UAW challenges Kentwood worker’s effort to break up with the union

In the Grand Rapids Press, 2009/01/12, there was an article about a Kentwood women who is challenging the fact the company is a UAW shop.

The disturbing fact is only 30% percent of the employees voted to become a union shop, which means a large majority did not want to be unionized.  A small minority of people apparently can force a company to be a Union Shop, which seems wrong. 

What happened to the majority vote meaning something?  What about the union dues that were collected from the majority who didn’t want it?

I hope this woman wins the case.  Majority rule should govern.

 

Jonathan

Your blog is not your resume, your resume is your resume

My friend Robert Scoble recently posted a blog article on how to socially network once you are fired, or if you looking for a new job.  And I disagree with him…..

Robert’s first point is “Your blog is your resume” and I would disagree with him.  Your resume is your resume….  Let me give you an example…. If I’m looking for another instructor to join my company I will not go searching different blog sites to find who can write the best how-to articles, or who can write the best article.  I would be looking for an actual trainer, someone with experience training, not writing how-to manuals.  Also I would hope that person would send me a resume complete with references and other ways of verifying the individual was actually a good trainer.

Secondly, Robert argues one should remove all LOLCats from our blog…  Sorry Robert, your blog should be able to personal and fun but it shouldn’t be all LOLCats and stupid drinking photos.  I will search for you on Google/Facebook but you should be allowed to be personal on your blog.

If your blog is nothing more then getting yourself a new job, consider other steps to get that name recognition on whatever you are doing.  Submit an article to a magazine, post some blog posts, hang out in forums, call companies, do a job search.  I will not find you and hire you based only on your blog.  An example:  I am a Symantec Consultant/Trainer and if you are looking to be a successful consultant spend time on the forums, either forums.altiris.com or juice.altiris.com or other Symantec related forums helping people out.  That’s how I will find you, not a blog post…..

Again the statement that kids/hobbies shouldn’t be more then 1% of your public persona is something I disagree with.  I have this blog and also a family blog, my flickr stream is full of family pictures…. Facebook is full of personal information.  Does that change who I am?  Does that affect my job?  I doubt that… Does it mean I’m stupid as to what I post on those services?  No, I have a real life and demonstrating that I am a real person with a real life makes me a better worker and a better person.

I think this advice is geared more towards those that exist within the same bubble that Robert does and want to continue to exist in that same bubble.

And Robert, a search for Robert Scoble blog on google and live search both turned up your old worpdress blog as the first two links, so you might want to take a look at your own SEO.

 

Jonathan

Windows to Ubuntu and back to Windows

I was in Houston TX, before the Christmas break and as i was leaving the client’s site I suspended my laptop running Windows Vista and when I got back in the hotel room it did not return.  I received an error message to insert my Windows disk to continue.  This all happened before I was able to select safe mode.  With my Windows disk back home in Michigan, the only disks left in my bag were my Ubuntu disks from UDS Mountain View.

So booting into the live cd allowed me to connect a USB drive to backup my data so I could reload my system and then continue teaching the class.

I have previously tried to go Ubuntu only on my work laptop several times without much success but this time I was going to try and run Ubuntu for one month in hope that I could migrate my work machine from Windows Vista to Ubuntu 8.10.  Sadly I reloaded my laptop to Windows Vista and would like to share the applications I miss in Windows that caused me to switch back and also the applications I miss from Linux.

Things I missed running Linux:

These items all affected my day-to-day paying job. 

  1. Presentation Mode:  The current version of OpenOffice in Intrepid does not support Presentation Mode, that is the ability to have the presentation on one display and the speaker notes on the other.  While trying to teach a class I found myself looking more and more over my shoulder or putting my back to the class to make sure I was on task with the presentation.  PowerPoint 2007 does this very well
  2. Dual Monitor Support:  This was a pain to configure correctly and easily.  I always struggled in Ubuntu to make sure my desktop was extended correctly (to the right) for the projector
  3. Outlook:  I live in these two products.  I needed connection to our Exchange server with Outlook, not Outlook Web Access, especially the reduced Outlook Web Access that Firefox (non-IE) provides.  While some will say Evolution or KMail should work with Exchange, neither of these products would successfully connect to the mail server.  I received an error message and was pointed to a KB for Evolution on steps to change.  As I do not have access other then email to the Exchange server and the company’s IT guy did not have the time (or perhaps the motivation) to get this to work it was back to Outlook.  I attempted Outlook over Crossover, but failed miserably.  Outlook 2007 crashed all the time on me. 
  4. One Note: The other product I use all the time is One Note for note taking of meetings and conversations.  This crashed as well in Crossover for me as well, plus I have a large investment in One Note Notebooks.  I tried Tomboy, KNotes, KJots and found all of these programs did not make the cut for me.  They were cumbersome and seemed to be lacking what I felt were basic Note taking items such as bullet points, and numbering.
  5. VPN:  I tried unsuccessfully several times to connect and create a connection to both the Cisco VPN and also the Microsoft PPTP server we have running for VPN access.  These failed with very little error logging in networkmanager.  Impossible to do in knetworkmanager and kvpnc would freeze being connected in Intrepid (might be the fact its a KDE3 app in a KDE4 world).
  6. Wireless with TKIP support:  While people would argue that my work shouldn’t be using TKIP for wireless encryption once again this is something that I could not change nor fight.  No wireless connection meant I was tied to a desk (LAN) connection for access to anything at work
  7. Internet Explorer:  I know IE shouldn’t be a requirement but there are a lot of internal resources we use as a company that are IE only.  The big process is our scheduling program that I use to schedule other resources, revenue amount, etc which is IE only.  This sucks but guess what it is another utility that I need to use on a day to day basis.

Things I miss running Windows:

These items are mostly related to my Ubuntu work, which is non-paying the bills work so are not a requirement for the day to day operations of my laptop.  I do have a Dell Mini 9 that is Ubuntu only and I do a lot of the Ubuntu work on that machine and anything that I miss is resolved through running a VM.

  1. I do a lot documentation work for both Kubuntu and Ubuntu and have some downtime throughout the day and it was always nice to be able to work on some documentation tweaks without having to start up a VM, now I just have a Kubuntu VM running in the background if I want to do some work there
  2. bzr and related utilities:  I haven’t quite gotten bzr + ssh to work correctly in Windows but there were times that I would see a bug related to Kubuntu-Docs or Ubuntu-Docs that I could quickly fix and then do a bzr commit to resolve the bug.  But now I can do a VM to resolve these problems.  The 5–a-day bug reporting tool is Linux only which is why my numbers have dropped remarkably in that area, but once again, I am not being paid to deal with Ubuntu/Kubuntu/KDE bugs, I’m paid to do other items.

I hope this list helps out in areas for possible improvement in the tools/applications that are out there in the FLOSS market. Don’t get me wrong, I love Kubuntu and love how KDE4 is shaping up (my Dell Mini 9 runs Intrepid + the KDE4 ppa to stay on the latest/greatest), but for me I cannot make the switch in my job, there are just too many tools I miss.  When there is  the ability to switch without adversely affecting my job, then I will happily switch back to Ubuntu/Kubuntu full time

Windows to Ubuntu and back to Windows

I was in Houston TX, before the Christmas break and as i was leaving the client’s site I suspended my laptop running Windows Vista and when I got back in the hotel room it did not return.  I received an error message to insert my Windows disk to continue.  This all happened before I was able to select safe mode.  With my Windows disk back home in Michigan, the only disks left in my bag were my Ubuntu disks from UDS Mountain View.

So booting into the live cd allowed me to connect a USB drive to backup my data so I could reload my system and then continue teaching the class.

I have previously tried to go Ubuntu only on my work laptop several times without much success but this time I was going to try and run Ubuntu for one month in hope that I could migrate my work machine from Windows Vista to Ubuntu 8.10.  Sadly I reloaded my laptop to Windows Vista and would like to share the applications I miss in Windows that caused me to switch back and also the applications I miss from Linux.

Things I missed running Linux:

These items all affected my day-to-day paying job. 

  1. Presentation Mode:  The current version of OpenOffice in Intrepid does not support Presentation Mode, that is the ability to have the presentation on one display and the speaker notes on the other.  While trying to teach a class I found myself looking more and more over my shoulder or putting my back to the class to make sure I was on task with the presentation.  PowerPoint 2007 does this very well
  2. Dual Monitor Support:  This was a pain to configure correctly and easily.  I always struggled in Ubuntu to make sure my desktop was extended correctly (to the right) for the projector
  3. Outlook:  I live in these two products.  I needed connection to our Exchange server with Outlook, not Outlook Web Access, especially the reduced Outlook Web Access that Firefox (non-IE) provides.  While some will say Evolution or KMail should work with Exchange, neither of these products would successfully connect to the mail server.  I received an error message and was pointed to a KB for Evolution on steps to change.  As I do not have access other then email to the Exchange server and the company’s IT guy did not have the time (or perhaps the motivation) to get this to work it was back to Outlook.  I attempted Outlook over Crossover, but failed miserably.  Outlook 2007 crashed all the time on me. 
  4. One Note: The other product I use all the time is One Note for note taking of meetings and conversations.  This crashed as well in Crossover for me as well, plus I have a large investment in One Note Notebooks.  I tried Tomboy, KNotes, KJots and found all of these programs did not make the cut for me.  They were cumbersome and seemed to be lacking what I felt were basic Note taking items such as bullet points, and numbering.
  5. VPN:  I tried unsuccessfully several times to connect and create a connection to both the Cisco VPN and also the Microsoft PPTP server we have running for VPN access.  These failed with very little error logging in networkmanager.  Impossible to do in knetworkmanager and kvpnc would freeze being connected in Intrepid (might be the fact its a KDE3 app in a KDE4 world).
  6. Wireless with TKIP support:  While people would argue that my work shouldn’t be using TKIP for wireless encryption once again this is something that I could not change nor fight.  No wireless connection meant I was tied to a desk (LAN) connection for access to anything at work
  7. Internet Explorer:  I know IE shouldn’t be a requirement but there are a lot of internal resources we use as a company that are IE only.  The big process is our scheduling program that I use to schedule other resources, revenue amount, etc which is IE only.  This sucks but guess what it is another utility that I need to use on a day to day basis.

Things I miss running Windows:

These items are mostly related to my Ubuntu work, which is non-paying the bills work so are not a requirement for the day to day operations of my laptop.  I do have a Dell Mini 9 that is Ubuntu only and I do a lot of the Ubuntu work on that machine and anything that I miss is resolved through running a VM.

  1. I do a lot documentation work for both Kubuntu and Ubuntu and have some downtime throughout the day and it was always nice to be able to work on some documentation tweaks without having to start up a VM, now I just have a Kubuntu VM running in the background if I want to do some work there
  2. bzr and related utilities:  I haven’t quite gotten bzr + ssh to work correctly in Windows but there were times that I would see a bug related to Kubuntu-Docs or Ubuntu-Docs that I could quickly fix and then do a bzr commit to resolve the bug.  But now I can do a VM to resolve these problems.  The 5–a-day bug reporting tool is Linux only which is why my numbers have dropped remarkably in that area, but once again, I am not being paid to deal with Ubuntu/Kubuntu/KDE bugs, I’m paid to do other items.

I hope this list helps out in areas for possible improvement in the tools/applications that are out there in the FLOSS market. Don’t get me wrong, I love Kubuntu and love how KDE4 is shaping up (my Dell Mini 9 runs Intrepid + the KDE4 ppa to stay on the latest/greatest), but for me I cannot make the switch in my job, there are just too many tools I miss.  When there is  the ability to switch without adversely affecting my job, then I will happily switch back to Ubuntu/Kubuntu full time