My Dad and I ...
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sun, 06/15/2008 - 08:57It's Father's Day, so I'm mostly taking the day off.
Instead, I'm putting up this picture that Fiona made for me as part of a Father's Day present, a book entitled 'My Dad and I...'
Happy Father's Day everyone.
Flags, Witches, Islands and Other Stuff in the Family Tree
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sat, 06/14/2008 - 07:20Flag Day, 1977. It was a strange day in a strange year for me. A few weeks before my eighteenth birthday, my last grandparent died.
Being seventeen was a challenge. My parents were getting a divorce. Life around home was rough. By the end or my junior year of high school, I had already racked up enough credits to graduate, so I skipped my senior year and went off to college early. The way my high school handled it, I needed to complete my freshman year of college and then return to graduate with the people who had been my classmates for so many years.
My younger sister hated me for leaving. It was pretty rough on her as well. I told her that if you are sitting on a block of ice and managing to melt the ice, then maybe it is worth it to stick around, but if all your doing is freezing your ass off, then it is probably time to leave. I felt I was freezing my ass off, and not really doing anyone any good.
During my freshman year at college, I received a letter from my mother. A girl that I had been interested in, in my unsophisticated geeky sort of way had disappeared. This was in the days before instant communications of email, and our family had always only used the telephone for emergencies. It never occurred to my mother that this might be an emergency to me. I had kept my romantic interests to myself and I don’t think my mother knew how attached I was to the missing girl, or what such a disappearance would do to the addled brain of a bright, messed up teenager.
A month later, I received another letter from my mother. They had found Rocky’s body in a ravine a few towns away from where I had grown up. My mother included newspaper clippings of the funeral. College was a ten hour drive away, so there was no way that I could have made it to the funeral anyway, but I was hurt that I didn’t get a chance to say my final goodbyes with my classmates.
Then, at the end of the school year, I did receive a phone call from my mother. Her father, who had been fighting Parkinson’s disease for many years finally died at the end of May. The school year was over, so I scrounged around to find a ride to his funeral. I think it was first time being a pallbearer.
Somewhere during this time period, I attended my high school graduation, which was a very awkward affair. I had been gone for all of my senior year. I didn’t really know all my classmates that well any more, and I had begun the changes that college brings.
So, Flag Day, 1977. My mother was at my aunt’s house. She was helping them deal with the aftermath of my grandfather’s death and care for my grandmother who had been quite ill for a long time as well.
The phone rang. I don’t remember exactly who answered the phone, I think it was me, or who said it, I think it was my eldest brother, but we were all there and we all knew what the phone call was. As I mentioned earlier, I grew up in a family that only used the phone for emergencies. We knew my grandmother was very sick, so someone said, “Grandma died”, before the phone was answered.
Sure enough, it was my grief stricken mother, letting us know that Grammy had died. On top of all the other losses in my mother’s life, she was now an orphan. She hadn’t been able to talk over her problems with her parents much during their final years, but now, it was final and she wouldn’t be able to go them for comfort ever again, the way she had when she was younger.
My father’s parents died before I was born, and being next to the youngest child of the youngest child of my grandparents, being from a family that didn’t travel much and rarely got together with my grandparents, this loss of connection with a previous generation was much more detached than what it was like for my wife when the last of her grandparents died. Kim’s grandparents lived in the next town over, and she regularly went to their house to swim, to eat, or just to hang out with her extended family.
And so it is Flag Day 2008. For some reason, my grandmother came to mind last night. Over the years, I’ve been interested in genealogy and have built up a good database about my ancestors, including the dates of their births, deaths, and marriages. Being the fact checking blogger that I am, I wanted to check the details, make sure that I remembered things right. Yes, the database confirmed that Grammy died on June 14, 1977.
My ancestors were early settlers of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. This means that there is a lot of genealogical data about them, and many of them have been traced back to their first arrival in America in the early 1600s. My grandmother was of the Eastman line, a line traced back nicely to Roger Eastman, and early settler about how much work has been done. He arrived in America on “Confidence” in 1638. Roger is my 8th Great Grandfather. His grandson, Captain Ebenezer Eastman married Sarah Peaslee. Sarah’s brother John married Mary Martin. Mary Martin was the granddaughter of Susannah (North) Martin, who was executed in Salem Massachusetts in 1692 on the charge of witchcraft. Somewhere else in the Eastman family tree is Daniel Webster.
Sarah Peaslee’s mother was Ruth Barnard whose great grandfather was Thomas Barnard. Thomas was one of the original purchasers of Nantucket in 1659, although apparently Thomas never visited the island.
So, I have spent the hours before Flag Day 2008 learning a little more about my family history, and through it the history of our country. There are witches and islands in our family tree, and many other great stories as well, yet most importantly, all the stories from today, from thirty-one years ago and from three hundred and fifty years ago make up the fabric of our lives, a rich tapestry with various rips and stains.
Poetic Justice
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Fri, 06/13/2008 - 21:04During my time covering the Avery Doninger case, I’ve often pondered better ways of this being handled. Avery Doninger is the high school student who was barred from running for class office after she wrote a blog post at home critical of the school administration, using the word Douchebag and encouraging parents to call the school, when the school administration cancelled, or if you want to parse words the administration’s way, postponed yet again, a battle of the bands known as JamFest.
I don’t know the details of why Jamfest was repeatedly cancelled and rescheduled, but it seems that there should have been a better process. I do know that Avery could have used better language when she encouraged the citizens of the town to get engaged in the issue, and I believe that Avery has learned that herself. I believe that the school administration could have made much better choices in how to take the incident and turn it into a teachable moment instead of a Federal lawsuit.
Now, Principal Karissa Niehoff is being punished for errors that she has made. On May 31st, Principal Niehoff sent an email to Mike Morris concerning details of the case. The email appears to have violated policies of the Board of Education and the Professional Code of Conduct of the State of Connecticut.for School Administrators. As a result, Ms. Niehoff has been asked to write a formal letter of apology to the Avery and her family, has been placed on administrative leave without pay for two days, and has been asked to attend a workshop on the Family Educational Right and Privacy Act. In addition, Ms. Niehoff will be asked to develop at least one goal for the 2008-2009 school year that will show her understanding of the seriousness of this. Perhaps she should start a blog about this and post ideas on how school administrators can better address these issues in a digital age online. Others have suggested that poetic justice would call for her not being allowed to speak at this year’s graduation ceremony.
I applaud the new Superintendent, Alan Beitman, in his efforts to take the situation and make it an educational experience for all involved. I also appreciate the difficulties that a case like this presents. It is difficult to be constrained by advice from lawyers as well as professional responsibility from speaking out when you feel that only the other side is being heard. Yet my interest in the Doninger case has brought me in touch with representatives of other school districts. I have been impressed with the professionalism with which other school administrators address complicated situations, situations much more complicated than the Doninger case.
The age of instant, persistent searchable communications places many new challenges that Ms. Doninger, Ms Niehoff and all of us need to think long and hard about. My interactions with Ms. Doninger leads me to believe that she has learned much about our rights and responsibilities in a digital age. Let us hope that Ms. Niehoff will have similar learning opportunities and will be able to make good use of them.
Recent ma.noglia bookmarks
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Fri, 06/13/2008 - 03:00Here are pages I've recently bookmarked with ma.gnolia:
Half In Ten: From Poverty to Prosperity
The real story behind Fox's "Obama Baby Mama" : Michelle Malkin is the racist's teflon | culturekitchen
High points and Low points of the Technology Management Conference, Day 2
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Thu, 06/12/2008 - 10:38One of the bigger disappointments of the Technology Management Conference was Don Tapscott’s keynote speech Wednesday morning. Tapscott is co-author of Wikinomics: How Mass Collaboration Changes Everything. I really looked forward to hearing some profound reflections on how Wikinomics relates to the financial services industry. Unfortunately, the session was scheduled to start at 8 AM, and because of a collection of transportation issues, I just could not make it into New York from New Haven in time to hear what Mr. Tapscott had to say. I hope he did say something profound and enlightening and that others will write about it.
The most exciting high point of the show was talking with Michael Warner, CEO and Founder of Quantum 4D. Quantum 4D provides a data visualization tool using 3D models, that shift as a time series is played through it, dependent on the perspective of the viewer. It is still in an early stage and there were lots of things that I wish it had. For example, you load data into Quantum 4D in batches, instead of Quantum 4D connecting up to real time data feeds. Their presentation layer looks good, and they talk about the ability of users to collaborate in the three dimensional space that the data creates. We talked about taking the presentation object and incorporating it into other systems. Being the Second Life fan that I am, I suggested finding ways of presenting their model in Second Life so people could collaborate in a virtual world to work with the data. There was some resistance to this idea due to some of the bad press that Second Life has received.
We talked about using QWAQ as a collaboration tools and about looking at integration with other collaboration tools. We talked about pricing models and about different companies creating their own data spaces that they could share on a free or subscription basis. This was definitely the hottest software I saw there. My sense is that it is something that only innovators and visionaries are likely to get right now, and the challenge will be to see how it develops, scales, gets documented, builds its community, and on and on, before it becomes the tool of choice by early adopters and the early majority.
After seeing such an interesting and compelling presentation, I was wondering what the Open Source Update panel had to say. The panel was made up of luminaries, Roger Burkhardt, CEO and President of Ingres, Randy Hergett, director of engineering for Open Source at Hewlett-Packard, Roger Levy, SVP and General Manager of Open Platform Solutions for Novell, Marcus Rex, CTO of The Linux Foundation, and Michael Tiemann, VP of Open Source Affairs at Red Hat. Unfortunately, it was too much like so many other panels, where the moderator asked lots of questions and didn’t really provide an opportunity to let these people shine. I left the panel without having heard anything new or interesting.
The final highpoint was the marketing effort of FTEN. They describe themselves as “an independent non-broker dealer application service provider (ASP) that offers these sophisticated solutions to Clearing Firms, Broker Dealers, Prime Brokers, Hedge Funds and Proprietary Traders.” They boast about their access, speed and control. Their swag was little stuffed pig toys with wings. They had women dressed as pigs with wings at their booth and they even gave away helium balloons to members of the press to try and get reporters to their booth. I didn’t find anything particularly exciting or innovative about their platform, but I do have to compliment them as having what seemed to be the most sought after and talked about swag.
Today is the final day of the Technology Management Conference. I’m working up in Connecticut today and won’t make it in. However, I was glad about what I did get to see, as well as the chance to connect with many old friends at the show and look forward to next year’s SIFMA Technology and Management Conference and Exhibition.