by cameron | Oct 12, 2006 | Podcast, Uncategorized
Miriam needs a Productivity Buddy to help her stay on track with her GTD weekly review. Des and I came up with the idea of the Productivity Buddy ™ system while recording our Productivity podcast last month. Basically you buddy up with someone and make sure you keep each other on track with your weekly reviews. I’ve been working with Michael Specht as my buddy for the last few weeks and it’s working great. Michael calls me each Monday morning about 9.30 after he’s done his weekly review. That motivates him to do it and reminds me to do mine. We’re also in each other’s Skype list and can ping each other during the week to touch base on how we are tracking. It’s like having someone to go to the gym with every morning or having a "sponsor" in AA.
by cameron | Oct 11, 2006 | Uncategorized
Anyone know how to make a GPRS connection from an XDAii persistent? Mine hangs up after about 60 seconds of non-usage and it’s as annoying as hell. I connect to Gmail and by the time I’ve read one email the thing disconnects and I need to wait another 30 seconds for it to re-connect. I’ve gone through the settings and I can’t figure out anyway to change it. BTW I’m running Windows Mobile 2003 second edition. Huh… I thought I upgraded to 2005. Weird.
by cameron | Oct 11, 2006 | Uncategorized
The nice folks at Apple have set up a "Featured Provider Page" for TPN in iTunes. Check it out. I think it looks sweeeeet.
by cameron | Oct 10, 2006 | Melbourne, Podcast, Uncategorized
Thanks to everyone out there who remembered by birthday today and sent me emails, IMs, called me, etc. It was quite overwhelming. Who the hell ARE all you people anyway? I got happy birthday emails from people I don’t even know. That’s weird. Especially when celebrating birthdays is something you try to avoid. Anyway, I appreciate it.
36…. when I moved from Bundaberg to Melbourne in January 1988, age 17, with a couple of hundred bucks I’d saved up from picking rockmelons over the summer on my girlfriend’s father’s farm, I promised myself I’d be a millionaire by age 25. The plan was – spend three years working out how the world works, then five years to execute "the plan". I had a high school education and was incredibly naive. I remember, after a week in Melbourne, wondering where you bought coat hangers from. I did my weekly shopping at the local 7 Eleven because I thought it was a supermarket. I lived on bread and tomato sauce for a week because I had no money.
Anyway, I didn’t hit the millionaire at 25 goal. At 25 I think I was making about $40,000 a year making corporate videos. So I reset the goal to 30. When I was 27 I landed a job at Microsoft when their share price was climbing. My hiring manager told me I’d be a millionaire in 4 years.
When I was 29 I started my first internet business – it was called Golflounge and we were going to create an online system for booking a round of golf on every golf course in Australia. We even raised $3 million on the back of a napkin. This was about… March 2000. Then Ballmer busted up Bubble 1.0 and we said "hmmm no thanks" to the money. I turned 30 six months later. I was working at Microsoft, making six figure income, traveling around the world, and miserable as hell. Oh and their share price was in a nosedive it STILL hasn’t recovered from. I went into a three-year depression. And I reset the millionaire goal to 35.
One year I turned 35. I was running The Podcast Network. I missed my goal again but at least this time I felt like I was doing something with my life. Finally. And you know? The "millionaire" goal suddenly seemed less important. So I didn’t reset it for 40. My focus had changed from being rich to being useful. I realized along the way that what I wanted wasn’t to be a "millionaire" anyway. What I wanted, what that represented, was freedom. The freedom to do what I wanted, with people I liked, when and where I wanted, and not to have to answer to a boss I didn’t respect.
And you know what? That’s my life today. Okay – I’ll admit, I’d like to have more liquidity. That would take some of the pressure off. But it’s a minor point. I feel like my life has meaning today. I am doing something I totally believe in, it’s a lot of fun, and I’m working with a terrific bunch of people who I respect and admire and am proud to be associated with. I’ve got a loving and supportive family.
I remember being at DEMO in the US last year and hearing several people on stage say "Find something you love to do and success will follow." I’m starting to understand that.
Forget about owning the next GooTube. Forget about being a millionaire for a second. Find something you love to do and you are passionate about and you believe in. Hopefully it will also be something that can impact positively on people’s lives. Then go do it.
That’s my wish for you on my birthday.
by cameron | Oct 9, 2006 | Podcast
Tom Reynolds, the guy who was a Telstra blogger until his contract was unceremoniously terminated last week, oh-so-coincidentally 24 hours after he wrote a post slightly critical of Telstra, joins Rich and I on the show today.
We talk about
- Type 2 Diabetes, childhood obesity and fast food. I think it’s time we (eg me) did something about it.
- Must see TV – Entourage, Deadwood, new eps of Battlestar Galactica, Studio 60 on Sunset Strip, and Heroes
- Cam’s planning on moving to San Francisco to raise funds for TPN.
- And Tom and Rich blame me for their life problems. Bloody typical. No-one takes responsibility these days.
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