A secret to enjoying life, live now like the ancients retired - friendships and reflection are priceless

While I was on 4 days of vacation I ran across a WSJ article that got me thinking.   The WSJ article was down this path.

The 'New' Old Age Is No Way to Live

The ancients had it right: Reflection and friendship are the bounties of old age

...

We are advised that an extended life span has given us an unprecedented opportunity. And if we surrender to old age, we are fools or, worse, cowards. Around me I see many of my contemporaries remaining in their prime-of-life vocations, often working harder than ever before, even if they have already achieved a great deal. Some are writing the novels stewing in their heads but never attempted, or enrolling in classes in conversational French, or taking up jogging, or even signing up for cosmetic surgery and youth-enhancing hormone treatments.

What happens when you don't consider this advice and you are focused on your accomplishments?  You treat your friends as tools in the games you play.

Epicurus also wrote: "Of all the things that wisdom provides to help one live one's entire life in happiness, the greatest by far is the possession of friendship." Even back in the Athens of the third century B.C., he could see how a professional life of any kind could corrupt genuine friendship. A life engaged in business inevitably leads to treating other people as means to an end, rather than as ends in themselves.

Do you live your life like this?

Tasso feels no need to manipulate, exploit or in any way maneuver his companions to do anything. No, Tasso simply wants his friends to be with him.

One of the things I enjoy about the data center industry is finding the people who think like the above where reflection and friendship are valuable.  Why?  Because, when you want to figure out some really tough things you need insight and friends who will tell you the truth.  

There are plenty of people who will tell you what you want to hear and lying is just part of playing the game.  

 

 

Joyent CTO discusses data center as Information Factory

Joyent's CTO Jason Hoffman just presented on the idea of data centers as Information Factories. at GigaOm Structure Europe.  Here is my post on the same concept of data centers as information factories 3 years ago.

Can you Green the Data Center? Maybe if you think in terms of an Information Factory

I have been writing on the Green Data Center topic for over 2 years with 1,000 blog posts. And, one of the things I have found is the name “data center” is not an accurate description to the layman of what data centers do. Are data centers the “center of data”?  In the past there was one corporate building that was the place where data was housed for the corporation. The standard for Fortune 500 companies now is to have multiple data centers around the world to provide information availability, disaster recovery, and reliability. How can there be multiple centers of data? If you green the data center what am I supposed to green? These multiple centers?  How?

You can see Jason's video here.


Are Spatial Skills one of the under valued skills of a data center engineer?

Designing a data center is a skill that you don't go to school for and learn from a book.  Book learning works for math, science, english and of course reading. So, what kind of skill is needed to design a data center.  One of the challenges is trade-off of getting things just right to reduce or eliminate the single point of failures.  Operations and maintenance costs are not hidden surprises.

Here is an article on Spatial Intelligence to get you thinking of whether spatial skills are a different skill set to look for in a data center engineer.

The last two paragraphs explain the value of engineers.

I think we often don’t realize that engineers have invented so many things that we take for granted in our everyday lives. Consider this. The device you are reading this article from right now was invented by engineers who utilized their phenomenal spatial talents. There are many kids today who are spatially talented who have the potential to create amazing things that can improve our lives and society.  We need to learn to value these beautiful minds.

We need to identify them.  We need to provide a tailored education for them.  And we need to place the tools in their hands so that they can help invent our future.

A specific example the author uses is how two of the brightest kids were not found by established testing standards.

Over 90 years ago, Lewis Terman attempted to identify the brightest kids in California. There were two young boys who took Terman’s test but who did not make the cutoff to be included in this study for geniuses. These boys were William Shockley and Luis Alvarez, who both went on to study physics, earn PhDs, and win the Nobel Prize. Why did they miss the cut? One explanation is that the Stanford-Binet, the test Terman used, simply did not include a spatial test.

Considering the current push for STEM education and our need for more STEM innovators, shouldn’t we be trying to find these talented minds who have a spatial rather than a verbal or mathematical bent?

Just because someone is good with words, numbers and going by the book doesn't make them the brightest.

But what about that kid who is a mechanical genius; who can take apart and put back together just about anything; who is like Robert Downey Jr.’s character in Iron Man, but who really has little interest in words or numbers? Is there a place for this talented kid in our school system? Do we value the talent of this individual as much as the talents of students who can write compelling essays, who can solve complex equations, and who can read great works of literature?

Robert Downey Jr. from Iron Man


A few tips and satellite imagery allows the curious to see bin Laden mock-up

The quality of map data has gotten a lot of news with Apple's move into maps.  Google and Bing are the sources I always use to look for data center sites and study data centers.  Much easier than taking a trip and stare through a fence if you can get that close.  If you know where to look you can find Google, Microsoft, Amazon's data centers.

NBCnews has a post on cryptome.org finding the CIA training site for the assault on bin Laden's strong hold.

Bing.com/maps

A Bing Maps view of the Harvey Point Defense Testing Facility.

In the best-selling book “No Easy Day,” a retired Navy SEAL who was on the raid that killed Osama bin Laden revealed that training for the assault on the al-Qaida leader’s compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan, took place in North Carolina.

Taking that information, the creators of the whistleblowing site Cryptome.org, apparently scoured satellite imagery of CIA facilities in North Carolina.

The original source is here.

Osama bin Laden Compound Raid Mock-up

A sends:

In No Easy Day, the book written by the Navy Seal about getting Bin Laden, he stated that they trained in North Carolina. If you go to Google Maps and put in these coordinates at Harvey Point Defense Testing (CIA training facility) there is nothing but an clearing in a field. If you go to the lower link in Virtual Globetrotting and look at the same location it appears to be the mock up training facility for the Bin Laden raid. It is not completed in the photo, but there is enough built to say it is an almost exact copy of Bin Laden's compound.

Google Maps

36.099724,-76.349428

Bing Maps

http://virtualglobetrotting.com/map/harvey-point-defense-testing-activity-cia-training-facility/view/?service=1