Because it’s Friday: The Preston Passion

This year is a big year in Preston (where I live), it’s Guild year, a tradition that dates back to 1179 and occurs every 20 years.

There are all sorts of events that happen throughout a Guild year, but this year has something new and that’s a Passion Play to mark Good Friday and the Easter Weekend. Hundreds of people from across the town have been practicing performances and songs for weeks. What’s more the play will be going out on BBC1 at 12:00 on Friday:

Fern Britton presents a ground-breaking live event marking Good Friday with a contemporary and ambitious exploration of the Passion story. A unique combination of spectacular mass participation performance and three original recorded dramas (starring Samantha Bond, Tom Ellis, Christine Bottomley, Pooky Quesnel, Ronald Pickup and Paul Barber) in moving stories based in Preston past and present, drawing on the enduring universal themes of the story of Christ’s condemnation and crucifixion. Traditional Holy Week choral music also combines with a modern day celebration of Easter as Heather Small sings live, marking the historic Preston Guild festivities.

bbc.co.uk

Because it’s Friday: Funny (scary) 999 Calls

This post is the 999th I’ve posted on this blog and I thought I would highlight some of the people that our emergency services have to deal with when they dial 999.

(For those of you in other countries 999 is the number of the emergency services in the UK)

These people are both scary and funny. It’s hard to know if any of them are prank calls, but most of them sound like people who are genuinely confused about the purpose of the emergency services:

Funny emergency police calls

The video is from 2008, but I’m sure that things haven’t changed very much since then.

Snowman Theft
Ice cream with a fly in it

Because it’s Friday: Flying like a bird

We already have all sorts of ways of flying, but I think that many of us would still love to be able to fly like a bird – with wings.

Well a team of engineers have achieved it this week:

Flying like a bird

If you want to understand what he says at the end there are subtitles available, but I suspect that you will pick up the gist of what he is trying to say without them.

From Wired:

Smeets got the idea from sketches of a futuristic flying bicycle drawn by his grandfather, who spent much of his life designing the contraption but never actually built it.

When Smeets began studying engineering at Coventry University in England, he realized the physics of a flying bicycle just didn’t pan out. Instead, he drew inspiration from Leonardo da Vinci’s wing drawings to build his flying machine. Along with neuromechanics expert Bert Otten, Smeets brought his design into reality

The design is based on mechanics used in robotic prosthetics. The idea is to give his muscles extra strength so they can carry his body weight during the flight.

Because it’s Friday: British landmarks made out of Jaffa Cakes

Not sure what to say about this one. The title tells you all you need to know:

Nibbled Jaffa Cakes of Britain from Dominic Wilcox on Vimeo.

Hunting Elevator
3 star elevator

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Disco Elevator

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Rat Elevator

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Morning Elevator

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Tahitian Elevator

My personal favourite is the disco one, I think, although I quite like Everest too.

Because it’s Friday: OLED Audi

As a child I thought that Knight Rider’s KITT was a fabulous car, so this concept from Audi looks terrific:

Audi visions OLED Technology

From EuroCar News:

“This homogeneous visual effect would not be possible with today’s LEDs,”Berlitz explains. “These are individual points of light that need additional optical devices – reflectors, optical conductors or scatter optics. OLED surfaces are themselves the source of light, and the thin plates also look attractive. They weigh little, light up extremely fast, develop only a small amount of heat, last for several tens of thousand hours and don’t consume any more energy than conventional light-emitting diodes. OLEDs suit Audi perfectly because they combine high-end technology, maximum precision and super design!”

Because it’s Friday: Why videos go viral

Kevin Allocca has a job that I’m sure would be a dream job for many young people, it requires him to spend his life watching videos on YouTube where his is the trends manager.

"Any one of you can be famous on the Internet by next Saturday"

Kevin Allocca: Why videos go viral

The first video that Kevin highlights is this one, and if you want something to make you smile in a morning this is all of it:

Yosemitebear Mountain Giant Double Rainbow 1-8-10

Because it's Friday: Why videos go viral

Kevin Allocca has a job that I’m sure would be a dream job for many young people, it requires him to spend his life watching videos on YouTube where his is the trends manager.

"Any one of you can be famous on the Internet by next Saturday"

Kevin Allocca: Why videos go viral

The first video that Kevin highlights is this one, and if you want something to make you smile in a morning this is all of it:

Yosemitebear Mountain Giant Double Rainbow 1-8-10

Because it's Friday: Massive Rope Swing

Following on from last week, the theme this week is again screaming.

One of the things we used to love doing as kids was to find a tree with a good overhang and erect a rope swing. If the tree was over water then things were even better.

This rope swing is on a completely different level:

World’s Largest Rope Swing

There’s also a making video which is also quite good fun:

Behind the Scenes – World’s Largest Rope Swing

Via Colossal

Northumberland – Half Term Break

Last week was half-term for us and we spent it in Northumberland. The weather was lovely considering it is February, not too cold and no rain.

The photos are up on Flickr, and here’s a slideshow for you:

http://www.flickr.com/apps/slideshow/show.swf?v=109615

Because it’s Friday: OK Go – Needing/Getting

I love fancy music videos and this one is fabulous:

OK Go – Needing/Getting – Official Video

Trust and Knowledge Networks

One of the things that I’m known to say is this: "The informal organisation is much stronger than the formal one".

Beverley WestwoodSometimes when I say this people nod wholeheartedly, but others look puzzled. The ones who look puzzled are normally near the bottom of the formal organisation, people further up the organisation seem to understand this implicitly. Karen Stephenson (an expert in this area) quotes a Four Star General as saying "I can lead men and women into battle but I’m a prisoner of war in my own organisation" and I think that many senior people in organisations feel the same way.

Karen codifies these informal organisation structures as knowledge networks and trust networks. She then goes on to classify the different types of network:

Six Varieties of Knowledge Networks

In any culture, says Karen Stephenson, there are at least six core layers of knowledge, each with its own informal network of people exchanging conversation. Everybody moves in all the networks, but different people play different roles in each; a hub in one may be a gatekeeper in another. The questions listed here are not the precise questions used in surveys. These vary on the basis of the needs of each workplace and other research considerations (“Don’t try this at home,” says Professor Stephenson), but they show the basic building blocks of an organization’s cultural makeup.

1. The Work Network. (With whom do you exchange information as part of your daily work routines?) The everyday contacts of routinized operations represent the habitual, mundane “resting pulse” of a culture. “The functions and dysfunctions; the favors and flaws always become evident here,” says Professor Stephenson.

2. The Social Network. (With whom do you “check in,” inside and outside the office, to find out what is going on?) This is important primarily as an indicator of the trust within a culture. Healthy organizations are those whose numbers fall within a normative range, with enough social “tensile strength” to withstand stress and uncertainty, but not so much that they are overdemanding of people’s personal time and invested social capital.

3. The Innovation Network. (With whom do you collaborate or kick around new ideas?) There is a guilelessness and childlike wonderment to conversations conducted in this network, as people talk openly about their perceptions, ideas, and experiments. For instance, “Why do we use four separate assembly lines where three would do?” Or, “Hey, let’s try it and see what happens!” Key people in this network take a dim view of tradition and may clash with the keepers of corporate lore and expertise, dismissing them as relics.

4. The Expert Knowledge Network. (To whom do you turn for expertise or advice?) Organizations have core networks whose key members hold the critical and established, yet tacit, knowledge of the enterprise. Like the Coca-Cola formula, this kind of knowledge is frequently kept secret. Key people in this network are often threatened by innovation; they’re likely to clash with innovators and think of them as “undisciplined.”

5. The Career Guidance or Strategic Network. (Whom do you go to for advice about the future?) If people tend to rely on others in the same company for mentoring and career guidance, then that in itself indicates a high level of trust. This network often directly influences corporate strategy; decisions about careers and strategic moves, after all, are both focused on the future.

6. The Learning Network. (Whom do you work with to improve existing processes or methods?) Key people in this network may end up as bridges between hubs in the expert and innovation networks, translating between the old guard and the new. Since most people are afraid of genuine change, this network tends to lie dormant until the change awakens a renewed sense of trust. “It takes a tough kind of love,” says Professor Stephenson, “to entrust people to tell you what they know about your established habits, rules, and practices.”

From Karen Stephenson’s Quantum Theory of Trust

There’s a PDF of this report available here

She also states that 80% of the knowledge in the organisation resides in these knowledge networks. That’s a powerful message for people who spend all of there time driving organisation change through the organisation hierarchy. It’s also a powerful message for those of us who live inside the networks and ignore their effect upon us and our influence over them.

If you prefer to watch there are a number of videos here.