Posts from October 2006.

Response times

Working in an IT/entertainment company, I’ve come to handle or at least hear lots of IT jargon each day. Yesterday as I was walking home by the circus that’s in town I realised that my personal response times to lots of things have gotten longer. This pretty much means that I’ve constantly had a few days of “lag” before being able to get back to something I was expected to respond to. I’m not talking about work here, but personal e-mails, blogging (yeah, talk more like 8 days! :-) ), etc.

With this said, I’m going to try and focus more on balancing out my time between work and free time, as well as getting my response times faster. There’s also a very sane reason behind this. For example, what happens to websites that have too high response times? …nobody uses them.

ps. I’ve also noticed that using IT jargon to explain issues in your personal life isn’t probably a good sign :-P

We are not evil

All those interested in revolutionary music business should head down to Korjaamo, located in Töölö, Helsinki - to listen to John Buckman, the CEO of Magnatune. He’s giving a talk in another Aula event at 7pm on Monday the 23rd of October. Read more here.

Magnatune is an online record label. Its catalogue can be listened for free on their website. Magnatune’s catalogue of music is distributed with CC-license. Magnatune makes profit by selling physical CDs, high quality audio downloads and licenses to commercial use of the works.

Couldn’t have said it better myself

There’s an excellent speech written by the CEO of Ooga Labs, a small (but extremely successful) start-up located in California, for graduates of a ‘06 class:

Don’t make my mistake!

So you’re going to take a cube job with slow Microsoft, bureaucratic Oracle, or with some boring financial company?

Why don’t you just shoot yourself in the head?

C’mon! Do you want spend all of your life wearing modest habits of charcoal grey, driving your Volvo on the salty roads of the drab East Coast, paying 50% of your earnings to taxes, and hanging out with narrow minded people, congratulating yourselves on improving a feature of a widget of version 12.1b.4 of some software, or maybe improving the financial return of some rich bald dude in Greenwich, CT by 0.2% above the S&P Index?

Has no one taken you aside and said, “Wait! You’re about to waste 10 years of your life figuring out the path you chose out of college is crap!”

No one did to me either when I went to Princeton, and it took me until I was 31 to get my ass out to San Francisco and do tech start ups. Don’t make my mistake. Save yourself now. Even if you don’t work for me. I mean it.

Out here, you think about the future. Out here, you are surrounded by colorful, dynamic technologists and entrepreneurs who are really making a difference, pushing the edge.

Most people think that working for a big or known company will give them good experience. That’s kind of like saying learning to sit still for dental surgery is good experience. Sure, it’s an experience, but there are life paths where you don’t have to have dental surgery, or work for a big company, to have the best life. In fact, I would argue that you learn the wrong things working for a big company, and that it’s actually not good experience. A good experience is when you really make something happen in the world. Big companies teach you how to work through layers of bureaucracy and how to solve problems in very risk-averse ways — in short, how to make something happen in their organization. A big company is not the safe career choice. It’s the risky choice. It risks your mind and your life.

Oh, and one more thing. Initially, your friends and family may not understand why you didn’t take that “safe” cube-job with the company whose name they know, but in two years they will understand. They will love using the websites you build, and they will talk often with their friends about it. They will see you having a vibrant life, pushing the edge of what’s happening, and they’ll be proud to know you.

Take a few minutes and reconsider your first “starting point” out of college. It sets up a direction that takes some time to change. Aim yourself in the right direction. Again, you don’t have to come to Ooga Labs, just get to the Bay Area and join a startup. You will never regret it.

I agree with this 100%. I took a chance and joined a small, but growing start-up in Helsinki - Apaja Online Entertainment. I was the 16th person to start working there, today we are close to 40. Work has been dynamic, demanding, challenging but most importantly very rewarding in terms of experience and challenge.

From year to year, the best of business graduates want to join large Finnish companies and work in a cubicle performing that routine job from day-to-day. However, I’d argue it’s more common among tech graduates to found their own company or join a start-up - they get to do the coding and designing they’ve always wanted to do. How many successful engineers do people worldwide know that came out of Finland, couple perhaps - how about successful business men?

BF 2142 in-game-advertising

Slashdot writes about Battlefield 2142 in-game-advertising and how this is portrayed among users as spyware. This leaflet also explains what EA is after. I understand the frustration the consumers are going through.

I believe the business model is the biggest problem here. When consumers pay for something they are taught that they don’t have to put up with advertising. It’s in the logic built by the the world around us. EA could have put out two different versions of the game, one with in-game-advertising that would sell a lot more cheaper and the other one with the option not to show in-game-advertising (and naturally this one would be priced more heavily to cover development costs in one purchase).

This is giving consumers an option - the natural thing they want anyhow.

Distorted image of beauty

It might hit you…

Time to chill

Long week of work behind -> time to chill. I find myself in Lappeenranta in the student campus at Arttu’s place. It feels so nostalgic coming here… lots of good memories. Damn :) Almost feels surreal. Anyhow - I’ll quit now and enjoy the weekend.

Cheerio!

Permission to link to Aussie Gov’t

Linux Overdose blogs how he got permission to link to the Aussie Gov’t pages @ australia.gov.au (I won’t create the link since I haven’t asked permission - pun intended).

This is like asking people to ask you permission before they mention your name…

Positioning and Mike Markkula

I was reading Jack Trout’s Differentiate or Die after a late supper, when I noticed the a short citation to Mike Markkula. Markkula is a definite Finnish surname and thus I jumped to my Mac to Google more info for it. I found the following;

In 1977, Markkula brought his business expertise along with USD$250,000 to buy one-third of Apple Computer. He also brought in Apple Computer’s first CEO, Michael Scott, then took the job himself from 1981 to 1983. Markkula served as chairman from 1985 until 1997, when a new board was formed after Jobs returned to the company.

(via)

The Finnish Wikipedia tells us that his grandparents were Finnish expatriotes that moved to the US in 1883.