James Avery’s blog

May 29, 2009

I’m off to DENver, have a nice weekend.

Morning,

I don’t ‘usually’ get up much before 11am, and often a great deal later than that, so this week I’m really pleased to say that I’ve been up before 9 every day (except Monday, when I got up around 11, why not - it was a bank holiday). For someone who normally has a chaotic routine, I’m pretty excited about this, because it is all down to one very simple tip I was given a couple of weeks ago. It took a week to get into the routine, and it has taken another week to keep it on track. This week has been extremely intense at times, but I’m hoping I can stick to the plan, and plan to make sure this happens.

So, am I off to Denver this weekend? No, Essex actually, but that just doesn’t sound all that exciting (nothing against Essex of course). To put it the other way, I could say I was going to cycle or drive to Stratford, which wouldn’t be much of a big deal, as Stratford is about 45 mins drive / 2 hours by bike from Coventry. But for an American, Stratford is an amazing place to visit (and in my opinion, Warwick Castle is even more impressive, but it isn’t so famous).

So,  I’m actually off on a bike ride to somewhere I might otherwise call ‘Glorious Middle Earth’ - it doesn’t have much to do with Lord of the Rings (Tolkien was inspired by The Black Country) - and I don’t know if the people who live there are particularly happy, but it is a very pleasant typical English village. On the village green, there’s a memorial to cyclists.

Speaking of which, I’m ‘flying’ with ‘BA’ (Bike Airways = the rest of the world’s favourite airline), and the ‘gate’ (front door) was supposed to have closed 5 minutes ago (my aim was to be out by 9, back around 10 - I’m running 5 minutes late, oh the stress is killing me (softly-not).

HAVE A NICE DAY :)

May 28, 2009

Manchester United - Come Home and Don’t Look Back In Anger

Well, I really can’t claim to be much of a football fan, but I guess the Champion’s League Final has become a must-see event with English teams appearing so often in the last few years. Last year saw an unprecedented four English teams reach the closing stages, with the losers only being knocked out by a fellow English team. This year, it was looking like the same thing might happen again, and that Manchester United could lift the cup for a second time, but let’s face it - as an Englishman who doesn’t really care too much for any team (supporting Coventry City is just a one way ticket to despair), I’d still have to admin that this scenario would just be too good to be true. And of course, most things that look so good end up disappointing, just like so much of the game last night.

So, as I was saying yesterday, I knew the ‘team that sings to the tune of Gaudi’ would win, it was just a question of which team that would be, because depending on your knowledge of Architecture (Gaudi is the Architect of Sagrada Familia, Barcelona’s famous un-built cathedral) or Mancunian music (as opposed to stadium chants - Gaudi is an obscure album track by the band James), that phrase might mean anything or nothing, just like any other attempt at predicting the future. Which is why I like talking about bookies’ odds so much more, since they can calculate the chances of something happening mathematically. Speaking of which, I had a small bet on Barcelona winning the game outright, so I could have a few drinks to drown any sorrows about Manchester losing tonight. Not that I’m really that bothered - so I think the money is going in the juke box.

And what better than Manchester music to celebrate the joys of glorious failure  (made even better because many of the artists mentioned below are City fans)?

  • Don’t Look Back In Anger - Oasis.
  • Super(t)onic - Oasis.
  • Come Home - James.
  • Ball (Born) of Frustration
  • (Not) Getting Away With It All Mess(i)d Up - James.
  • How Was(n’t) It For You - James.
  • Pleased To Beat (Meet) You - James.
  • Dragging Me Down - Inspiral Carpets.
  • This Is How It Feels  - Inspiral Carpets.
  • I Wanna Be Adored (But Everyone Hates Us) - Stone Roses.
  • (Cup Aspirations) Ruined In A Day - New Order.
  • Cuplifters of The World (United Didn’t Take Over) - The Smiths.
  • We Hate It When Our Enemies Become Successful - Morrissey.

Anyway, I could go on, but I breakfast is calling…. But if you want a corny airport reference for Man-U fans, then it has to be ‘Veni, Vidi, left empty handed from Da Vinci’.

Enough!

May 27, 2009

Manchester and Barcelona meet ar, err - Gaudi?

Filed under: James the band — Tags: , , , , — admin @ 9:08 am

We all know Manchester and Barcelona are meeting in Rome tonight, and there are numerous interesting connections between these great cities, but here’s an obscure one which to me makes the best link between them.

It is a song by my namesake Mancunian band James, from an appropriately titled 2001 album ‘Pleased to Meet You’. It is called Gaudi, named after the  architect who created the one of the most famous unfinished buildings, the Sagrada Familia, in Barcelona:

God’s dead, this state is torture.
Find me shade and bring me water.
Holding on.
I’m thirsty for your sage.
Back at the ranch I just got slaughtered.
Too many shoulds, too many orders.
Better come out, holding onto faith.
Let the sun begin to shine through your night
Let the light reveal disguise in your life.
Work kills! It’s killing me slowly
And what is the point in being so lonely?
Who do you love?
Who do you love above all?
If you want to live some life gets slaughtered
But they’d sell their sons and daughters
Who do you love?
Who do you love above all?
How can we fail less we really want to
Under the drum of some local voodoo curse
We can change our fate
Let the sun begin to shine through you night
Let the light reveal disguise in your life”

(C) James - as in the band, not me!

James Gaudi lyrics

At last, a placard with my name on it :)

Filed under: random — admin @ 8:57 am

I might do a fair bit of travelling (especially using Google maps these days), but I’ve never had the limo experience. So it was nice to see that Vauxhall workers in Germany had so kindly come up with a placard with my initials on it:

May 26, 2009

New Flightmapping map - First Draft

Filed under: Affiliate Marketing — admin @ 11:09 pm

We’re going to be putting upa new map at the end of the week, which will satisfy a long running aim of getting all routes onto one screen / sheet of paper. The starting point is the network maps which are more commonly used by rail companies, and we’ve borrowed a few ideas from Harry Beck’s classic tube map, and then added in a fair few ingredients of our own.

A map like this will have to start off as a static file - there’s too much to change to make it interactive between different airports, so we’ve concentrated on showing all routes from London. This isn’t a huge amount of use on its own, as a basic ’spider’ network could do that quite simply, so we’re putting in distinctions between different destinations, onward connections by air, and alternative journeys by rail or even sea in a few cases.

I think the result will get in as much information as we can without being too busy, but would appreciate any feedback or twitter comments:

Click on maps for larger view - best zoomed to about 200%

 

This has developed from a simpler version developed last week, which we’ll probably roll out first across all airports:

 

 

(C) 2009 James Avery

At last - a new logo for Flightmapping

Filed under: Affiliate Marketing — admin @ 12:19 pm

We’ve been messing around with this for ages, and I think we’re just about there. As always, these things often resolve themselves in a flash, and the inspiration didn’t come from anything aviation related. Instead, it was the meeting point at Victoria station, reversed to show plane wings pointing out from an airport.

We’re split between the square and the circle, so we’re holding our own mini-referendum - but you can have any logo colour you want, as long as it is red!

     v.

 

Comments?

May 21, 2009

More not so random thoughts

• I am definitely practising my own version of flipping – sleeping from 9-to-5, and working the rest of the day (well, night really) round that, but this week has been pretty good so far, even if I would like to have gone to the twitter discussion event which was on earlier on today in London, but I only found out about that from Murray Newlands’ blog late last night.
• My hours might be totally out of kilter, but I am trying to get into a habit of producing a minimum of 1500 words of ‘useful’ (i.e. commercially proven) content before doing anything else, or at least as soon as I switch the computer on.
• Having said that, the first thing I did when I got ‘up’ today was go for a bike ride, and this was a nice reminder of the joys of cycling along canal tow paths (see upcoming Bling My City post for more about this).
• I haven’t got round to reading or hearing any news today, but the last breaking story which came through last night as I was shutting my computer down was that there had been a military plane crash in Indonesia. No doubt by now we’ve had the usual messages of condolence from the Foreign Office, saying how deeply saddened Mr Miliband is to hear such a tragedy. You always know when they trot out the deeply saddened line that they don’t give a monkey’s, because if they did, they’d say something original.
• Speaking of news, much as though I was glad to finally see the back of speaker Michael Martin, has this not buried a far more significant story about the missing link being found in the evolutionary chain? Surely when we look back at 2009 in 20 years time, this will be one of the most important scientific discoveries of our time, although how it had been kept under wraps for 20 years is another story.
• I was having a good MSN chat with the ever-busy Nadeem from Azam Marketing  last night, and we were both agreed that quick lists like this are quite a useful way of dividing up thoughts, ideas and useful links, but I also wonder if there is a twitter application which could compile up a day’s posts, filter out the idle chit-chat and then integrate the decent ones with WordPress? I guess not, that would require a computer to do some thinking.
• So what useful links could I add today? Michael Dunlop (Income Diary) has an interesting list and discussion of 30 dyslexic entrepreneurs — there’s a few well-known and well documented characters on the list like Richard Branson (Virgin) and David Neeleman (Jet Blue), but I didn’t know about Ingvar Kamprad (IKEA), but can’t exactly say I’m surprised. In certain respects, I’d have asked the question the other way — which entrepreneurs (or major achievers in any field) haven’t had to deal with some form of learning disability, serious emotional challenge or mental illness at some stage in their lives? If you go through the list of the top 10 greatest Britons, I don’t think you’ll find any. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/100_Greatest_Britons
• Speaking of IKEA, it’s about time I went to get some more bowls for the kitchen, and this has to be a lot easier when you have a flashy new city centre IKEA store within walking distance. How many people have bragging rights to that? Seriously though, IKEA has to be one of my most respected brands, and I’m really glad they actually put a bit of thought into designing it.
• Lee McCoy (the Get Visible legend) had an excellent interview with Martin ‘purple’, where he gives a very interesting tip about using social networking sites like twitter to ask questions, rather than just talk about your lunch.
• I also need to look up ZiiTrend, a website about ’social predictions’.
• Meanwhile, Lee himself made some excellent points about blogging being far from dead (I think this particular Internet party is only just getting going), and I certainly concur when he says ‘I agree that Twitter is a much better conversation tool, and when you think that open conversation is the best route to expanding your mind, I still prefer blogging as the nature of my thoughts are essentially verbose. I dislike quick one-liners, it simply isn’t me’.
• Going over some reading from last night, Nadeem also gave a very interesting interview to Murray Newlands, but I think I’ll have to take him up on his comments about Margaret Thatcher later.
• See Flightblogging.com for my upcoming post about Log maps, potentially the next major development in Flightmapping.com.
• Whenever I come up with new ideas, I’m always slightly wary of sticking them straight up on the Internet, because a lot of people say that somebody else might steal them. However, I just don’t think there is much you can really do to copyright protect an idea, so my general feeling on this is to just stick stuff up anyway. I’ve never been short of ideas, so if somebody takes one, well, you know what they say about imitation and flattery.
• Yesterday, Chris Clarkson pointed me to a very interesting article about the Google user experience, and their 10 principles to create a so-called ‘Googley’ website. I think we have a lot to learn, and a lot to do, so that’s enough for now.
• Well, not quite — last night, Nadeem kindly suggested that I should update my blog more often, and I’m glad to say that even though I’ve been doing a couple of posts each day this week, this hasn’t distracted attention from the ongoing text updates for Flightmapping — these will always be like painting the Forth Bridge, but if you really do want to know anything about finding cheap flights to Copenhagen, Stockholm or Oslo, that’s my focus this week. As far as the maths goes, this blog post, like almost all of the content I write, has been created using voice recognition, so it has just taken 20 minutes so far, and maybe another 5 to check. Regardless of whether anyone else reads it or not, I always think it is good to review what you’ve read yourself, especially as there is so much other random information out there. I reckon that between blog posts, twitter updates and news articles, you could quite easily scan through 100 pages in a couple of hours, so spending 15 to 20 minutes summarising the key points has to be time well spent.

Enough for now!

May 20, 2009

Can you beat this for Corporate Bolloxology?

Filed under: Affiliate Marketing — Tags: , , — admin @ 1:45 am

I’ve just stumbled across this homepage from a company which has a theoretically great brand name, but which has used some of the best Corporate nonsense language I’ve ever seen. Could you do better?

***** provides independent consulting and coaching services to meet the needs of businesses in today’s challenging world of change.

We are specialists in providing Organisation Development and Change, Organisation Design, Facilitation and Coaching services.

We believe that successful organisational change occurs through awareness (and acknowledgment) of the status quo as well as clear and unambiguous support to new initiatives.  Although basic, these conditions for change are often ignored as a large percentage of change programmes fail due to lack of attention to the people component of change.
 
Spend 5 minutes looking at our free tool to help you assess the change readiness level within your department or organisation. 

We are dedicated to partnering with clients to deliver results faster, in a more sustainable way, and with higher impact on performance than they could alone.

Our business model is based on a small core team with access to a network of committed associates.  This offers a single point of responsibility to our clients, whilst providing the experience, flexibility and lower costs that a network business model can deliver.  

May 19, 2009

Good riddance Michael Martin - and other random thoughts

Another post of random daily thoughts

Actually, after my post yesterday, isn’t this the way to go? After all, there’s people out there making hundreds of post each day on twitter, I’m just trying to assemble a few quick thoughts from the day into one simple blog post, but hopefully extending some of them a little bit out beyond 140 characters where necessary:

  • Firstly, and perhaps most obviously, good riddance to Michael Martin, by yesterday he had clearly lost the dressing room, but it is all well and good to make the speaker the scapegoat, and say it is imperative that a person in such a position should have full respect, but how about the Prime Minister?
  • Didn’t Gordon Brown lose all possibility of being respected the moment he did a U-turn on the election that never was? And let’s say nothing about gold reserves and getting rid of boom and bust!
  • This is supposed to be a vaguely-relevant-to-affiliate-marketing blog, so I’ll try and post something on that topic later in the week!
  • Well, it is TV time now, I am keen to catch up with prison Break, but don’t like hanging around during ad breaks. So what’s the best time to start watching (I have a Sky+ box)? About 20 minutes in?
  • Where can I get some sour grapes? Or at least some grapes that aren’t so sweet? Apparently the grapes used to make wine are inedible, but there must be some hybrid grapes out there that are the equivalent of let’s say 70% cocoa dark chocolate.
  • I don’t like being ripped off, but yesterday I was overcharged in Marks & Spencer’s of all places — shows why it is always best to keep a rough tally of what you are spending, and always check receipts. Never assume that a product marked as a special offer is still going to be charged as such at the till!
  • I’m having another quick twitter session today, but I’m still not sure whether it’s one big waste of time, or a useful way of sharing information. Jury definitely still out on this one, but at least I have my TV viewing coming up in a moment.
  • I promise my next blog post will be more of an essay, but should blogs really be that way? If the blog is supposed to be more of a diary and a sketchbook, then surely it should be kept nice and scrappy, and not everything has to make sense, or be blocked together in the same category.
  • Speaking of which, I went to join my library today for the first time since moving to Coventry six years ago. I took out couple of books (you know, those big papery things with words and pictures in them), but I’m not sure if I’ll ever actually read them — the same goes for most other books, well, I will at least look at the pictures, but I never get very far with the text. At least with websites, you can just hunt and scan to find what you want. The urban planner in me still wonders how long it’ll be before places like libraries become obsolete, but when I went into Coventry Central library today it was at least quite busy.
  • After yesterday’s frustrations, voice recognition seems to be behaving reasonably well, and yes, it does at last recognise the F-word, but thankfully I haven’t needed to use it.

Right, that’s enough for now, I think I can go and rewind the Skybox of the start of Prison Break!

Teaching Voice Recognition how to swear (Dragon Naturally Speaking 10.0)

I’ve been using voice recognition software for about eight years now, and generally I think it is superb technology which is a massive improvement in productivity, and a great saver of fingers. However, there are times when it just gets things badly wrong, and I want to scream.

A few weeks ago, I’m sure I tried to programme it to use the F-word (there is another major irritation, it doesn’t recognise the proper English spelling of the word programme — well, it bloody well should now, I’ve just deleted the American program from the dictionary, so no more I hope — the programme pogrom is complete! Now I really can get with the programme, and continue where I left off, sorry….)

So anyway, where was I? Generally, as I was saying, Dragon voice recognition is an excellent piece of kit, but when it gets it wrong, it has a habit of still getting it wrong even after multiple attempts to correct. This can lead to more and more frustration very quickly. Thankfully, this doesn’t happen too often — if it did, there would be a lot of broken computer parts scattered around this office, and I would never be able to produce the kind of Glorious verbiage that keeps me going — (maybe some would say that’s a good thing).

Naturally, as I run a travel website, I use place names a great deal, and it is often surprising how well it gets them — let’s see — Abuja (spot-on), Windhoek (okay, that was a curveball, it got that as an intro), Trivandrum (no problem), Pago Pago (page okay go) — okay, I’m deliberately picking out difficult places from around the world, my frustration is that popular European cities like Zürich often cause a problem (of course it got its perfectly this time), but particularly this evening, I had to try about five times for it to get Bilbao right, and even though I tried to use it again within pretty much the same sentence, it still got it wrong, and did not offer it in the list of corrections. Maybe you’d have to understand voice recognition software to understand the frustrations it causes — Dragon is supposed to save you from the strains of having to type too much, but when it isn’t getting things right, it ends up being more trouble than it’s worth. So, I wanted to use the F-word to swear at it, but for some reason my last attempt to add said F-word had failed. Anyway, now that I’ve said my piece, I don’t feel such an urgent need to swear any more, but needless to say I have just checked that the F-word is still there in the vocabulary, it no longer comes up as park (nice green imagery, maybe this thing is way cleverer than I ever thought possible) and it is working just fine.

Goodnight!

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