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February, 2010:

Are You an Athlete?

Lord Stanley’s Cup

I grew up playing hockey.  My parents had me on the ice when I was two, and I have been playing ever since.  Growing up, winters were spent traveling every weekend throughout upstate New York, and weeknights were spent at practices in rinks that only had three solid walls, the forth being a tarp.

Grippen ice rink, the rink I grew up playing on that only had three solid walls. Sadly, it is now closed forever after the flood of 2006. Picture credit NOAA.gov

Summers were spent traveling from hockey camp to hockey camp, picking up new techniques, and learning edge control from a figure skating coach who emigrated from the USSR.  Once we were home in the summer my brother and I would break out the street hockey nets and start pickup games in front of our house.

Dr. Smushkin's springboards used to teach coordination and muscle control . Photo credit http://www.hockeyagility.com

It is safe to say hockey dominated my childhood.

The Transition

After high school I stopped playing competitively.  Now, twice a week I break out the equipment.  Pickup hockey is on Sunday night, and Tuesday is league night.  My league team won the championship last fall, yes I am a member of a championship team, a championship beer league team.

Transitioning from competitive hockey to a beer league can be jarring at first.  For one, no more contact.  The game completely changes when you know you are not going to be hit.  Secondly, the amount of ice I see in any given season is drastically less; there are no practices in a beer league.

There are a couple of upsides to playing in a beer league.  Since I know I’m not going to be hit anymore I participate in a lot more risky plays than I did in the past.  Fancy passes, dekes between the legs, having a little “fun” on the ice talking to the players on the other team, most of these things would have been a “no no” in competitive hockey.  Now, however, since nothing is really on the line every game is a fun game where I can go out and really enjoy playing for the sake of playing.

Plus, let’s not forget about the beer in the locker room after the game.  One really couldn’t call it a beer league if there wasn’t beer in the locker room after the game.

I’m not longer striving to be an athlete in hockey, but I am still out there enjoying the game I grew up playing.

The Athlete’s Mentality

Athlete’s practice day in day out, hit the gym, run on their off days, and are constantly preparing for their next game.  Beer league players pick up the equipment once or twice a week, enjoy a relaxing game, and get up the next morning and head into work.  For most of us we can no longer be athletes on the field, but we can each take our athletic mentality and apply it now where it counts the most, in the office.

Do you train and compete like an athlete in the office, or are you merely showing up, collecting a paycheck, and putting in a beer league performance?

To see if you are a beer leaguer or still working on making it to the pros ask yourself a few questions:

Do you read about your industry?

I feel reading is key to staying a head in software development, a topic I have touched on before in My Digital Reading List, http://benjaminhysell.com/archive/2009/01/my-digital-reading-list/.

  • Athletes read about their industry in their spare time.
  • Beer leaguers enjoy not knowing about what is happening outside of their cubical.

Do you try new techniques, software packages, and play with new hardware?

Our industry moves fast, staying on top of what others are doing, researching, and implementing is key to staying ahead of the curve.

  • Athletes are always playing with the latest and greatest, they know when to stay with what works, or jump to newer technologies.
  • Beer leaguers wait to be told what hardware and software they should use.

Do you try to learn about tools and techniques outside of your core field of competence?

There are a lot of other industries out there besides software development,

::I know I was shocked too when I heard this news, but there really is!::

…what can we learn from those industries and bring back to our own?  The restaurant industry has been working with and managing teams of people for decades, do they have tools or techniques we could then apply to software development?

  • Athletes learn about other industries outside of their own to learn from them, and see how they would fit in with their primary fields.
  • Beer leaguers have already found their set of tools and don’t want to know what others are doing.

One might not be able to “go pro” in their job, but who are you likely to want to hire, work with, start a startup with, given the chance?

Breaking Down the Game Film – Voting with Your Dollars

“Breaking Down the Game Film” is a term commonly used to analyze tape from an already played sports game to dissect what went right and what went wrong.  In this series I’ll be taking published articles from around the web and break them down.

Topic: Voting with Your Dollars

Article: “Will Anyone Pay for Anything”

Author: Guy Kawasaki

Links: https://www.openforum.com/idea-hub/topics/the-world/article/will-anyone-pay-for-anything-guy-kawasaki and video http://www.building43.com/videos/2009/07/24/will-anyone-pay-for-anything/.

Guy’s article sums up the video nicely, but I highly suggest watching the video just so you can hear what the panelist say with your own ears.

In the event you are short on time, I’ll save you the click through to the article and the video and sum them both up here:

Guess what teenagers and twenty-somethings are willing to pay for online?

NOTHING!

There were only two services any of the panelists were willing to pay for:

  • Gmail
  • Xbox Live

Facebook, Twitter, YouTube…they won’t pay for any of them.  This panel never clicks on banner ads, and if any of the services started charging them money to use them they would move on to find a new service to meet their needs.

Millions of users, and Facebook might loose them all if they ever wanted to charge money.

That is scary.

It turns out developers of all ages are not too different, well, it appears we don’t click on ads at least, as Jeff Atwood laments, http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2009/11/our-amazon-advertising-experiment/,

If Stack Overflow, a site that does a million pageviews a day, can’t make enough from AdSense to pay even one person half time — and let me tell you, that’s being overly generous based on the actual income it generated — how does anyone make a decent living with AdSense?

Thus, teenagers, twenty-somethings, and developers don’t click on ads on the Internet.

I then asked myself two questions:

  1. How does anyone stay in business online?
  2. What would I pay for online if it wasn’t free?

Question one has a myriad of answers that I won’t dive into in this post.  With question two I spent a few minutes and came up with this list:

  • Gmail – Nope, I would put up my own email server if push came to shove.  I already have one on standby just in case.  Better safe than sorry, :-) .
  • Xbox Live – This I do pay for, mainly because there is no alternative to play the Xbox online.
  • Facebook – Gone.
  • Twitter – Gone.
  • Flickr – I have already moved to Facebook.  See above for how I feel about paying for Facebook.
  • Stackoverflow – Tougher decision, however there are too many free alternatives out there to fill the void.  Right now when I Google a programming question I’m still finding plenty of links to non-Stackoverflow sites with very good answers.  Someday, but right now, it is a no.
  • Google Reader – Plenty of alternative RSS readers.
  • All of the feeds in my Google Reader – There isn’t a feed/website in my reader that I couldn’t live without.
  • Google – Would I pay for Google?  Again, there are too many free alternatives.

It would be painful to move, change, or lose any of these services/websites, but not painful enough to pay any amount to continue to use them.

Scary thought.

Or…

What happens in a world where no one pays for anything and you are the one person who will pay for something?

You might just get everything you ever wanted.

Look at the cartoon Family Guy, from our friends at Wikipedia:

Shortly after the third season of Family Guy aired in 2001, Fox canceled the series.  However, favorable DVD sales and high ratings for syndicated reruns convinced the network to renew the show in 2004.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Family_guy

Family Guy was dead in the water, with no hope to ever see the light of day again.  Then, something crazy happened.  People voted with their dollars, bought the DVDs like crazy, and watched all of the reruns over and over and over again.  Fox woke up, picked the series back up, and Family Guy is entering it’s 8th season.

I’ve decided to start “voting with my dollars” online by monetarily contributing to the following projects that create the plug-ins I use on my blog:

I also purchased an iPhone game I normally wouldn’t have, but I bought it based on the author’s excellent blog posts.  Check out Monkeys in Space from Streaming Colour: http://www.streamingcolour.com/blog/2009/09/22/monkeys-in-space-escape-to-banana-base-alpha/ and check out Owen Goss great iPhone development blog at http://www.streamingcolour.com/blog/.

It is my hope to continue to support developers and their projects by contributing to them on a regular basis to further their development.

Next time you find a project, blog, or application you really enjoy I urge you to support it.  By voting with your dollars we have a lot more power online than we realize to influence what survives and what withers.

It is time we all start voting with our dollars!