February 5, 2012

The Spirit of the Season

“Merry Christmas, Happy Holidays, Happy New Year!” We say it all so readily as the early winter season approaches. But do we mean it? Are you helping make your part of the world better, are you volunteering your time to help others. There are so many organizations that need our help where you can directly help individuals in your community or around the world.

Here are some organizations that I feel are worthwhile, please let me know if you have any to add to the list. Organizations that truly know the Spirit of the Season all year long.

- Your local volunteer fire company, they depend so much on the generosity of other. Please help.

- Your local Rotary Club. These dedicated business persons help with community projects to international aid and do so much to help others around the world and around the corner.

- Your local food bank. As the economy slowly recovers from 2011 to 2012, please remember there are many in your community that may need help with the basic elements, such as their next meal, please remember to help all year long, as hunger isn’t just a seasonal problem.

- Helping someone that is down on his luck, cancer touches almost every family, and For Pete’s Sake Cancer Respite Foundation helps families battling cancer so they can get break from cancer.

- Nothing says Christmas and Hanukkah like toys for children, no one does it better than the U.S. Marine Corps. and their Toys for Tots program. If you can help, please do.

Let me know who you help at this season, and Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to everyone!

What made your business a success?

Steve Jobs and the Original Apple MacI recently had the pleasure to listening to Guy Kawasaki speak about innovation at the IABC World Conference in Toronto. His Top Ten items for Innovation really resounded with me. But it was his example for number 6, Let 100 Flowers Blossom, that really stuck with me. Guy was a member of the original Apple Macintosh design team. As Guy explains it, when they launched the original Mac, the team thought they had created a great computer to compete with all the other computers of the time that let users manipulate data in early spreadsheets. But a little known desktop publishing program called Aldus Pagemaker was also just starting to bring desktop publishing to the masses. Well people soon realized that the icon-based Graphic User Interface (GUI) of the Macintosh, worked hand-in-hand with this new program and the popularity of both grew. Pagemaker eventually evolved into Adobe InDesign, still a desktop publishing powerhouse. And we all know what happened with Apple. According to Guy, “Aldus Pagemaker saved Apple, if we had been restrictive of what the Mac could do and stuck with spreadsheets, Apple wouldn’t exist today.”

Guy had other examples of products being used for pursuits outside it’s original purpose, such as AVON Skin-So-Soft being used as a bug repellent. His advice, “take the money, let the 100 flowers blossom.” My question for you is what unforeseen purpose, product or service helped make your business a success? For me, I was asked to help a business communication organization I belong to revamp its Philadelphia chapter’s website. The result was having to learn WordPress on the fly and design the site at the same time. WordPress development and customization has become a majority of my business, but who knows if it would have happened if I didn’t volunteer for the website redesign assignment. What unforeseen event or product use helped make your business a success?

Let me know, until next time, Tim

Marco … Polo and Lessons He Left for Us Today

Marco Polo

On this day back in 1324, Marco Polo died. I remember as a child, The Travels of Marco Polo, was one of the first books I signed out of the library. I remember sitting on the steps of my house reading the book cover to cover. The stories of the explorer venturing out of Venice and traveling to China fascinated me. But did you know, Marco Polo didn’t write his own story. As the story goes, after traveling throughout Asia for 24 years (after his Father and Uncle traveled there), and naming all the kingdom he found in the time of Kublai Khan – Polo returned home and the Genoese captured him as a prisoner of war as they fought with Venice. It was while he was imprisoned that he related his story to a fellow prisoner, who wrote it down. The ghost writer, rumored to be, Rustichello of Pisa, was for the most part lost to history but the tales of Polo’s adventures lived on. The book became a top seller in medieval Europe.

But you’re probably wondering why I’m writing about Marco Polo, who has been for the most part relegated to a summertime swimming game and the history books, on a blog that for the most part deals with design, marketing and communication. The lessons of Marco Polo for the modern world:

1) If you have a story to tell … but feel you can’t do it justice, find someone who can, and let them tell it. But do share your story, as it may inspire others, like a young boy in the suburbs of Philadelphia to one day venture out on his own and tell his story.

2) Go outside your comfort zone, as Marco Polo did leaving his native Italy to visit with cultures and people that surely shocked him.

3) Be a student of life and the people within it. Just as Polo studied Khan’s empire and became a trusted advisor to him, being able to speak four languages and teller of tales he engaged this foreign audience in China who was as curious to learn from him as he was to learn from them.

4) Take risks, venturing down the Silk Road was a bold move at the time, putting his life on the line with bandits and warlords was to be admired.

5) Stick you your guns, when The Travels of Marco Polo was released, most in Europe thought it to be a book of lies. Polo died being considered a creator of fairy tales more than an explorer, but Polo remained firm his stories of his travels were true. Many think that Polo and others embellished their stories to sell more copies, which is probably true.

6) Network, Marco Polo supposedly was given a golden tablet from Khan himself that let him travel freely throughout Asia and warded off bandits. So it goes to show you even in the 1200s it was who you knew that had a powerful impact on your life.

So let me know your thoughts on the Marco Polo lessons for the modern world. What book do you remember reading as a child? Does a story that entertains us and takes us to another world need to be entirely factual, or is it the fact that Polo promoted it as such, that turned his audience against him, (i.e. Oprah and James Frey, author of A Million Little Pieces)?

Until next time, Tim

In Tribute to Edgar Allan Poe

Poe_TombstoneThis past weekend, my wife and I attended the funeral of Edgar Allan Poe, the poet, writer and man about town in Baltimore, MD. The burial event was part of the bicentennial celebration of Poe’s birth in 1809. We made a weekend of it and on Saturday visited the Poe House and Museum in one of Baltimore’s “finer” neighborhoods. The tiny house has just enough articles and mementos to keep a Poe fan, like me, satisfied. We had the added bonus of being able to “visit” Mr. Poe’s body. It was actually the special effects creation produced for the next day’s funeral, but it was very “death-like” corpse and eerie being in the home Poe lived in for a short time, looking at his coffin, his stillness, on the second floor parlor of the home.

The next day, we gathered with several hundred other people to witness the procession and funeral service that Poe never had as only a handful of people reportedly attended his funeral in 1849. The crowd spanned the generations and was complete with folks in true Victorian garb to people in what they think is Victorian attire, to people like my wife and I who thought a Poe T-shirt from the Annabel Lee Tavern was appropriate to honor the poet. We all started snapping photos as the horse-drawn casket escorted by the police and the Loch Raven Pipe and Drum Band along with actors portraying Poe’s contemporaries and other famous authors influenced by Poe lead his casket into Westminster Hall where Poe is buried on the corner of Fayette and Greene Streets.Poe_Memorial

Just prior to the arrival of Poe’s body and procession, I was interviewed by Bob Little of the Baltimore Sun for the article he wrote about the reburial. We were interrupted by security Westminster Hall who asked to leave the cemetery as the 12:30 ticket holders proceeded inside. His article captured the atmosphere well, the odd gathering of fans and “sad occasion,” as described by Jeff Jerome.

Poe_hearseWhat I found was the reburial was more of a celebration of Poe’s short life and his work and his genius. The crowd laughed, it pondered Poe’s influence and was entertained by the actors who portrayed the following figures and eulogized Poe:

Sarah Helen Whitman – Poe wrote several poems about her

The Rev. Rufus Griswold – A contemporary of Poe’s who defamed him after his death, he was hissed by the crowd as he railed against Poe’s literary criticism skills.

Nathaniel P. Willis

George Lippard

Dr. John Moran – who attended to Poe in his final days.

Marie Louise Shew

H.B. Latrobe – The editor of the magazine who awarded Poe $50.00 for his story MS. found in a Bottle.

Walt Whitman

Charles Baudelaire

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle

H.P. Lovecraft

Sir Alfred Hitchcock

The living:

Ellen Datlow, award winning author and editor

Gris Grimly, artist and graphic novelist

Mark Redfield

Poe_john_askinJohn Astin – emceed the proceedings, the actor who for years has portrayed Poe in a one-man show. Well-known to the world as Gomez Addams from the Addams family.

Jeff Jerome

The literary genius of Poe was captured nicely by Jeff Jerome, curator of the Poe House and Museum, who put together the burial weekend in an odd, macabre setting of Poe’s home and the ceremonies at Westminster Hall. I think Poe, who I believe was always seeking Eldorado, his city of gold, would have appreciated all the attention and be humbled by it. Poe is like most of us, not confident in his own talents, but talented none the less and as John Astin pointed out, he never gave up writing throughout his tormented life. As he urges us in Eldorado to continue to ride boldly into the night.Poe_body

Until next time, Tim

Happy Birthday Hitch!

hitchcockToday Alfred Hitchcock would have been 110. As my favorite film director, I’ve always enjoyed his films, his vision, and his odd personality. I’m not alone, across the country people will be celebrating the master.

My top five Hitchcock films:

  1. Strangers on a Train
  2. Rear Window
  3. Psycho
  4. The Birds
  5. Rope

What are your favorite Hitchcock films? Let me know.

Until next time, Tim

Inspiration From: an inflight magazine

I’ll occasionally find inspiration in the oddest places, I’ll try to share them here with you, please feel free to share where you feel inspired or are inspired.

I’ve been traveling a lot lately and on a recent flight from Milwaukee to Philly on Midwest Airlines, I read through their magazine.

I found an ad that got me thinking. It’s from Dodge County, I didn’t even know where Dodge County is located, I assumed it’s in Wisconsin, but it is in Nebraska, I had to look it up, but the ad was very clever.

Headline:
Refresh with Dodge County

Remember when Menus were about food?

Remember when Plug-ins were electrical outlets?

Remember when Browsers were looking in store windows?

It made me wonder, especially as a web designer, how many terms the online world has “borrowed” from the English Language? “Tabs” used to be in binders, “Windows” were for looking through. “Scrolls” were what monks wrote on … etc.

Do you have any examples? Kudos to Dodge County and www.fdcvb.org … maybe I’ll refresh there next time I’m in Nebraska.

Until next time, Tim