Blog

  • The Great Push

    June 6, 2011

    SUMMARY: The hard, demoralizing work that goes into doing necessary chores drains me of energy faster than I can replenish it. This essay examines the factors that are behind the drudgery, and postulates how to integrate the fun of learning the right way back into the work. This is based on the experience of mentoring a 12 year-old boy and reading James Somers’ recent article How I Failed, Failed and Finally Succeeded at Learning How to Code.

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    DSri Seah
  • Nifty Hard-bound Mini ETP

    May 29, 2011

    by Андрей Котковец Commenter Andrey Kotkovets made a hard-bound mini ETP (A5) journal, and posted a link with a few pictures on PicasaWeb. Cool! I love the red cover.
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    DSri Seah
  • Update on European Pre-Printed ETP Pads

    May 29, 2011

    "ETP for Europe" The following is a guest post by Al Briggs, who I’m working with so that we can produce and dispatch Emergent Task Planner pads from within the EU. He’s a UK software developer who lives in Germany, and he’s been gracious in shouldering the burden of handling European production and fulfillment. Here’s Al’s status update on the project!

    Guten Tag und Hallo aus Deutschland!

    I thought I should introduce myself and provide a quick update for those of you interested in ETP pads for the EU. I have been working with Dave for a while on this idea and although it has not been as quick as we would have liked, we are making progress and should begin shipping in the next few weeks.

    We have had 39 pre-orders so far. This is not as high as expected but we have decided to move forward with the project and hope that there is enough interest out there that we don’t lose money on the endeavour! :-)

    As we have looked into the logistics of how to provide the pads we have made some changes from our initial ideas. Initially I had thought the simplest method would be to put the pads on Amazon UK and get Amazon to handle storage and shipping of the pads, but the truth is that this would only become economical if sales volumes were going to be quite a bit larger. I had also assumed that because the pads are currently only available in English that the bulk of the orders would come from the UK and it would be simpler (and cheaper) to do the dispatch etc from the UK. The pre-orders so far though are split 47/53 between the UK and other EU countries and I had been expecting something more like 80/20.

    This means that we have decided to dispatch the orders from here in Germany. It gives us a little more control on how things work initially and also means that we can check the quality of every pad that is sent.

    The prices have had to change slightly because we will now sell them in Euros instead of Pounds and the prices are:

    • €9.99 for a single 50 sheet pad
    • €21.99 for a triple pack of pads

    I hope you agree that these are still very good prices.

    Dave and I are talking about implementing a new website something like eu-market.davidseah.com to sell from in the future. For those who have already placed pre-orders, we will contact you via email once we are ready and send electronic paypal invoices so that we can quickly dispatch your orders.

    Part of making the decision to ship from Germany involved reviewing the costs of postage from here to the UK and other EU countries, and I have good news to report on this front. We can ship inside Germany for €1.45 for a single pad and €4.10 for our triple pack and for the rest of the EU this is €3.45 for a pad and €8.60 for a triple pack. These prices are exactly what Deutsche Post charge us and will therefore be subject to any changes they might make.

    The major problem has been to find a printer who can print the pads at the quality level that Dave expects, at a reasonable price (for relatively low volume orders) and who we can work with easily. We are in the final stages of working with a printer and just waiting for a final quote for an initial print run of 250 pads. I expect that this will all be finalised next week and the pads should be printed and with us shortly after that.

    If you haven’t pre-ordered yet – please place a pre-order – otherwise I will soon be in contact via email to those of you who have already expressed an interest.

    Any questions please email me at al [at] albriggs (dot) com.

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    DSri Seah
  • Weekly Version of Gantt-style Excel Graph Paper

    May 18, 2011

    My Gantt Weekly Chart V3 A couple of requests came in for a weekly version of the Gantt Excel spreadsheet. As it happens, I’d solved a similar problem a couple months ago when making the spreadsheets for my Groundhog Day Resolutions review day 3. So I dropped in the logic from those spreadsheets into the Gantt Excel spreadsheet, et voila! It is done!

    Like my other Excel Gantt chart, it automatically calculates the dates and formats everything according automatically for you. You just fill in the grid yourself manually, pretending Excel is a big sheet of magic graph paper. Try changing the year in the upper left corner, and watch the dates update automagically. When you’re done, print it out (turn on “grid lines” for a more structured look), pass around copies at your next meeting and enjoy the admiring glances from your peers for being so damn organized.

    I imagine that these would be good for sketching-out multiple high-level, week-by-week project dependencies in a way that the Compact Calendar does not, as you can see overlapping threads of work more easily. Keep in mind, though, that the spreadsheet does not do project management software stuff like calculate dependencies, handle shifts in schedule, and all that stuff. This spreadsheet is a quick-and-dirty sketching tool only.

    Visit the Manual Gantt Charting In Excel page to download the new files. The new zip archive is listed at the end of the post as a separate download. You’ll need Excel 2007 or newer to use the new spreadsheet.

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    DSri Seah
  • Podcast 023: Brushes with Awesomeness

    May 14, 2011

    I just posted the latest podcast with my buddy Sid; it’s a fast-paced 30 minutes of us talking about the people we know that are doing inspiring things, and what we’re doing too to try to be a part of it. It’s a little heavy on the geek culture references, but I think at least a few of you out there will appreciate hearing about how people around us are out there doing things. I’m pretty happy with the way this one came out :) Listen to Dave & Sid’s Unnamed Podcast #023 online or on iTunes. If you’re on Facebook, we have our podcast page…give us a like if you are so inclined!

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    DSri Seah