Tech hotshots: The rise of the UX expert

Blame Apple’s aesthetic: Even the stodgiest of enterprise shops are engaging user experience experts who can design logical, beautiful interfaces for mobile computing’s limited spaces.

Blame Apple’s aesthetic: Even the stodgiest of enterprise shops are engaging user experience experts who can design logical, beautiful interfaces for mobile computing’s limited spaces.

Google revs up Chrome, crushes bugs

Google on Thursday upgraded Chrome, improving the browser’s start-up performance and patching two dozen security vulnerabilities.

Google on Thursday upgraded Chrome, improving the browser’s start-up performance and patching two dozen security vulnerabilities.

Oracle to stop patching Java 6 in February 2013

Java 6 will be retired from security support in less than two months, and users and businesses should prepare now for its demise, experts said today.

Java 6 will be retired from security support in less than two months, and users and businesses should prepare now for its demise, experts said today.

Poner eñes y tildes

Ya pues otra vez recurriendo al aprendizaje… vale la plena encontrarse este tipo de introducciones cuando lo que se busca, es la ñ, á, Á

Todos los que se han enfrentado a un ordenador extranjero han tenido el mismo problema: ¿Cómo puedo evitar que el receptor crea que tengo varios esfínteres fecales cuando en realidad lo que pretendo es expresar mi edad? Pues bien, he aquí un tratado elemental para evitar ese malentendido, así como otros muchos derivados de la falta de eñes, tildes, interrogaciones, exclamaciones y diéresis en teclados extranjeros:

WINDOWS
– Tilde: Alt Gr + vocal (alternativamente, Ctrl + Alt + vocal)
– ñ: Alt + 164 en el teclado numérico

Además:
– Ñ: Alt + 165
– ¡: Alt + 173
– ¿: Alt + 168
– ü: Alt + 129
– Ü: Alt + 154

Ya sé que aprenderse todos esos numerajos es un rollo patatero, pero en realidad con el 164 de la eñe minúscula basta, ya que el resto no se usan ni tres veces al año. Y para esas veces no les cuesta nada volver a visitar esta página!
* Nota para portátiles: Para activar el teclado numérico (que en los portátiles está escondido entre las teclas de la derecha del teclado) hay que presionar la tecla Fn. Así, para conseguir la Ñ combinaremos Fn + Alt + 165, y con las demás igual. Esto no siempre es efectivo, porque dependiendo del programa que estemos usando pudiera ser que llamemos a otra función distinta. En ese caso:
* Alternativamente podemos cambiar la configuración del teclado, para ello tenemos que abrir la configuración de idioma pinchando en “Start => Contol panel => Regional and Language settings” y seleccionar España o el país que queramos. Después, es cada ventana en la que vayamos a escribir hay que pinchar abajo a la derecha, donde dice “EN”, y seleccionar “español”. Ahora el teclado será español, por lo que hay que andarse con ojo porque las teclas no corresponderán con lo que dicen, pero podremos lograr la Ñ con la tecla del punto y coma, al lado de la L.

MAC
– Tilde: Option + E, y luego la vocal
– Ñ: Option + N, y N otra vez
– ¡: Option + 1 (o la tecla donde esté el !)
– ¿: No hay método rápido. Hay que abrir el “Character Palette” pinchando en la banderita de país de arriba a la derecha y luego “Show Character Palette”.

UBUNTU
En el panel superior, vayan a
System > Preferences > Keyboard > Layouts > Layout Options > Composite Key Position.
Ahí elijan la tecla “compuesta”, por ejemplo Alt Gr. Luego simplemente escriban combinaciones de tres teclas

, ‘ , a = á 
, ~ , n = ñ 
, ” , u = ü 
, ? , ? = ¿ 
, c , o = © 
, e , + + = €

Callbacks in C

Function Pointers and Callbacks in C 

By Dibyendu Roy on February 28, 2012 in CodingDevelopers ·

Function pointers are among the most powerful tools in C, but are a bit of a pain during the initial stages of learning. This article demonstrates the basics of function pointers, and how to use them to implement function callbacks in C. C++ takes a slightly different route for callbacks, which is another journey altogether.

access the user interface from multiple threads

By 28 Jun 2012

Using Windows.Forms gets really ugly when you need to access the user interface from multiple threads. IMHO, this is an example of leaky abstraction.

When you run a program with this UI threading issue from within Visual Studio, it will always throw an exception. The same program running as a standalone EXE may not throw the exception. That is to say, the development environment is stricter than the .NET framework.

SmartDraw Software

On Sat, Jul 21, 2012 at 12:20 AM, SmartDraw Software <donotreply@smartdraw.com> wrote:

SmartDraw

Develop a Strategic Plan in One Hour

If you’ve been putting off developing a written strategic plan for your business, don’t worry. You aren’t alone. According to one survey, about 90% of businesses have no strategic plan.

So, do you need one?

Yes, if you want to greatly increase your chances of success. Highly successful enterprises not only have a strategic plan, but they review and update it on a regular basis and follow it religiously.

Is it different from a business plan?

Yes, a strategic plan answers the question why while a business plan is a blueprint forhow. It is a big-picture, forward-thinking approach to a company’s reason for being.

What do you mean, 'we never got around to developing a strategic plan'? Copyright by The Cartoon Bank
“What do you mean, ‘we never got around to developing a strategic plan’?”
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It needs to address very specific questions:

  • What is our company’s vision?
  • What is our mission?
  • Who are our customers and what exactly do they want to buy?
  • Who are our competitors and how do we stack up against them?
  • What are the agents of change that will affect our customers and our competitors in the future?
  • Are we able to meet our customers’ needs today? Are we prepared for future change?
  • What are we best at doing?
  • Is it consistent with our mission?
  • Is everything we do aligned with our vision?

I know my business needs a Strategic Plan, but who has the time to do it?

As with anything worthwhile, a good strategic plan does take time. But most of what goes into a strategic plan are things you already know. The main thing is to get the process started.

Because you’re busy, you need a strategic plan format that is efficient, flexible and interactive. Strategic planning is an ongoing process, so the format must allow for information to be captured, shared, and updated in real time.

The One-Hour Strategic Plan

To get a very basic strategic plan developed within a sixty-minute timeframe, you need to be prepared to maximize the time allotted. For the best results, take the following steps in advance:

  1. Make sure that the key people who guide your company’s direction are present. If your organization comprises only you or a couple of business partners, you might want to invite one or more people whose business acumen you respect to join.
  2. Outline your meeting and share your agenda with all participants in advance. Let them know you’ll be seeking their input and ask them to be ready to contribute.
  3. Use a conference room with a projector so you can build your strategic planning document in real time. If attendees are remote, use an online meeting platform such as WebEx® or GoToMeeting®.
  4. Watch your time and stick with your agenda. Avoid getting into too much detail – limit this meeting to big-picture thinking. Details can be added later.

Begin with a Written Agenda

We’ve created an agenda for our meeting using a SmartDraw mind map, shown below. The five major topics of discussion are indicated and we’ve set a time limit for each one. This agenda will be emailed to each attendee in advance of the meeting and will be ready on our projector when they arrive.

SmartDraw has the automation and ease of use to allow your entire team to quickly create ALL of the visuals required for smart and effective strategic planning.

Vision and Mission

Your company may already have vision and mission statements. If so, you should evaluate them to make sure they are still appropriate and make changes as necessary.

These are very important components and may require more than 15 minutes of discussion. But keep to your purpose–to create a basic strategic plan in an hour. You can always go back later and make additions or changes to it.

Goals

The next major area is discussion of goals. Because of our self-imposed time limit, we have allocated only 10 minutes for discussion of goals. This demands that the discussion be kept to only the most important of our company’s goals. For Acme Printing, three major goals were indentified, one of which has three subcategories.

As shown below, we are transforming our agenda document into a strategic plan. We have now added our major goals along with vision and mission statements.

SWOT Analysis

To have an effective strategic plan, it’s important to be brutally honest about your company and its competitive environment. Only through a realistic assessment of these areas can you develop a valid plan for your organization’s future.

In performing this analysis, you may indentify areas of weakness that need to be either improved or eliminated. Perhaps your company has unique strengths that are not being fully utilized. Shifting conditions in the economy or your specific industry may be revealing opportunities you should pursue or threats that need to be hit head on or avoided entirely.

As we work through our SWOT analysis we continue building our mind map in real time and now have a visual that looks like this.

Final Step: Formulate a Strategy

We now have the basic framework needed to move into the final phase of the strategy plan. For Acme Printing, this will involve outlining an operating plan. Because the operating plan includes a number of items, we linked it to a new visual, shown below.

Thanks to the power of SmartDraw, we have created the basic framework of a strategic plan for Acme Printing during the course of a one-hour meeting.

You’ll note that the visuals created are very easy to read and understand. The information flows from left to right and from top to bottom, just as we are trained to read.

Using visuals for communicating information is as much as six times more effective than using words alone. So not only are these visuals easy to create and read, they also offer your audience a considerably higher rate of comprehension.

While these are reasons enough to use SmartDraw to help you develop your strategic plan, we’ve only scratched the surface of what a great visual processor can to for your company.

Implementation and Progress Tracking

The mind map above showing your operating plan can be converted into a project chart simply by changing the view. Clicking this icon allows you to turn your strategic plan into a working document showing timelines and also allowing tasks to be assigned to individuals.

In the project view, you can form a clear plan with dates and responsibilities.

This visual operating plan document serves a dual purpose:

  1. The mind map view clearly shows the relationship of near term objectives to strategic goals and is a very effective way of communicating the essence of the strategy to the entire company.
  2. The project view allows management to track and manage the work being done to implement the plan.

Not only have you created a strategic plan, but you now have transformed it into a working plan with tangible tasks, assignments and deadlines.

A Roadmap to Success – in One Hour

Unfortunately, too many business people are overwhelmed by the seemingly complex nature of the strategic planning process. The bottom line is twofold: get started and keep it simple. An hour-long strategic planning meeting, capturing information in real time, allows you to build the framework your business needs to succeed. The best way to do that is with visual strategic planning using SmartDraw.

Why SmartDraw?

One-Click Microsoft Office® Integration

Insert visuals in Word®, Excel®, and PowerPoint® documents with one click. SmartDraw is also SharePoint® enabled and imports Visio® files.

Automatic Formatting

Click simple commands and SmartDraw builds your visual for you, automatically. Add or remove a shape and SmartDraw realigns and arranges all the elements so that everything looks great. You don’t need to be able to draw to use SmartDraw.

Quick-Start Templates

Dozens of professionally-designed strategic planning examples make you instantly productive. Simply choose the applicable template and customize it to suit your needs.

Get Started Now

Visual strategic planning for your company’s success is only a click away. Discover for yourself the powerful benefits of SmartDraw. Buy SmartDraw now and save $100!

Now that you’re part of the SmartDraw community we invite you to keep in touch with us on your favorite social networks.

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White Paper

To read more about how to do strategic planning with SmartDraw,download this white paper .

Watch Video
To watch a video showing how to do a SWOT diagram for strategic planning with SmartDraw,
click here.
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