Why Harvard?

Author: David Jodoin  |  Category: My tales of Harvard, Pondering Life

Over the last year, I have been taking courses at Harvard University under their Extension School program.  I have to admit, it has been nothing but interesting, engaging and fulfilling.  In fact, I have enjoyed the experience so much that I have applied to the program to work toward an ALB.

When I first enrolled in courses, I had made mention of the fact to an old friend and colleague John Luongo.  Interestingly enough, he had given me the idea to take courses to begin with, as he had been working on going to school locally in California.  When I delivered my news to him, he responded with a very pleasant coincidence.  He had decided to switch and continue his next degree at Harvard Extension school as well.

One thing I found was that when he was explaining his decision, I did note a bit of what almost seemed to be him justifying why Harvard Extension was a good choice.  Perhaps it was me reading into what he was saying, perhaps not.  But I had been aware that there has been an ongoing controversy about the validity of the Harvard Extension School program.

We are merely weeks away from entering a new year and the calendars showing the year 2010.  That year is significant as it marks the 100th anniversary of Harvard University’s Extension School program.  If you scour the internet it is not hard to find many articles that either extol the virtues of the program, or seek to demean it due to it not being a degree from “Harvard”.  With a little digging you will find articles ranging from people who are caught “impersonating” a Harvard student, to people misrepresenting themselves on their resumes, to people who just downright treat people who have attended Harvard extension as ivy league “wanna-be”s.

The funny thing I find though, is that much of this controversy is generated by people who are not even associated to Harvard.  I have the luxury of being close enough to the campus where I can freely attend all my classes on campus.  I am not relegated to merely experiencing my education on-line through distance learning due to being in some far away state.  As such, my experience is not merely limited to just having access to the courses.  I interact face to face with my professors, fellow students and enjoy a myriad of what the Harvard campus has to offer.

Perhaps it would be good to clarify a few things.  First, Harvard University has 13 colleges under it’s umbrella.  Harvard Law, Harvard Business School, Harvard Medical School are just 3 of them.  Of course there is the infamous Harvard College.  But then there is Harvard Extension.  It befuddles me to think why on earth there would be such a debate as to whether Harvard Extension is really “Harvard.”  The university itself clearly advertises and states that it is indeed a bonafide and valuable part of the Harvard brand.  So why the controversy?

Some point to the fact that it is driven by the parents of students of Harvard College who have the privilege of paying the high price that comes with being a student that matriculated into the program through its rigorous admissions criteria.  Some say it is because Harvard Extension has an open enrollment policy and as such is reflected in the quality of the students.  For whatever reason though, the controversy exists.

The program itself is excellent.  It is also not as easy as people may think.  To be considered part of the degree program, you do indeed need to show you are capable of doing the work at a high enough level where you have proven you deserve to be there.  So perhaps it is a nice courtesy to let anyone try under open enrollment, but you have to be successful at a Harvard level to go beyond just taking a few classes.

But what of the positives other than just those that the extension student receives?  Does the University as a whole receive any benefit?  The answer in my opinion is clearly a “YES”.  One of the cornerstones of an education at Harvard is its promise of experiencing a diverse group of students and faculty.  That is not unique to Harvard, but it is something they hold in high regard.  The existence of Harvard Extension school bring a degree of diversity to the mix that is intrinsically valuable to the entire campus community, and is a dynamic that should be cherished by all those who walk through that square.

The Harvard Extension program brings people from all walks of life and gathers them into an environment where they can learn from each other, not in isolation, but as a group and community all striving to better themselves.  If you look at the roster of students who are part of this college within Harvard University, you will find successful politicians, business people, investors and executives all learning side by side with young students who can do much worse than to be exposed to the experiences of people working in many different industries from all walks of life.

Perhaps moving into this new century of Harvard Extension’s existence, we can all grow to set aside this meaningless controversy and focus on the primary reason we are all at Harvard University…

To be part of a talented group of people – culturally, economically and socially diverse – all seeking to work together to further our knowledge and bring value to each other and our global society.

Droids, droids everywhere and not a bot to blink.

Author: David Jodoin  |  Category: Pondering Life, Technodump

As you all know I have been an avid fan of the iPhone since its initial release.  I had the pleasure of having my oldest son present me with one as a gift.  His gift wasn’t that he was buying one for me, it was that he got in line at 7 am on the day of its first release and waited in line all day to ensure I would get one of the first out the door.  Well he was second in line, and since I had already been an AT&T customer, a mere few minutes later I was the first person leaving the store with an iPhone in my hand.

I was very engrossed in this wonderful ground breaking technology.  Being a techie from way back I researched and studied the phone in great depth.  I even participated on the iPhone hack team by performing tests on my phone and sharing the results with the coders that were furiously working to unlock its hidden secrets.

I bought a MAC and downloaded the tools I needed to start coding in XCode and Cocoa as soon as the SDK was available.  I cranked out enough apps to test the iPhones useability and was pleased with the results.

I doubt I could ever claim to have coined the term as it seems so obvious, but I have always believed in the existence of “technocrud”  I have written about it in the past, and Im sure you can find my blog posting about it in my indexes of entries.   It seemed that technocrud was being developed at such a rate that it was mind boggling.

Then the wind began to change… DROID was coming… Or more specifically the promise of a trully open OS for a phone such that the artificial barries that Apple was imposing would no longer exist.  Skeptics claimed that Apple’s foothold would prevent its adoption.  They were down right wrong.

So here I was sitting there in my living room and all of a sudden my son came screaming to me in a fit of excitement… “DAD DROID IS COMING!”

I had seen some of the early Android phones.  I had several opportunities to play with them and I had been watching the myriad of apps that the developers had been releasing.  Yet up until now, none of the phone had ever struck me as being true iPhone like predators.  The screens didn’t work anywhere as nice.  Getstures were clunky, keyboard typing not as intuitive.

So I skeptically went down to the Verizon store, perhaps in hopes of maybe seeing something that really would impress me.  You see… as much as I loved the iPhone, my passion has always been cooled due to the requirement to be on AT&T’s network.  As much as there have been arguments regarding their coverage areas being comparable to Verizon’s, they simply did not stack up compared to what Verizon offered in the areas I frequented.  So me with my skepticism ventured forth.

Upon my arrival, I went to the pod that had this large Droid banner hanging from it and I was immediately faced with two phone options.  One was teh Moto Droid.  Having been a fan of Motorola, I picked that up first.  It was nice.  Very….. well… um…. Wait… Kind of a cross between a Q, Blackberry and Treo.   Ummmm…  Isn’t this kind of bulky?  Did their engineers design this to target people who like the button feel of a keyboard?  Moving parts on the phone?  Sliding screen?  I don’t get it… did any of them ever look at an iPhone?

But I looked over next to it, and my eyes immediately were drawn to this sleek, little, sexy number.  It had this little roller ball that was intermittenly glowing white as if it were calling out “touch me”.  I put the Moto down and lifted this matte finished,  black beauty and it immediately felt at home in my hand.  I pressed the phone button almost instinctively and the screen came to life.  Slide down to unlock…  Here was the test.  Was this going to feel like yet another faker attempting to lure me away from the graceful feel of the iPhone interface?  My thumb traveled down and with a swipe the home screen came to life.

OMG!  The weight, the design, the look, the vibrant display, the smooth touch and glassy feel of the phone made me instantly realize I had my hands on what was soon to be (at least for me) the death of my iPhone.

I must have spent two hours probing the applications and interfaces, email, calendars, contacts, phone, video, internet speeds.  All to which I was looking for that one flaw… NOTHING.  I could not find it.  A quirky smile came across my face and I reached out with my hand in the air, the phone being restricted only by that simple littel security wire and I gestured to the sales clerk… I want this one.

HTC had done it.  I don’t know where they found their engineers, but they were ultimately successful in creating what to me seemed like the very next step BEYOND what Apple had accomplished.

Well to say the least, my sons were happy as when I got home, they were the proud recipients of my two iPhones I had been using.  They dont use them as phones, they merely use them as if they were iTouches.

But me… Everyday I use my wonderful new communication companion, I grow further in love with it.

I tip my hat to both Google and HTC, and hope they can surpass this wonderful device so I may remain loyal as a new follower, adopter and fan.  And I appologize to AT&T.  As much as I like to be loyal… you do need to catch up.  Verizon is a better phone network, especially now since they have drunk the coolade and really know that there are people like me that need and want phones that are open to do with what we please.

Oh… and as a note to HTC… I am always open to having you send me pre-release phones, I would more than enjoy giving you my feedback. (hint hint hint)

End of the Haitus

Author: David Jodoin  |  Category: Pondering Life

Well things are rolling along this year.  I’ve been busy handling many of the things you would normally expect….  the search for new customers, moving forward with my book (yeah… I know.  It seems like a never ending process) and dealing with many changes in and around my personal life.

Now that I have a bit more time on my hands, I will be blogging more often.  (hopefully)

I guess that is it for this post as I do have something I want to write about but I would rather not clutter it up with my letting you all know I am back around for a bit.

Happy reading!

LinkedIn – Are you using it effectively?

Author: David Jodoin  |  Category: Pondering Life, Technodump

This evening I had the pleasure of being invited to attend a seminar that was given by my Friend and colleague, the brand samurai Kevin Skarritt. He is in my blog roll, so please go check out his blog.

Anyway… the topic of his presentation was to discuss the effective use of LinkedIn and are you maximizing it to help drive business for your company. Even though I feel I am fairly knowledgeable about LinkedIn, I attended in order to show my support for my friend. Maybe one reason was that when I spoke to him earlier this week, he had said that only a handful of people had registered. I figured why not attend, after all, I would be networking with people, and I may just learn something new from Sensi Kevin.

LinkedIn is not Facebook, and I remember that over the last couple of years, that its growth (at least within my network of people) was slowish. However, over the last several months, I have noted a significant increase in my network of peers filling in on the site. I actually use my contact manager to compare my contacts there to what I have on linked in, to determine saturation rate.

What I am finding now is that of my active contacts, saturation is very high right now. Somewhere in the 60-70% range based on my recent contacts in my contact manager. My older or less accessed contacts I can see a much smaller percentage of saturation. Last I checked it was in the 20 to 25% range.

So leave it to say, that LinkedIn has now become a valued tool in my daily arsenal. And lo and behold, when I showed up at the seminar. It seems Sensi Kevin had nothing to worry about. We were both pleasantly surprised to see an overflow crowd of people at least 5 times what he had told me had registered.

Congrats Kevin, and yes… I will be more than glad to go to your next event in a month.

Although some wine and beer might be a pleasant addition to the evening.

Oh! and by the way… Read more…

He probably didn’t hear you Dad… He’s deaf you know.

Author: David Jodoin  |  Category: Pondering Life

A few weeks ago, my son Lucas was working on a school fundraiser.  He was selling magazine subscriptions.  The proceeds of which would help fund school activities.  He was very enthusiastic.  He took out his material, walked out the door and was going to hit every house in the neighborhood.

I was a little wary and was concerned he would meet with disappointment.  He assured me this would not be the case, as he had sold these before and had done well at it.  So who was I to argue.  He smiled at me and off he went. Read more…

iPhone Tech Talk World Tour; Will I get picked?

Author: David Jodoin  |  Category: Pondering Life

I received an invitation to register today for Apple’s iPhone Tech Talk World Tour.  Always being one to enjoy absorbing more information, I eagerly jumped on this to register for my nearest location.  Boston was not one of them.  HMMMMMM  Ok… I will live with that.  SO I then looked at the next closest location NYC.  FULL.  Already?  HMMMMMM Ok…  Next… um  well I’d love to hit the San Fran one, but all the west coast dates are during a business trip I have planned, so it narrows it down to Austin or Chicago.

I picked Chicago.  Curious as to where the venue would be held, I tried to google where it might be.  Then I ran into a blog from someone who claims they registered, awaited their confirmation and was denied.  This person claims that Apple selectively hand picked developers based on the company, web site content, or status within the community. Read more…

Strange Attractors – Xcode 3 and the iPhone

Author: David Jodoin  |  Category: Pondering Life, Technodump

When I first started programming, I remember carrying a long cardboard box around.  I would walk into the computer lab, find the nearest workstation, sit down and start typing away.   Each time I felt I had that next line of code perfect, I would hit a key and the din of a series of mechanical arms would fill the air as they punched a card and spit it out to then be added to the collection of cards that resided in my box.  Once I felt my perfect program was done, I would take my box to the window on the other side of the lab, and I would hand my neatly stacked and labeled cards to the seedy looking guy on the other side of the window.  I would fill out a form and that was then wrapped around the cards and held with an elastic band and I was off to my class.  I would then ponder for a period of time what fabulous results would spring forth from my masterpiece. Read more…

Film is dead… Well maybe on life support.

Author: David Jodoin  |  Category: Pondering Life, Technodump

When I was in high school I took a photography class.  I was pretty good at it.  The teacher said I had the ‘photographer’s eye.’  Perhaps I inherited the trait.  My father was a photographer in the Air Force during the Korean War.  I still even have several of his cameras from that era.

Over the years, my skills and love for photography advanced.  I upgraded from one camera to the next and went SLR.  I bought lenses, set up my own dark room and processed my own prints.  Then came digital. Read more…

Passion… the fire that drives.

Author: David Jodoin  |  Category: CEO's Corner, Pondering Life

Passion.  I believe it differentiates many people.  We all have passion.  But do our passions align with our ambitions?

When you are an entrepreneur and you are starting your own company, your passion is at its peak.  However, where you place your passion can directly drive you to success or failure.  Passion does not mean instant or guaranteed success, what passion does is keep you focused and provide you energy to drive you toward success. Read more…

When is less actually more?

Author: David Jodoin  |  Category: Pondering Life

Good question!  My son was just getting ready for his new school year.   He is in high school.  I find that a funny observation I have is the older I get the younger the teachers get.  I remember when I was younger.  I probably had all the same experiences as a lot of you.  I felt that my parents didn’t understand and that things were more complicated than they realized.  Reality was, I think I was making things more complicated. Read more…

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