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Christian Nimsky's Weblog

Fundraising Evolution - Where Is It?

Christian Nimsky

As our kids enter their “mainstream” school years I am shocked at how much things have changed from when I was a kid.  We have homework for kindergarten students whose average age is closer to 6 than 5, (way too much) technology in the classrooms, overachieving parents and extracurricular activities organized to an almost paramilitary level of rigor.  Its no wonder the kids are so stressed these days - as a parent I’m stressed from the logistics alone and could see this stuff occupying a stay-at-home parent full-time before they had a chance to whip up a dinner each night for Ward (or June) when they come home from work.

One thing that hasn’t changed though are the fundraising approaches.  In spite of the internet, services like PayPal and the increase in two-income households (at least where I live) I still see countless fundraisers that emphasize “sweat equity” like selling candy, gift-wrap, tickets to some Lion’s Club or Rotary breakfast, etc.

I know that these tactics are in part used to avoid penalizing those with less disposable cash but it’s the most inefficient method possible to raise money.  I typically bring a checkbook to these and ask the person “how much do you want?” to just cut to the chase.  For fun I might ask how big a check I need to write not to be bothered again for one year.  Suprisingly, about 30% of the time the person asking for my help in these fundraisers doesn’t even know what their goal is.

Everything else about childhood seems overengineered yet we are like lemmings when it comes to fundraising.  Why is there little-t0-no original thinking going on here? 

New Bluetooth Headset

Christian Nimsky

plantronics910.jpg
plantronics910.jpg

Historically I’ve not been a fan of bluetooth headsets because I think they make you look like you belong in a “B”-grade science fiction movie.  But now that I spend a lot of time switching between my cell phone and VOIP, I thought I would see if any models existed that could make the switching easier while letting me roam around the home office.

Enter the Plantronics .Audio 910.  One of the more ubiquitous designs out there, it isn’t pretty but it is very comfortable, sounds good and lets you pair with multiple devices at the same time.  Works for me, even though my kids think I look like a dork when I wear it. 

Moving from GApps to Zimbra

Christian Nimsky

Well this note won’t move markets or anything since we’re talking just a handful of users here, but Nimsky family ops here in California - after long and arduous discussions - has moved its email hosting from Google Apps For Your Domain to a hosted Zimbra implementation provided by 01.com.

Zimbra rocks, and I’m glad they got picked up by Yahoo.  For more on why we moved and some tips for making the jump yourself, read on.  If you could care less about switching email, skip the click.

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Back from The Big Family Trip with a new toy

Christian Nimsky

I haven’t posted for a while because we took one of those classic family summertime trips - stuff the kids in the car, drive all over the southwest, stay in something like half a dozen hotels and see just how far your kids can go till they absolutely freak out from travelling so much.

Actually the kids did great - the only issue is we now have a daughter who has to be “un-spoiled” from eating at restaurants for every meal.  One thing that was helpful on our trip was a Garmin Nuvi 350.  Not much bigger than an iPod, this little gadget can attach to your windshield (or just float around the front console without losing signal) and has nearly the level of navigation prowess as my Acura’s built-in nav system, which I’ve been told by my automotive journalist friends is one of the best systems out there.  And it weighs just a few ounces, runs on rechargeable batteries (great for rental cars!) and can even talk to you in a voice of your choosing. 

Go buy one.  Now. 

Globalstar

Christian Nimsky

The family CTO role is more than buying new gadgets - you get to deal with stuff after it stops working.  A couple years ago when I worked far from home we bought two Globalstar phones so we’d have a way to communicate in a natural disaster.  We also like to use one for keeping in touch with family when we go places that normal cellphones can’t reach.  Over the past few months I’ve read about Globalstar’s satellite issues but I thought they were more theoretical.  On our last camping trip I found out firsthand that they are very real.

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Marriott Gets Hotel Multimedia

Christian Nimsky

Hotel Room Multimedia Input Panel

What has never impressed me about hotels (even my preferred chain, Marriott) is the lack of multimedia support as a general rule: Usually you get a sizeable TV which has been neutered to only show hotel-provided TV with no external inputs for a personal DVD player, video iPod or laptop and a special protector on the cable’s input to prevent “rewiring” attempts by people like me. I suppose the original theory was to encourage sales of their pay-per-view movies but it always struck me as presumptuous that they would dictate my media consumption that way, especially as media continues to fragment into more of a “long tail” distribution.

The newly remodeled San Mateo Marriott has shown me the future and it is much more friendly to today’s increasingly digital guests. The guest rooms have a flat panel TV (a less unique feature these days) that has more importantly been wired to a multimedia input panel built right into the desk along with a high speed data line and not one, not two, but FOUR power outlets.

Good job Marriott! If all hotels did this I could stop travelling with little power strips for all my laptops, phones, etc. and I could watch some episodes of “24” that I’ve downloaded (legally, mind you) to my DishPlayer Archos multimedia device. I hope this is a sign of things to come to other properties at Marriott and other hotel brands in the future.

Crap Plastic Toys

Christian Nimsky

The public reaction to the Mattel Toy Recall is somewhat disappointing in that the focus seems mostly on the lead and the oversight process.  My heart goes out to any family with a child affected by lead but it really shouldn’t surprise anyone in the slightest degree that this could happen given the way we’ve delegated our children’s’ playtime equipment to the lowest common denominators of the global economy: Retail at Walmart or Target for convenient purchase a cheap toy from a global marketing engine like Mattel and outsource the production (and likely the design) to China.  Both China and Mattel need to answer for their parts in this play but this really isn’t about China - it could happen in any outsource scenario - to me the issue is that we have a part to answer for too: we’re fueling the demand for these crap plastic toys.
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Squarespace

Christian Nimsky

In my last post (April!) I said that I was moving to Media Temple and Expression Engine.  I have used Expression Engine for years to run Kidzwire and I think its one of the best pieces of publishing software written.  I also have an active Media Temple account and like their hosting setup quite a bit.  One of the few weakpoints of Expression Engine however is that EE’s stock templates are relatively few and are really meant to show you how to use EE to achieve a variety of formatting effects.  Customization therefore requires diving into code. 

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Why aren't we focusing on good automotive UI design?

Christian Nimsky

This past weekend Kathy and I took a Cadillac SRX up to Sonoma to get away and just relax a bit.  In my driving impressions I shared my frustration with the fact that Cadillac’s designers intentionally crippled various functions while the vehicle is moving.  That got me to thinking — what are people’s attitudes on driver distraction?  Are these types of design decisions just fear of litigation or is there popular support for such restrictions?

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