Friday, May 06, 2005

How to Write a Thank-You Note

The Morning News: "There is a six-point formula to the proper thank-you: Learn it, know it, memorize it – and it will never fail you."


1. Greet the Giver
    Dear Aunt Sally,
2. Express Your Gratitude
    Thank you so much for the slippers.
3. Discuss Use
    It gets very chilly here in the winter,
    so they will get a lot of use when winter comes.

4. Mention the Past, Allude to the Future
    It was great to see you at my birthday party, and
    I hope to see you at Dad’s retirement in February.

5. Grace
    Thanks again for your gift.
6. Regards
    Love,
    Leslie


On Sunday's plane ride home Sheree completed what seems like 500 thank you cards for bridal shower gifts. I signed the first 20 of them with trite, banal words, like a complete buffoon. Today Google rescued me. As I compared my template-assisted responses to the well-formed ones Sheree wrote above mine, I confirmed that I am indeed marrying well

Thursday, May 05, 2005

Bullying

Boing Boing: Bullying Search Engine Optimization, Inc uses legal threats to silence critics: "Bullying Search Engine Optimization, Inc uses legal threats to silence critics "

Now this is an excellent example of why the internet is so powerful. I have been reading boingboing for a few months now, and they regularly link to interesting stories like this one.

SEO tactics give the internet a part of its negative reputation. I was satisfied when I found a random blog containing nothing more than repeated links to some Whistler Mountain skiing website, successful Google searches for which were difficult to create. So Google is on the case. The guy from this story just wanted everyone to know.

MY DA hat says, what's the danger of using a bigger site for such truth-spreading? One friend is regularly entertained by fark.com, successful purveyors of short-lasted rumors and fake news (according to him). I have yet to visit the site, with my 'fake information' thirst easily quenched by The Daily Show and The Onion. Back on topic, the danger is obviously spreading lies. Hopefully such a practice rarely succeeds for long.

Like China's moderately successful internet/information/freedom filters, SEOInc tried to prevent a reasonable discourse of ideas. I think of Jeff Goldblums Dr. Malcolm who said something like, Life will find a way. Maybe information does, too. Check out today's Slashdot article about the internet and the same.

<link rel="icon" href="../mg.png">

The most popular site on the web recently updated its little web browser icon. This is the icon that appears to the left of the URL in the address bar of Firefox, and probably one day soon, IE7. Just add above the <head> declarations of the webpage's html code the line
<link rel="icon" href="location of the 16x16 pixel png file">.

A quick glance at his html code showed me this, and I can now see the fruits of my labor. Satisfied, I am now wearing the same smug smile James used to wear after choreographing the Rockettes line of dancing Coca-Cola cans on the shelf of the triple's under-cabinet refrigerator.


Update 28 Jun 2005:This works with a .jpg file, but I worry the quality suffers. I will research this tomorrow, but use .png today.

Management

You and your research resonates with me so strongly because of my recent struggles with life.

Sure the writer is arrogant, and he makes sweeping claims, but I think many of them are fairly well-founded. The paper strikes me hardest as I compare it to my own life, not that I should be working on potential Nobel-Prize winning projects, but that I have the tendency to settle for mediocrity.

In this negative state, I see an apathetic world blindly accepting the status quo, and I struggle with my failures to live up to my own potential. Thankfully my life is not full of this pessimism. Somewhere in my mind I know that my life (and the world) is not a barren wasteland, and there is no reason to feel so useless.

Everything is going so well, yet each day my drive to work fills my soul with an immense dread. It is not really the monotony, but the dissatisfaction with my life's progress the last day, month, or decade. A poker metaphor would be, I am happy with the cards I have been dealt, but I do not feel like I am playing them very well.

Reading this transcript gave me a few moments of levity, as I was again able to find some mature aspects of my personality. Developing them has been an intense struggle, and it is hard not to criticize my slow, broken progression. Too often I spiral down that self-defeating path, not appreciating what I have already done, and feeling helpless to make any improvements. If these are all maturity issues, I should be happy that the problem is so simple!

I have plenty to be thankful for, and indeed I am. I thank every star in the universe that Sheree is willing to give me a chance. All the uncertainties in my life are balanced by the conviction that with her, everything will be all right. And my friends, my family, and a God's good fortune are another source of gratitude. Focusing on her, them, and the rest of the positives should be such an easy task, but I have a hard time building that discipline.

The segue in the speech of Al Pacino's Frank Slade says it well, "I always knew what the right path was. Without exception, I knew. But I never took it. You know why? It was too damn hard."