment but not life threatening, however that will not be the case when it affects the national wheat harvest or decimates an entire region's corn feed crops. If you thought climate change was a political thing or not your problem, maybe this will give us all something more to consider.

Thursday, July 15, 2010

Demand Zero

In the summer of 1979, I was 12 years old, I had the rest of my life to look forward to, and I lived in constant fear of being vapourized. The SALT-II treaty was signed in Vienna that year in June and being the overly inquisitive child that I was, I tried to learn everything about this interesting news event. I remember feeling sorry that I did. I am actually shaking a bit writing this as I recall reading the numbers.

I was not your normal kid by any means even though I thought I was at the time, but how many 12 year olds do you know that have an explosives license and have already built and launched 3 or 4 home made rockets? How many 12 year olds do you know can quickly take a news report on Strategic Arms Limitation, do the math and calculate that between the US and the Soviet stockpiles, the two opposing forces had enough nuclear warheads to incinerate the planet surface 38 times.

Since that time, I have been very aware of world events as they pertain to global survival and nuclear destruction. There were several years during the Cold War where things actually looked stable in a Mexican standoff kinda way. Each of the two super-powers had enough intercontinental warheads to obliterate the other as well as most of the life on the planet, so neither one was willing to actually "push the button". In a weird way, the extreme over-kill of the situation saved us from complete self extinction through the induced fear of the ultimate consequences.

When Reagan withdrew from the SALT-II treaty in 1986 sighting soviet violations of the treaty, all those fears came back. When the Soviet Union finally collapsed in 1991, it was the beginning of a new age of fear and uncertainty for me. With the fall of the once powerful Soviet Union, there was no oppressive government to prevent radical waring factions from using those weapons on each other. Even worse, the Soviet economic collapse meant the nuclear fuel made for a very valuable trading commodity that was guarded by very poorly paid soldiers. Quite honestly, I am surprised we have not seen a "suitcase nuke" set off in New York yet, or that LA gangs are not trading in Uranium and Plutonium on a regular basis.

The latest problems in Pakistan and North Korea have me thinking about 1979 again and I worry about the safety of my children. Unfortunately it is not 1979 and the Cold War is over. There are not just 2 super powers pointing weapons at each other that they never really intend to use. This is 2010 and a thermo-nuclear device capable of wiping out 50 city blocks can be packed into a brief case. There are terrorists all over the world with more money than brains and plenty of poorly paid guards who would gladly turn a blind eye for a few thousand US dollars.

There is a whole new generation running the world now, watching and creating the news. We live in a world of social networks and interconnections that were unheard of in 1979. This new generation is largely oblivious to the silent horror that many of us lived with when we were kids growing up in the seventies and eighties. This new generation needs to know the truth of that history.

On July 23rd, a new documentary "Countdown to Zero" will debut in select cities and will trace the history of atomic weapons from origin to present day. If you have an opportunity to see it, please take the time. If you can't please do some research, contact your MP, congress person, or other government official and let them know that we have had enough. The need for nuclear weapons has long past and it is time for all nations to locate and dismantle all nuclear weapons. The time has come for all nations to come together to agree never to build these abominations ever again. The lives of our children depend on it.



Further reading....
http://www.takepart.com/zero
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cold_War
http://www.nucleartippingpoint.org/home.html

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Things I hate about flying First Class

I normally fly coach for all my business trips but recently took advantage of an upgrade offer to First Class on an 6 hour trip to Boston. I have not flown First Class since I was 12 years old, and I had forgotten what the experience was like. I thought I would run down my "like" and "dislike" list for you.

First of all, I really hate that you get on the plane first, bypassing the long annoying line of coach passengers. Oh wait... that was supposed to be on my "like" list. Well, I really hate that they serve lunch like it came from a 4 star hotel with a never ending supply of red or white wine "on the house". Hmm... that was supposed to be on my "like" list too.

Let's see....
Hot steamy towels to wash up before lunch...
Gold label salted almonds for snack...
Chocolate praline desert (OMG that was good)....
Fresh brewed coffee in a real mug...
Complimentary headset....
Nice fluffy pillow...
Extra twelve inches of leg room...
One flight attendant for 6 people....
Fold down foot rest for my tired feet....

...yeah.... those were all supposed to be on my "like" list.

Ah here it is... the "dislike" list..
Those pesky flight attendants always filling up your glass or asking if you want anything else to make your flight more comfortable.

OK, so I had to have something on the dislike list. So I guess it is pretty clear, I will be trying to book First or Executive class for all my long flights in the future.

I think every person who is involved in providing front-line customer service should take a First Class flight at least once every year. This is an airborne classroom in the art of exceeding expectations. If you interact directly with clients and are responsible for their satisfaction, a First Class flight to anywhere is a good lesson in the difference between meeting customer expectations and exceeding them. Anyone who has a goal to provide exemplary customer care can learn from this experience.

No, I did not save you any almonds.

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Afghanistan ... Again....

There are a few numbers that have been on my mind lately.

One Hundred and Fourty Six (146) - This is the number of Canadian soldiers who have given their lives during the current war in Afghanistan.

One Hundred and Three (103) - This is the number of months that Canada has been actively involved the war in Afghanistan.

Twenty Eight Hundred (2800) - The approximate count of Canadian Military troops engaged in the war.

Eighteen Billion ($18,000,000,000) - The approximate dollar value the Canadian government has spent on supporting the war.

Thirty Four Million (34,000,000) - The number of Canadians who just want our troops to come home safely and just have it all over with.


We are in Afghanistan to help restore the democratic government that was over thrown by Sunni radicals (Taliban) in 1996. Hamid Karzai is the rightful, democratically elected president of Afghanistan, and he deserves the right to lead his people to rebuild and prosper in a democratic country, for the good of all other countries on this planet. In order to do that, the oppression and violence of the Taliban insurgents (NOT a government by any means) needs to be removed before that rebuilding process can really begin. We, the USA, and the Russians are largely responsible for allowing the Taliban to take power in the first place, so we have a moral obligation to set things right.

I get a little weary of hearing people whine about how Stephen Harper and the Conservative Party are responsible for us being there. This situation pre-dates Stephen Harper by decades. The previous Emperor of Afghanistan was overthrown in 1973 and the country has been in a variable state of civil war ever since, often fuelled by US/NATO and Russian arms sales. We joined the allied forces in Afghanistan under Jean Chretien's Liberal government in October 2001 and that party had 5 more years in power to choose to change that path before the Conservative government came into power and inherited the situation.

If Canada were overthrown by a radical, violent, oppressive regime bent on self-serving profiteering by turning our farmland into drug growing operations, as the Taliban has done in Afghanistan, I would welcome an invasion of NATO and allies to fight them and help win back our freedom and right to a democratically run country.

We *have* been there too long and we *do* need to bring our troops home, but we have important work to do there and the people of Afghanistan deserve the right to self government. This is about global stability and fighting for the concept of open democracy. This is about fighting oppression and tyranny where it lives strongest. I support our troops there 100% and hope they can get the job done soon so they can all come home safely and we can look forward to a long term beneficial relationship with the new democracy of Afghanistan.

We live on this planet, not just in this country and we all have a moral obligation as citizens of Earth to help other countries provide for a safe, democratically run government for the good of all mankind. Canadian soldiers know that their lives are at risk every day to meet that goal, regardless of the country they do it in and for that I can only say "Thank you".

Saturday, June 5, 2010

Criminal Negligence in the Oil Field

I have to wonder if anyone on the planet actually believes that the thousands of barrels of oil per day that spill into the Gulf of Mexico are anything more than a scheme to increase the value of oil while creating work for thousands of unemployed Americans. I am actually starting to wonder if BP execs didn't engineer the "accident" in he first place. It would not be the first time a large company broke the law and ignored morals in order to turn a profit.

Where were the inspectors who are supposed to ensure that safety mechanisms exist in the event of a failure? Where was the government regulation that was supposed to prevent this kind of disaster in the first place. Where is the political will to enforce a fix and clean up? Why are we now 45 days into he worst ecological disaster in written history without any sign of repair or responsibility?

Why is it that a couple of farmers can come up with an almost free clean up scheme [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o6_LU4zHlSE] while BP, who is at least partly responsibe and is one of the largest corporations in the world chooses to spend $50 Million on TV advertising to basically say "it's not our fault". In fact, there are a large volume of suggestions to fix this mess that are going largely ignored. It amazes me that the US Army core of engineers has not been engaged to seal the leak. Leaving the clean up responsibility in the hands of the idiots who caused the problem in the first place is insane. If the US government will not step in and take action then perhaps the UN needs to engage their peace keeping forces and their associated engineering cores to solve this problem at any cost and them bill it all back to BP and Transocean.

Once we finally clean up this mess, Transocean and British Petroleum should both be held criminally responsible. Yes, I said criminally responsible. The damage this has and will cause to the life-forms that depend on the Gulf of Mexico for survival, including humans, is staggering. Their inability to protect the environment that surrounds their drill-site absolutely must be punished not only in painful financial damages, but in prison terms. If the US government will not demand it, then we and citizens of Earth must do so. If this kind of business over humanity thinking continues, our civilization will be lost forever.

You may think that sounds overly dramatic, but history tells us otherwise. Greed makes men wealthy while destroying the planet we rely on for survival. This kind of environmental impact can only have devastating effects on us as a society of people, and where will the perpetrators be when we are looking for new resources to feed ourselves years from now?

It's time for people to take a stand against corporations who recklessly endanger our lives by poisoning the environment with their waste and accidental fallout. Entire species face extinction because some corporate executive chose not to spend the money to fix a safety mechanism.

What an incredibly sad commentary on what 21st century man has become.

Saturday, March 20, 2010

Hackers, Crackers and Programmers

I recently had a discussion with a person who presumed that since I knew how to write code for computers, that I was a programmer. I guess this is true at a very high level, but I prefer the term hacker for what I do. So what's the difference?

Programmers will use a $50 brand name crowbar and will postpone a job if they don't have the right one. Hackers will use a left over piece of re-bar from the garage. A programmer speaks one or two languages fluently, while a hacker knows 10 or 20 languages at a functional level.

A programmer will write an elegant piece of code that is fully documented and takes most variations into consideration with error handling and pretty error messages. The code will be written to industry standards with strict variable scopes and attention to validation on inputs. There will be copious commenting as well as a fully documented usage guide. It will take two months to release a final version and even then, it will be called "beta" until several users have tried it without any problems. There will typically be an upgrade path that is well thought out in advance and patches will will be built for all possible operating systems.

A hacker will give you the same piece of code in three days and it will work exactly as you requested for the environment you want it to work in. It is unlikely to run without modification on any other operating system and all new versions will have to be hand coded. The comments will all be in-line with the code because only other hackers would want to look at it right? It is unlikely that you will see a manual or user guide, but you might get a one page README file explaining basic usage. You will most likely be handed version 0.01a and the concept of "beta" if foreign to hackers.

Programmers will introduce themselves as a "C programmer with a degree from Stanford" or a ".NET Programmer with a degree from UBC" and they will have experience with methodologies like "Agile", "Scrum" and "Rational". A hacker is unlikely to identify themselves at all and never had the time to bother with finishing a degree. You often have to "know someone who knows someone" in order to find a hacker, while programmers typically carry business cards touting their credentials. Programmers have rules and ethics and follow protocol. Hackers don't think too much of rules, have flexible ethics and only follow protocol when they need to.

Crackers are hackers gone bad. These are the people who spend thier time writing mail worms and viral files and password decryptors. They often are brilliant one-time hackers who crossed over to the dark side and the allure of the pirate world. They get high on the thrill of seeing one of their code creations seep into millions of computers undetected. They sometimes are recruited by corporations for digital espionage or by organized crime for a multitude of nefarious reasons.

Hackers don't like Crackers.

I definitely fall into the "hacker" category in everything I do. Whether it is software, hardware, robotics, AI, writing, or building a deck on the back of the house - I'll always take the hacker approach. I have a number of friends who are professional programmers and I have immense respect for what they do. If I want a polished market ready application built, I would definitely have a programmer build it, but you can guarantee the first version would have been hacked into place.

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Fat Tuesday!

Whether you call it "Fat Tuesday", "Mardi Gras", "Carnival", or "Day before Ash Wednesday", today is the last day before the fasting and penitential season of Lent. It is also Pancake Day!

The later may be more significant to many these days, but there was a time when the known universe operated in fear of, or under the rule of the Roman Empire that was fuelled primarily by the Catholic church, and no pancakes were served.

In any other measure, it is 47 days into the new year and the hours are ticking away. If you planned on making a difference this year, carpe diem and all that, it is time to start (if you have not already). In the days of the Roman Empire, when every day was critical to your survival, the 44 days of Lent had other important geo-political functions, and Fat Tuesday was a pretty significant day. Today, it is a good reminder that there are only 365 days in a year and this means we are well past the 10% point.

In the business world, it is critical to understand that this is also the point at which business gets back to business. The holidays are over, summer is on the distant horizon and there is a window of opportunity for the next few months to make your mark on the year. After three decades of working for a living, I've noticed these patterns emerge in every company I have worked for in every industry. There are always those people who don't take advantage of this opportunity and find them selves scrambling in the fall to make up for lost time.

It is a fabulous time of year to be creative. Writers, painters, and sculptors find inspiration in this time of year and with good reason. Not only is it the beginning of a season of fasting, it is also a season of new growth, rebirth and the melting away of icy oppression. Any hungry creative person should take heed of the chance to teach, build, write and generally do whatever they can to mold the world around them.

The Chinese call this the year of the Tiger (4707 post Huangdi) and in the tradition of the tiger, I plan to stalk and pounce on every opportunity. I think I wave written more this year already than I did most of last year. Unfortunately I have less time for pancakes.




Saturday, January 2, 2010


Happy New Year!

Welcome to 2010. Wow - There were a few times over the past decade that I thought I would not be saying that, but here we are - fat and happy in 2010.

Like most people I try to take some time today to be introspective, to take stock of who I am, where I'm going and where I've been. I like to crack open my resume and touch it up with all the new things I've learned over the past year, and to write a few "thank you" cards to people who have helped, inspired or somehow improved me as a person. This year will be no different except that I have been thinking over the past 10 years a little more.

What a decade this has been. We started by battling fears that 2000 would see a worldwide computer crash leading to feast, famine, accidental wars, and general badness. Well the crashes were minor and deserved, the plagues of locusts never appeared, and it turned out to be a lot more media hype than anything.

In 2000 I was working with First generation (28 million transistor) Pentium CPUs, movies were watched on TV and theatre screens, and a "Walkman" was still the device of choice for portable music. Ten years later, even compact notebook computers use multi core processors with nearly a billion transistors on a chip. YouTube has replaced all other forms of video entertainment as far as volume goes, and the iPod has completely revolutionized how we store, carry and listen to music.

I personally have seen a number of changes in my life that track with technology including a move from the sunny Okanagan Valley to Calgary in 2002, a complete transformation of my business between 2002 and 2006 and a new lifestyle that has me spending more time in jets than cars. I've been able to watch "robotics" grow from a hacker hobby into an actual industry, Ive seen the Internet transform from "tool" to "environment" and I've witnessed the birth of real virtual communities. This year I think I will spend a lot of time thinking about what the next decade will look like and what part I will play in it.

The past year has been an interesting adventure for me personally and in business. I have met many new people and learned many new things. I could easily argue that 2009 was the most tumultuous year of my life. Working with cutting edge technologies and with companies who are shaping the future is both exhausting and incredibly rewarding. I am privileged to be associated with a group of people who will create what they need if it does not exist yet or help a community fix technology that is broken. I am thrilled to see what is on the horizon just out of reach of the general population, but still find myself guessing at what is coming next. In 2009 I litterally spent more time in airports and on flights than I did driving my own car, yet I have more contact with my family and friends than ever before.

I am an inventor and a writer, a builder and a teacher. I have seen the world change dramatically over the past decade and I fully expect twice that volume of change again in the next 10 years. I plan to spend more time writing about what I see, know, and predict. I will spend more time with my family, even if I am on a plane. I will enjoy more music, food and video choices because of the emerging technologies around me. My creative energies will be focused on making lives easier through invention. Most of all I will learn to be even more accepting of change, embrace the unknown and forge ahead into the wilderness.

Happy New Year.