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R. Kris Hardy

November 24, 2009

Confessions of a Researcher-turned-Engineer

Filed under: Articles, Development, Random Thoughts — Tags: , , , , — Kris @ 1:59 pm

I wasn’t always a software engineer…

Before I began developing software for a living, I used to be in chemical research & development as a biochemist.  For some reason, I always found myself gravitating back towards software and informatics, so I eventually gave in and started a software company.  But I’ve learned a lot of lessons during my time as a scientist.

When solving a difficult problem and you know 25% of the solution, you can figure out 70% through hard work, patience and trial-and-error.  The last 5% may never come, and if it does, is rarely when you’re looking for it.

“I am enough of an artist to draw freely upon my imagination. Imagination is more important than knowledge. Knowledge is limited. Imagination encircles the world.” – Albert Einstein

Just because you don’t know the answer right now, doesn’t mean that you can made headway and figure it out as you go.  I’ve learned the most when I’ve tried things that haven’t worked, but figured out what went wrong and then tried again.

If you’re not continually learning and improving yourself, your working days are numbered.

“Genius without education is like silver in the mine.” – Benjamin Franklin

Don’t be afraid of challenging yourself and learning new languages, technologies or skills.  Each one of them expands your experience and perspective, and can give you an opportunity to take a look at the status quo.  Unfortunately, self-motivated learners are in short supply but in constant demand because they can adapt to any situation.

If you want to succeed, you have to train for it.

“You can know the name of a bird in all the languages of the world, but when you’re finished, you’ll know absolutely nothing whatever about the bird… So let’s look at the bird and see what it’s doing — that’s what counts. I learned very early the difference between knowing the name of something and knowing something.” – Richard Feynman

Let’s face it…  The likelihood that you’re going to “knock one out of the park” your first time up to bat is pretty low.  Whether it’s business or baseball, the odds are against you.  It takes grit, determination, exercising yourself both physically and mentally, and lots of disappointment as you fail again and again.  But each day, train yourself a little more, a little harder, and each day you get a little stronger.  It’s cumulative, and it takes a lot of time.

Give credit to those who came before you.

If I have seen further it is by standing on the shoulders of Giants.” – Sir Isaac Newton

In science, recognition is incredibly important and one of the first lessons that you learn.  When you’re making a presentation, writing an article, or doing your homework, you have to cite any sources of information that when into your work.  This is partly because scientists are focusing on sharing knowledge, and in order for the community to work together, there has to be trust between researchers that their information will not be stolen by one-another.

Even more so, no inventions are made in complete isolation.  They are incremental improvements based on our understanding of our world and everything that has come before.  The iPhone wouldn’t exist without the much earlier inventions of silicon wafers, transistors, plastics, aluminum, and light.  And the next wave of inventions will be no different.

Take advantage of the information and knowledge that we have, but show respect to the community that this knowledge came from.  You probably will need more help from it in the future.

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November 17, 2009

The Art of Bootstrapping a Business

Filed under: Articles, Random Thoughts — Tags: , , — Kris @ 5:14 pm

I was sent this great article that Guy Kawasaki wrote way back in 2006 about bootstrapping that I just have to share.

At it’s essence, Bootstrappers are business owners that start and grow their business without any outside funding. That means no angel investors and no VC deals. You don’t hear about it much because it’s not glamorous, but it’s the way that most businesses are started.

I am a hard-core believer in bootstrapping, and I know for a fact that I have learned a lot of lessons the hard way that I wouldn’t have learned as easily if I had not been a bootstrapper. (Mo’ money, mo’ problems anyone?)

Especially when you start your first business (and if you’re like me, your second as well), you WILL make mistakes, and lot of them. I still make mistakes, but I like to think that my hard-fought experience has saved me several times. Sometimes I can get out of the way in time, and sometimes I still get run over. But I’ve become better and better at keeping the damages small and keeping the business agile.

If you’re in the Columbus, OH area, come out to a meeting of the International Bootstrapping Association and say hi!  Our next meeting is Dec 9th, 2009 at TechColumbus hear Ohio State University.  RSVP at the link below:

http://www.bootstrappingassociation.org

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April 2, 2009

Twitter is for… Plants?

Filed under: News, Random Thoughts — Tags: , , , , — Kris @ 7:34 am
Pothos on Twitter

Pothos on Twitter

It seems that nearly every day someone is figuring out a way to plug another object of their into Twitter.  It’s pretty interesting to watch, because creativity can run wild when you put your mind to figuring out ways that an object can send a 140-character message to you.

This latest one is very simple, but pretty unique:

Meet Pothos.

Kate Hartman and Rob Faludi of New York University decided to make a system that allows a plant to tell its owner, via Twitter, that it needs water.

The idea is actually a continuation of an older idea from 2007, where Hartman and Faludi made a system that called its owner over the telephone:

(more… >>)

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April 1, 2009

You Know You’re Doing Something Wrong When…

Filed under: Random Thoughts — Tags: , , , — Kris @ 7:47 pm

You know when you’re doing something wrong with your website when you get a Google Analytics report like this…

-Kris

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March 28, 2009

From SAP: Business Analytics = Hot. Business Intelligence = Not?

Filed under: Random Thoughts — Tags: , , — Kris @ 9:14 pm

Hot from SAP: Business Intelligence is Dead.

In what I can only understand as a bunch of doublespeak, hand waving and magical unicorn rides, SAP has unanimously decided that they are no longer in the “Business Intelligence” industry, and are now young, cool, and Google-y with their “Business Analytics” products.

Can someone explain this maneuver to me, PLEASE?

“I don’t believe (business intelligence is) where the future is,” said Jim Davis. “The future is in business analytics.”

Classic business intelligence questions, said Davis, “support reactive decision-making that doesn’t work in this economy” because it can only provide historical information that can’t drive organizations forward. Business intelligence, he said, doesn’t make a difference to the top or bottom line, and is merely a productivity tool like e-mail.

“SAS is bucking the trend because analytics has come of age,” said Davis.

(more… >>)

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March 26, 2009

Google Suggest FAIL

Filed under: Random Thoughts — Tags: , , — Kris @ 2:51 pm

I was catching up on failblog.org, and I came across this hilarious/scary Google Suggest FAIL.

So, I spent a few minutes to see what bizarre Google Suggest results I could pull up.  This one topped the list, after my short 3 minutes of looking:

Google Suggest - I want to eat your children

Google Suggest - I want to eat your children

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March 11, 2009

Welcome!

Filed under: Random Thoughts — Kris @ 9:37 am

Hi!

My name is Kris Hardy, and I am a website analytics expert.  My whole mission is to help your business become more profitable by analyzing your current customer base and finding opportunities to sell to them that you have missed.  I also implement fixes to your website and online/offline sales material to help you increase your sales and profit-per-sale.

Here are a few tactics that I use in order to help your business win:

(more… >>)


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