Thursday, March 27, 2014

Preparedness

When opportunity knocks, you have to be ready just to answer, but to apply tons of effort to making your chance happen.

When you get your shot don't wait on someone else to pull the wagon. If you wait on people to pull your wagon they will all stand and look at the wagon with you.

"Be the change you want to see."

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

Top 10 Dead-End Jobs On Their Way To Extinction


Credits:  

10 Years from NOW! This is a Probability!

Being a social media expert might be one of the coolest gigs going right now, but getting paid to post content on Twitter and Facebook is a dead-end career choice, according to a new study.
Job-hunting site Workopolis says social media experts won’t exist in 10 years time, alongside other careers such as taxi dispatcher, postal workers, retail cashiers and, perhaps of little surprise to many, video store clerks and print journalists.
“It’s a keen reminder that today’s job market changes rapidly,” says Tara Talbot, vice president of human resources at Workopolis.
While the decline in print journalists and video store clerks seems obvious, social media experts is more surprising given that the career is relatively new.
Today, social media experts are in demand because older workers that didn’t graduate from college or university with a smartphone stuck to their palm aren’t as comfortable with the technology, or its impact. That’s why they hire “experts” to do the work for them.
Workopolis says the career has limited shelf life because it will soon become part of everyone’s job.
“With this glut of savvy young online communicators looking for work, social media skills will just become expected communication competencies, like reading and writing, rather than unique areas of expertise,” Workopolis says in a new report. “This will end the need for social media experts.”
Taxi dispatchers are also predicted to become obsolete, as more people use their smartphone to call a cab directly, while the growing popularity of self-checkout services will also make retail cashiers less necessary.
The 10 jobs that won’t exist in 10 years include:
  • Social Media Expert
  • Taxi Dispatcher
  • Toll Booth Operator
  • Retail Cashier
  • Word Processor / Typist
  • Switchboard Operator
  • Photo Finisher
  • Postal Worker
  • Video Store Clerk
  • Print Journalist

Monday, February 3, 2014

7 Factors to Consider When Creating Your Vision


Something about staring at a snowstorm at the beginning of the year makes me contemplate my preferred future. 
Perhaps it's the new rush of opportunities that seem to kick in after January 10th or maybe just the hypnotic effect of powerful force of nature.

Either way, here I am by the fire evaluating my destiny.


 Some years it's hard to revise and align my thoughts around a clear vision. The lessons from the year past and the opportunities in front of me may not give me a readable glimpse of where I really want to go or what I am truly capable of. 
This year is different. My world is aligning. This column has grown followers substantially and my new radio show has launched.
The platform I started building six years ago is now big enough to generate its own opportunities and show me a very bright future, if I make the right decisions on the path ahead.
Whether you use a notebook or vision board, I believe the act of detailing your desired future into some sort of tangible document is key to keeping you on track to your preferred destiny. As I take advantage of my indoor time this winter, I will be considering several factors carefully and asking myself hard questions to create my powerful guide for the journey ahead. Below I am sharing the list I use to challenge my thinking, in case you want to do the same.


1. Specificity. 
So many visions are meaningless because they are blurry and vague. What exactly do you want? Wealth and riches is not specific.
Visualize it in detail. What colors, shapes, emotions are associated with this car, house, company, opportunity?
2. Honesty. 
When you say you want something, why do you want it? How does it fit in the landscape of your life? What about it is appealing?
Is it practical? Is it truly worth sacrificing time and resources? How will you actually feel when you get it?
3. Personality. 
Are the details of your vision coming from within you? Or do they form from outside pressure?
Are they things you want for yourself, or that others want/have wanted for you to do and have? Do they reflect your own core values? 
Do they represent the image that you choose to project?
4. Flexibility. 
Many struggle with the exercise of visioning because they know things change.
The purpose of articulating a vision is not to bind you to a path; rather it should help you decide which path to take when you come to a fork.
It exists to serve you, not the opposite. Does your vision have the openness to allow for change?
5. Ingenuity. 
Tangible items like cars and houses are nice, but they can become mundane and meaningless as well.
Are you being lazy in choosing your desires? Visioning is a creative process. Give it the mind expansion it deserves.
Are you stretching your mind to create a vision that is truly compelling?
6. Boldness. 
The whole point of visioning is to push past mediocrity and the daily ties that bind. Are you focusing on objectives that will challenge you and stretch you?
Are they worthy of your potential? Will they leave a lasting impact once achieved?
7. Compatibility.
 For most successful people, their preferred future is not one of isolation. Rather it is a celebration of those who shared your journey.
Who are the people who will guide you, teach you and support you at every milestone toward this vision?
 How will you benefit them and show them gratitude along the way?

Thursday, January 30, 2014

3D Printing: Make anything you want

This is Crazy, Cool and Awesome. Yes, it's TECHNOLOGY. 

Technology and jobs: Coming to an office near you

The effect of today’s technology on tomorrow’s jobs will be immense—and no country is ready for it


 Technology and Jobs
Technology and Your Job

INNOVATION, the elixir of progress, has always cost people their jobs. In the Industrial Revolution artisan weavers were swept aside by the mechanical loom. Over the past 30 years the digital revolution has displaced many of the mid-skill jobs that underpinned 20th-century middle-class life. Typists, ticket agents, bank tellers and many production-line jobs have been dispensed with, just as the weavers were.
For those, including this newspaper, who believe that technological progress has made the world a better place, such churn is a natural part of rising prosperity. Although innovation kills some jobs, it creates new and better ones, as a more productive society becomes richer and its wealthier inhabitants demand more goods and services. A hundred years ago one in three American workers was employed on a farm. Today less than 2% of them produce far more food. The millions freed from the land were not consigned to joblessness, but found better-paid work as the economy grew more sophisticated. Today the pool of secretaries has shrunk, but there are ever more computer programmers and web designers.

Remember Ironbridge
Optimism remains the right starting-point, but for workers the dislocating effects of technology may make themselves evident faster than its benefits (see article). Even if new jobs and wonderful products emerge, in the short term income gaps will widen, causing huge social dislocation and perhaps even changing politics. Technology’s impact will feel like a tornado, hitting the rich world first, but eventually sweeping through poorer countries too. No government is prepared for it.
Why be worried? It is partly just a matter of history repeating itself. In the early part of the Industrial Revolution the rewards of increasing productivity went disproportionately to capital; later on, labour reaped most of the benefits. The pattern today is similar. The prosperity unleashed by the digital revolution has gone overwhelmingly to the owners of capital and the highest-skilled workers. Over the past three decades, labour’s share of output has shrunk globally from 64% to 59%. Meanwhile, the share of income going to the top 1% in America has risen from around 9% in the 1970s to 22% today. Unemployment is at alarming levels in much of the rich world, and not just for cyclical reasons. In 2000, 65% of working-age Americans were in work; since then the proportion has fallen, during good years as well as bad, to the current level of 59%.
Worse, it seems likely that this wave of technological disruption to the job market has only just started. From driverless cars to clever household gadgets (see article), innovations that already exist could destroy swathes of jobs that have hitherto been untouched. The public sector is one obvious target: it has proved singularly resistant to tech-driven reinvention. But the step change in what computers can do will have a powerful effect on middle-class jobs in the private sector too.
Until now the jobs most vulnerable to machines were those that involved routine, repetitive tasks. But thanks to the exponential rise in processing power and the ubiquity of digitised information (“big data”), computers are increasingly able to perform complicated tasks more cheaply and effectively than people. Clever industrial robots can quickly “learn” a set of human actions. Services may be even more vulnerable. Computers can already detect intruders in a closed-circuit camera picture more reliably than a human can. By comparing reams of financial or biometric data, they can often diagnose fraud or illness more accurately than any number of accountants or doctors. One recent study by academics at Oxford University suggests that 47% of today’s jobs could be automated in the next two decades.
At the same time, the digital revolution is transforming the process of innovation itself, as our special report explains. Thanks to off-the-shelf code from the internet and platforms that host services (such as Amazon’s cloud computing), provide distribution (Apple’s app store) and offer marketing (Facebook), the number of digital startups has exploded. Just as computer-games designers invented a product that humanity never knew it needed but now cannot do without, so these firms will no doubt dream up new goods and services to employ millions. But for now they are singularly light on workers. When Instagram, a popular photo-sharing site, was sold to Facebook for about $1 billion in 2012, it had 30m customers and employed 13 people. Kodak, which filed for bankruptcy a few months earlier, employed 145,000 people in its heyday.
The problem is one of timing as much as anything. Google now employs 46,000 people. But it takes years for new industries to grow, whereas the disruption a startup causes to incumbents is felt sooner. Airbnb may turn homeowners with spare rooms into entrepreneurs, but it poses a direct threat to the lower end of the hotel business—a massive employer.
No time to be timid
If this analysis is halfway correct, the social effects will be huge. Many of the jobs most at risk are lower down the ladder (logistics, haulage), whereas the skills that are least vulnerable to automation (creativity, managerial expertise) tend to be higher up, so median wages are likely to remain stagnant for some time and income gaps are likely to widen.
Anger about rising inequality is bound to grow, but politicians will find it hard to address the problem. Shunning progress would be as futile now as the Luddites’ protests against mechanised looms were in the 1810s, because any country that tried to stop would be left behind by competitors eager to embrace new technology. The freedom to raise taxes on the rich to punitive levels will be similarly constrained by the mobility of capital and highly skilled labour.
The main way in which governments can help their people through this dislocation is through education systems. One of the reasons for the improvement in workers’ fortunes in the latter part of the Industrial Revolution was because schools were built to educate them—a dramatic change at the time. Now those schools themselves need to be changed, to foster the creativity that humans will need to set them apart from computers. There should be less rote-learning and more critical thinking. Technology itself will help, whether through MOOCs (massive open online courses) or even video games that simulate the skills needed for work.
The definition of “a state education” may also change. Far more money should be spent on pre-schooling, since the cognitive abilities and social skills that children learn in their first few years define much of their future potential. And adults will need continuous education. State education may well involve a year of study to be taken later in life, perhaps in stages.
Yet however well people are taught, their abilities will remain unequal, and in a world which is increasingly polarised economically, many will find their job prospects dimmed and wages squeezed. The best way of helping them is not, as many on the left seem to think, to push up minimum wages. Jacking up the floor too far would accelerate the shift from human workers to computers. Better to top up low wages with public money so that anyone who works has a reasonable income, through a bold expansion of the tax credits that countries such as America and Britain use.
Innovation has brought great benefits to humanity. Nobody in their right mind would want to return to the world of handloom weavers. But the benefits of technological progress are unevenly distributed, especially in the early stages of each new wave, and it is up to governments to spread them. In the 19th century it took the threat of revolution to bring about progressive reforms. Today’s governments would do well to start making the changes needed before their people get angry.
From the print edition: Leaders

Friday, January 24, 2014

EDMONTON

THINGS TO DO IN EDMONTON, ALBERTA

Reblog from travelalberta.com

 

Eskimos
Pro sports mania

Join the local fan frenzy at a live Oilers hockey game, or an Eskimos football game, or catch the best of bull riding and steer wrestling at the Canadian Finals Rodeo

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Retail therapy

West Edmonton Mall is the largest shopping centre in North America with 800+ shops and services, a waterpark, skating rink, marine park, hotel and the world’s biggest indoor amusement park. For eclectic shops and cafes, hit historic Old Strathcona or the 124th Street area


Golf until the cows come home – and then some

With 17 hours of daylight in high summer, you can golf in Edmonton long after the cows have gone to bed!


Paintings, plants and people

The triumphant architecture of the Art Gallery of Alberta is a masterpiece in itself, housing local and international exhibitions. Explore the unique collections of the Royal Alberta Museum. Travel back in time at historic Fort Edmonton Park, where many feature films set in the old west have been shot.

 

It’s a jungle in there
Escape winter chills in the tropical gardens of the Muttart Conservatory








Get outta town!
Less than an hour away, Elk Island National Park is a sanctuary of aspen parkland. Watch for the bison that roam the park. Camp in the summer and cross country ski here in winter. If you’re looking for a blast from the past, be sure to visit the Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village. Twenty-five minutes east of Edmonton.
You’re this close to more authentic Alberta experiences. Explore the towns and counties in Edmonton’s countryside.