I saw this on Failblog today. Very cool. Although the Pocahontas script may have been tailored for this comparison. It is really really similar…. I don’t think it’s a failure, because Avatar is WAY WAY WAY WAY cooler than Pocahontas.
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Joey’s Blog Thoughts on Life, Work, Technology, and Society
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I saw this on Failblog today. Very cool. Although the Pocahontas script may have been tailored for this comparison. It is really really similar…. I don’t think it’s a failure, because Avatar is WAY WAY WAY WAY cooler than Pocahontas.
P.S.
Only rednecks have so little hesitation to on the spot innovation.
I love being from SC.
This is definitely a supped up Hot Wheels (24v power instead of 12v), as anything this much fun would be law suit fodder… See a forum post about making your powerwheels this much fun: http://forums.radiocontrolzone.com/showthread.php?t=134795
African Dwarf frogs, play dead. Not only do they play dead, they play LEAF at the same time. Check out this video:
Katrina and I got one. When they aren’t moving, they are rigid, so they behave just like a leaf as they go with they coast in the water. They also breath at the surface, so they constantly swim up and down inside a tank. My favorite thing, is when they are positivly boyant, and float to the top of the tank spread eagle. Katrina calls it a “backwards base jumper”. Here’s a video of him doing it:
So… My wife and I recently got an aquarium, so we’ve been checking out some fish. Really wierd sci-fi looking fish exist… Check them out…
Stonefish look like stones! They hide, and then eat whatever gets too close. Stonefish are also extremeley venemous, wikipedia says the most venemous fish in the world. Stonefish stings are usually due to stepping on them. Fortunately, hot water (above 113F) neutralizes the venom.
These fish have arms and legs.

Lumpsuckers are nearly spherical. As you may have guessed, they don’t swim all that great and spend a lot of time on the sea floor where they camouflage themselves. They are found in northern waters, with the most species along the contental shelf (from 100 – 1700 meters).

This blog has even more weird fish: http://www.bountyfishing.com/blog/2007/08/07/27-aquatic-lifeforms-you-never-caught-while-fishing/
Nothing great has ever happened without a leader. Ok, so well, maybe SOMETHING great has happened without a leader, but the occurrences of great things happening with a leader vs. without show great things usually involve a leader. Or, great things are brought about by a great leader.
What is a leader? It’s easy. Someone who pulls, and doesn’t push.
Little red wagons… Do they have push bars, or pull handles? Horse “drawn” wagons? Pulled again! Even our cars… (Most of them) are PULLED by the front wheels rather then pushed by the rear ones (this is a big deal if you live where it snows). Trains, while they can be pushed, they are usually pulled. Why were airplanes “pulled” by engines until the invention of the jet engine? They were far more stable. Most elevators, are PULLED by cables, not pushed by pistons. When something is pulled, it’s easier to steer and direct. You just go where you want what you are leading to go, and you will pull what you are pulling along behind you. A light rope can be used to pull yourself hundreds of feet in the air, whereas it would take a very heavy expensive ladder to push you up. Parachutes, they pull you gently upwards while gravity pulls down. The examples could go on and on.
I believe, that this is the biggest difference between effective leaders, and ineffective managers. Leaders, “lead”.
One of my very favorite speeches ever, was written by a man named “Hugh Nibley” (He was really really really smart, in fact, at the college where he devoted his life, there was another smart man, and rumor has it that they would play a game, one of them would write a sentence in a language, and pass the paper to the other, who would write it in another language, and they would go back and forth until one of them could not translate the sentence into a new language, and the other one won.) He talks about leaders and managers. He uses as his example the protagonist and antagonist of a book of LDS scripture. But, it should be entertaining to listen to if you are not framiliar with the book. If you want to listen to it, just use this handy dandy embeded mp3 player to listen to it. He starts out with an in-depth history of collegiate graduation ropes (“Black Ropes of a False Priesthood” he calls them). He progresses from the history of the robes to the comparison between the two figures previously mentioned. Anyways, here it is. (You may be bored at first, just listen for the first few minutes. It gets better, I promise, just hang in their for the first ten minutes..)
Here are some of my favorite quotes from the speech:
To Parkinson’s Law, which shows how management gobbles up everything else, he added what he calls the “Law of Injelitance”: Managers do not promote individuals whose competence might threaten their own position; and so as the power of management spreads ever wider, the quality deteriorates, if that is possible. In short, while management shuns equality, it feeds on mediocrity.
–Hugh Nibley
No one ever “managed” men into battle.
–Captain Grace Hopper
The Generalstab tried desperately for a hundred years to train up a generation of leaders for the German army, but it never worked, because the men who delighted their superiors, i.e., the managers, got the high commands, while the men who delighted the lower ranks, i.e., the leaders, got reprimands.
–Hugh Nibley
Leaders are movers and shakers, original, inventive, unpredictable, imaginative, full of surprises that discomfit the enemy in war and the main office in peace. For managers are safe, conservative, predictable, conforming organization men and team players, dedicated to the establishment.
–Hugh Nibley
“If you love me,” said the Greatest of all leaders, “you will keep my commandments.” “If you know what is good for me,” says the manager, “you will keep my commandments, and not make waves.” That is why the rise of management always marks the decline of culture. If the management does not go for Bach, very well, there will be no Bach in the meeting; if management favors vile, sentimental doggerel verse extolling the qualities that make for success, young people everywhere will be spouting long trade-journal jingles from the stand; if the management’s taste in art is what will sell–trite, insipid, folksy kitsch–that is what we will get; if management finds maudlin, saccharine commercials appealing, that is what the public will get; if management must reflect the corporate image in tasteless, trendy new buildings, down come the fine old pioneer monuments.
–Hugh Nibley
It is my opinion that one of the largest problems with our current government is that there are too many managers and no leaders. However, why is this? Could it be, that the peoples demand for a perfect faultless government has created an environment where the government MUST over manage to reduce liability? I believe it is. We elect our representatives. We should elect people who show leadership, not perfection. Leaders take calculated risks. Leaders make mistakes occasionally. Most importantly, Leaders know those they are leading. Lets show some mercy to those we have put in office. Let’s not hold them accountable for things like Huricane Katrina, 9/11, etc… They do a fine job. But WE, the people have put them into a position where there is no mercy, where we expect them to fix all our problems, where slowly self reliance is evaporating into dependance upon Uncle Sam. And thus no real leadership allowed. We need to elect the person that says “Hey, we have problems. We can fix some of them, but some of the require a change in the people, not the government to go away.”
At Infusionsoft we are focusing even more on listening to customers, and this morning our support leader sent this around as a funny example of what can happen when you aren’t compassionate to your customers (courtesy of United Airlines). My sister told me about it Sunday, and so I figured I had to post it. Enjoy.