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July 29, 2005

New pictures of Grace

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Posted by kermisch at 10:07 AM

July 27, 2005

Learning From Lance

** Re-printed from the New York Times **

By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN

There is no doubt that Lance Armstrong's seventh straight victory in the Tour de France, which has prompted sportswriters to rename the whole race the Tour de Lance, makes him one of the greatest U.S. athletes of all time. What I find most impressive about Armstrong, besides his sheer willpower to triumph over cancer, is the strategic focus he brings to his work, from his prerace training regimen to the meticulous way he and his cycling team plot out every leg of the race. It is a sight to behold. I have been thinking about them lately because their abilities to meld strength and strategy - to thoughtfully plan ahead and to sacrifice today for a big gain tomorrow - seem to be such fading virtues in American life.

Sadly, those are the virtues we now associate with China, Chinese athletes and Chinese leaders. Talk to U.S. business executives and they'll often comment on how many of China's leaders are engineers, people who can talk to you about numbers, long-term problem-solving and the national interest - not a bunch of lawyers looking for a sound bite to get through the evening news. America's most serious deficit today is a deficit of such leaders in politics and business.

John Mack, the new C.E.O. at Morgan Stanley, initially demanded in the contract he signed June 30 that his total pay for the next two years would be no less than the average pay package received by the C.E.O.'s at Goldman Sachs, Merrill Lynch, Lehman Brothers and Bear Stearns. If that average turned out to be more than $25 million, Mr. Mack was to be paid at least that much. He eventually backed off that demand after a howl of protest, but it struck me as the epitome of what is wrong in America today.

We are now playing defense. A top C.E.O. wants to be paid not based on his performance, but based on the average of his four main rivals! That is like Lance Armstrong's saying he will race only if he is guaranteed to come in first or second, no matter what his cycling times are on each leg.

I recently spent time in Ireland, which has quietly become the second-richest country in the E.U., first by going through some severe belt-tightening that meant everyone had to sacrifice, then by following that with a plan to upgrade the education of its entire work force, and a strategy to recruit and induce as many global high-tech companies and researchers as possible to locate in Ireland. The Irish have a plan. They are focused. They have mobilized business, labor and government around a common agenda. They are playing offense.

Wouldn't you think that if you were president, after you'd read the umpteenth story about premier U.S. companies, like Intel and Apple, building their newest factories, and even research facilities, in China, India or Ireland, that you'd summon the top U.S. business leaders to Washington to ask them just one question: "What do we have to do so you will keep your best jobs here? Make me a list and I will not rest until I get it enacted."

And if you were president, and you had just seen more suicide bombs in London, wouldn't you say to your aides: "We have got to reduce our dependence on Middle East oil. We have to do it for our national security. We have to do it because only if we bring down the price of crude will these countries be forced to reform. And we should want to do it because it is clear that green energy solutions are the wave of the future, and the more quickly we impose a stringent green agenda on ourselves, the more our companies will lead innovation in these technologies."

Instead, we are about to pass an energy bill that, while it does contain some good provisions, will make no real dent in our gasoline consumption, largely because no one wants to demand that Detroit build cars that get much better mileage. We are just feeding Detroit the rope to hang itself. It's assisted suicide. I thought people went to jail for that?

And if you were president, would you really say to the nation, in the face of the chaos in Iraq, that "if our commanders on the ground say we need more troops, I will send them," but that they had not asked? It is not what the generals are asking you, Mr. President - it is what you are asking them, namely: "What do you need to win?" Because it is clear we are not winning, and we are not winning because we have never made Iraq a secure place where normal politics could emerge.

Oh, well, maybe we have the leaders we deserve. Maybe we just want to admire Lance Armstrong, but not be Lance Armstrong. Too much work. Maybe that's the wristband we should be wearing: Live wrong. Party on. Pay later.

Posted by kermisch at 3:47 PM

July 26, 2005

Podcasting

I have finally found the time to subscribe to pod casts provided via Apple. I am totally enamored with the medium. Self-published audio broadcasting is extremely cool. It allows a listener to investigate more information in an easy format. It also allows individuals to contribute to the content highway in such a manner that allows a humanistic touch that goes beyond the printed word. I also look at pod casts as the Tivo for audio. I can select the programs I want to listen too and subcribe to them to receive updates as they are published. Very cool!

Currently I am listening to Science Friday - Is Lance Armstrong a Genetic Freak! Next I am going to listen to Sirius radio's Lance broadcasts from the 2005 TDF.

Posted by kermisch at 9:40 AM

Commuting to work

This morning I rode my bike to work for the first time (ever). I was damn excited. It is about 10 - 11 miles from my house to my office. I can ride trails most of the way here, which make the ride a bit more pleasant.

My 'ride' is my old Specialized Allez Pro steel framed bike. This is what I rode pre-Madone. It is amazing how different the two bikes are. The Allez Pro is heavy, not as nimble, yet has a more comfortable ride in that it absorbs the bumps of the road better. I took the bike and converted it from a traditional road bike to a fixed gear bike (similar to a track back). I am riding a 16 cog in the rear, which makes the hill climbs a bit more tenuous.

I loved the fact that I got a short work out in this morning and that I get a chance to unwind on the way home as well. I hope to commute this way to work at least 3x a week.

Posted by kermisch at 8:03 AM