Daily Archives: 12 January 2008

Road Trip #2 for 2008

Purple Eagles’ tickets

Well, well, two weeks into the new year and two road trips have come and gone.

As noted previously, my 20 year old daughter attends Niagara University. Her twin brother attends the State University at Buffalo. He had to be back to school before her dorm opens for the new semester. She and I decided “road trip!”

We left home around 11 am yesterday, Jan 11th. By 2:30 pm, we had dropped Andy at UB and were on our way to see how many things we could do before our athletic destinations.

We made a stop at the campus store at Niagara. Books for the upcoming semester were purchased for under $100. There are two books still outstanding so another $75 or so and this will be a cheap book semester.

We made a visit to Campus Activities to visit friends of Lei’s. This is always a favorite stop of mine. I love the CAO staff!

Then, it was a sneak up into her room to leave the books. My suggestion if we could get in the dorm as it meant one less thing to forget to pack.

Then, off to shop. I had promised her a trip to Steve & Barry’s as we don’t have one near us at home. She got a new pair of jeans and new running shoes. I got her 13 year old brother a pair of jean as well as a pair for myself.

We had a quick dinner at Wendy’s before finding a parking place with our ultimate getaway from campus in mind – which would be at about 11:30 pm as we were staying for the 9 pm basketball game.

A very windy walk over to Dwyer Arena put us at our first athletic event – the Purple Eagles of Niagara against the Colonials of Robert Morris in men’s ice hockey. Having watched two Purple Eagles’ games last weekend, I have to say that last night’s was probably the best of the three. I don’t say this because the end result was a 7-2 win but because it was by far the most physical and well-skated of the three games.

After the seventh goal was scored, we headed over to the Gallagher Center to watch the basketball game – Niagara against Siena

The game was the third straight sell-out of the Gallagher Center. I got one of the last three tickets available. We couldn’t find seats but did find some of Lei and Michael’s friends in the student section. We stood the entire game. It was close but not close. It was college basketball at its best.

The end of the road trip was leaving Niagara at 11:30 pm and heading for the four hour ride home. Lei had had me drive up and do all our driving around so she could stomach the drive home. We made a quick stop at Pembroke Service area on the NYS Thruway and then one quick one at her oldest brother’s in East Syracuse. Lei and I were tucked tightly into bed by 4 am.


360! Again

I know I am not a big blog in the Yahoo! 360 world. I have, though, been blogging since November of 2005. I am not concerned with moving to a universal profile. I am absolutely amazed that people have more than one Yahoo! profile. I have one – it works for 360, it works for email, it works for geocities (it is not the original geocities ID I had when I first started there but that plus a dot geo), it works for groups.

I have watched Yahoo! do changes and integration previously. There was little, if any, contact when Geocities became a Yahoo! product. There was slightly more when egroups moved to Yahoo! groups. I believe that the product development community is trying to have even more information on the 360 closing/new universal profile and social networking starting but they are doing so from a product and, basically, an engineering point of view. They are not doing it from a marketing or public relations point of view.

I have a degree in marketing and public relations. The first big mistake was to say the word “close.” Use any of a number of other words in saying things will be different and you are already on better footing – migration, integration. Even culminate and conclude might go over better. Close has way too much of a finality with it to make anyone reading feel secure in what they post here and in what they want to post in the future.

The main thing for anyone contemplating such a huge change is “people don’t like change,” regardless of what the political parties will tell you. Status quo is much easier in most facets of our lives than change is.

Another contemplation is for the product development team to realize this change – whatever format it may be – will be similar to death for many people. There will be all five stages of grief set out by Elizabeth Kubler-Ross – denial, anger, bargaining, depression and acceptance. Each 360 user will go through these stages at a different pace. I have seen this happen as I use to moderate a discussion forum that just closed.

Lastly, information is the most important thing that Yahoo! has on its side. By letting all 360 users know what is going on and feeling vested in the change, Yahoo! will have a much easier time in the arena of public opinion.

For those who have not read the various blogs on the 360 change, please see a list below.
Yahoo! 360 Product Blog
Mr E’s Blog
My360MI’s Product Blog
Yes Virginia, 360 is Closing…However…


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