What's Richard Doing Right Now?

    [check twitter]

    Sun, 15 Jul 2007

    Picture This
    The scene: A plain house, beige vinyl siding. The yard is raw. Lots of exposed red dirt, not much grass. The cars park where they stop.

    So, I'm driving by this house and what catches my eye? Two little kids, both in diapers. One is on the trampoline already. The other, he's sporting a red helmet, carrying a shovel and climbing the steps to the trampoline.

    Kid #1 is gesturing to the dog, perhaps a pit bull or mutt of that extraction, to join him on the trampoline.

    The dog does join him, hopping up easily, while wearing a harness of some sort.

    The harness is hot pink.

    Tags: trampoline on technorati, delicious, flickr

    Wed, 25 Apr 2007

    Hutch
    Someone's got a fan club:

    Huntsville First is available to assist our Main Street coordinator and the downtown merchants as they devlop plans for the future. For those residents who do not know Hutch or do not know much about the Main Street program, please stop by his office on the square.

    You will be impressed with the program but even more impressed by the man behind the Main Street program, Harold Hutcheson. Thanks to King's Candies for allowing Huntsville First to host the meeting.

    [26 April, itemonline.com link fixed]

    Tags: hutch on technorati, delicious, flickr

    Sat, 18 Nov 2006

    Every New Beginning Comes From Some Other Beginning's End

    It's been a rocky week at the salt mines, one in which our Chairman, Jon Miller, departs (I think he might have left half a cup of coffee and the radio playing softly, given the speed of the departure) and in which a dear friend and unofficial mentor, David Habib, decides to move on to his next challenge.

    One's a shock and one's not, at least at first glance.

    We all weren't born here nor did we grew up together, so other endings begat these relationships, these times of laughter, doubt, and victory. Yes, we've had some victories at AOL, both for the company, for our teams, and even personally - we had to, no one willfully stays long where things are always bad. It's the nature of our industry. The boom-bust cycles, crazy hours, layoffs, breath-taking expenditures of effort and capital, epic arrogance, and monuments to hubris carved into the face of the Wayback Machine; these all define us. When the history of the Internet boom is written (and I don't believe we're even close to done), the scale of it will be compared to the opening of the West during the 19th century or the explosive arrival of the oil economy in Texas in the 20th century.

    What's to be said about Jon Miller? He was 127 layers of management above me, has a car service, bathes in oceans of doubloons like Scrooge McDuck, yet was nice. Miller seemed to operate with the best intentions (if not a bit timidly given the heap of trouble in which AOL found itself) and signed his company-wide emails "Warmly, Jon". He was a class act, but the stock is hung at $19/share, and I'm sure he has to take some of the blame.

    For David, I'm not writing the obituary - no past tense. He's out and on to something else, somewhere ultimately more fortunate and advantaged for his presence. Middle manager, yes, but someone has to manage the dogfaces, right? The bitch of it is that we didn't suffer under a gladly-dismissed tyrant or wallow in the benign neglect of a disinterested corporate politico, so the before/after contrast will be marked.

    We'll live. But that's gonna leave a mark.

    Tags: AOL on technorati, delicious, flickr

    Mon, 25 Oct 2004

    Peace Through Strength

    It's telling how applicable and true this statement still is in today's global war on terror.

    "As I said last night in Dallas, our military serves to protect our freedom and keep the peace. None of the four wars in my lifetime and none of the wars that you have seen came about because we were too strong. History shows that weakness invites tyrants to believe that the price of aggression will be cheap. And while military strength alone is not enough to ensure a more secure world, without military strength, there can be no effective diplomacy, no meaningful negotiations, no real security, no lasting peace."

    Ronald Reagan
    National Convention of the Veterans of Foreign Wars in Chicago, Illinois
    August 24, 1984

    Tags: on technorati, delicious, flickr