Tomorrow is my last presential exam of year 1

Posted June 29th, 2007

And then I will have only three projects left (two in group, one individual).

I am so looking forward being done…

runner-2.jpgIn the meantime, and quite off-topic, has any of you practiced or tried Chi Running? I’d like to hear comments if so. Achilles tendinitis is a recurring problem I get when running, and I am curious of whether improving my running form could help me there.

I got a very positive review about it, I’d love to get more opinions.


Avoid Spanish tapas Restaurant Viña in Paddington st, w1 near Marylebone High St

Posted June 23rd, 2007

Here goes a warning for all my foodie readers (and fellow bloggers, you know who you are!).

fake_stamp.pngAVOID Spanish tapas restaurant Viña in Paddington st, W1 (near Marylebone High St, location here). I just came from lunch there, and it’s been awful. I saw the restaurant getting ready to launch a couple of months ago, and I decided to give it a try today.

Item by item:

  • The bad: The tortilla was tasteless and came with tomato sauce (why!?), patatas bravas were moist and not krisp, chicken croquetas were extremely heavy.
  • The more or less: Chorizo with red wine and the breaded squid were ok, but nothing out of the ordinary.
  • The missing: The bread we ordered never made it to the table. The service was quite slow, in general.
  • The ultimate sin: The “diverse” mar & montaña included both jamón, chesee, olives and boquerones (anchovies in vinegar). Guess what, everything came in the same big plate, and the boquerones were on top of everything, driping vinegar like there is no tomorrow. The outcome: The cheese, the olives and the jamón tasted all like vinegar. It was horrible! (The Jamón could have been prosciutto, but due to the vinegar… I couldn’t tell!)

Final outcome: Arriving at 1h30pm, two starving spaniards (yours truly and Ms. R) with a good appetite for Spanish food (and a first hand understanding of the limitations in cooking abroad) couldn’t finish a single tapa (all horrible), left in less than one hour, and directly complained to the manager that the food did not deserve to be called Spanish.

My note: Avoid restaurant Viña, that is not Spanish food, and spend your time somewhere else.

PS:  I know this was a little bit of a rant, but I needed to get it off my chest. Now, if only I could get it off my stomach…


In the last week life has been hectic

Posted June 21st, 2007

Exams, projects, starting to work, farewells, parties, exams, projects, taking care of Raquel too, friends, talking to family in Barcelona, 36h mini holiday between school and Reuters,…

To regain some mental peace and control over my life, I NEED TO close some chapters (basically, close the 1st year academic chapters that are still open) so these do not interfere too much with the rest of my life. Three courses to go (Macroecon, Strategy 2, Advanced Marketing Strategy), and a lot of work to be put into these.

Wish me luck!

P.


Entrepreneurship and World journey

Posted June 12th, 2007

One of the amazing things of business school is the people you get surrounded by. Here is a fantastic example: Fredrik, a classmate of mine, (go stream D!) and his team in Sweden are working hard to launch JayCut, a Wiki-Youtube, where people can share their videos and edit them collectively.

Quite a neat application! The other day, I started playing with it and this is what I came up with:

Yes, that is me, dancing in different places à la Matt Harding. The cool thing is that the editing, cutting, titles and music is all done online. Isn’t it cool?

JayCut is still not open to everyone yet, but I believe they will start inviting more users very very soon. Stay tuned to JayCut and their collective editing!

PS: Here is the link to my video mix and to JayCut: JayCut – Mix: World journey


Facebook killed the blogging star

Posted June 11th, 2007

All of us (un)fortunate enough to grow up in the 1980s, remember a classic pop song that explained how TV clips killed radio music, or almost.

Now, something similar is continuosly always happening on the interweb.

The last one is that facebook killed the blogging star!

welcome_3.gif killed the logo100.gif star

As it was anticipated by Gartner 10 predictions for 2007
it seemed that “3. Blogging and community contributors will peak in the first half of 2007.” While I have no figures on number of interesting blogs being published, I do know that one of the fundamental needs that blogs served for (broadcasting easily what are you doing) is being fulfilled more effectively by facebook.

One of the limitations of any blog, this one for that matter, is the control of who reads what. Unless I convince all of my friends & family to sign up to a access controlled blog (highly unlikely), anything I post here can be read by any person.

If you have ever posted in a blog, you know that will inhibit you from posting things that you would normally want to share with your friends, or start writing in code:

The other day, I went to J partay, he was with Z, and both ended up at 6 am shouking to the sras, in our usual rendezvous place, right before Mr X showed up, in his usual, you know what I mean, right?

No, I don’t understand you. That was 100% gibberish! Well, now facebook allows you to do this, while you get all of your friends to sign up not just for you, but for others as well, you get control of who reads what, etc…

And people write more on facebook than on blogs, and more comments as well!

Blogs will keep open for business, as an open window to the world for wanna be writers (or MBAs, for that matter), or for other people looking to share their views with the world, the other fundamental need that blogs address, but I don’t see how they will ever get back to their previous glory…

PS: I know you want it,…


First days GTDing, a couple of metrics

Posted June 9th, 2007
GTD

It's been a week since I bought "Getting Things Done", following…

.a. how popular the book was in Silicon Valley (43 folders and similar)
.b. an email in the internal Portal of the school.
.c. a reference by Al Martine http://www.abigpond.com/blog/2007/05/28/getting-things-done

and coincidentally in time with the book acquisition and comment by RusGirl http://rusgirl.blogspot.com/2007/06/getting-things-done.html

So now that everybody is talking about it, it's my turn to discuss it. First, if you want to get an idea about how it works, definitely look at the previous posts. I am going to focus on the outcome and how I use it.

Warning: If you haven't read the book, this post might sound like gibberish to you.

I still have no final opinion on the system. First impression is good, it looks like a system with tons of common sense and practical experience implemented. I am giving it a serious go, because I truly believe I can benefit from it.

Plus starting up a business while doing a MBA and doing internship practices while having a life is quite challenging in terms of organization. That's my main motivation to try it: I am sure I could get better organized. And the book promises "stress free productivity!" How sexier can it sound?

== HOW I DO IT: ==

I use a simple, relatively low tech approach, similar to the one described at  http://www.43folders.com/2004/09/15/how-does-a-nerd-hack-gtd/

I use simple .txt files for most of my professional tasks. The only exceptions are the small paper notebook I carry with me to write down tasks and ideas (that later down I translate into paper) and a "physical next action" binder I have set up at home, for those physical items that become the reminder themselves (like the films to be processed or new batteries to buy).

Back to the text files, I have the basic lists in the system implemented:

# _@nextactions
# @inbox
# @waiting
# @someday
# Projects list
# Plus the Google calendar for my commitments.

== HOW AM I DOING? ==

Three days ago I collected a huge "inbox" of items that required my attention, and today I processed it, resulting in plenty of "next actions".

How do all these files look today after a lot of work?

# _@nextactions 117 lines of text (not all actions, there are some empty lines and context spacers)
# @inbox empty, as it should be after processing it. :D My email inbox is empty too. :D :D (double smile)
# @waiting One item only. I suspect there should be more, I need to get used to track more items here
# @someday 40 lines of text, a reasonable amount of things to eventually do in the future.
# Projects list Huge with 95 lines. That's what stresses me the most, the number of projects has multiplied. It should simplify slightly with finishing the 1st year, but the MBA is not the lion's share of my projects (Oops!) Need to streamline a little bit more, I believe.
# Plus the Google calendar for my commitments. (all the commitment, the hard landscape is there)

Now all the actions seem in place. Still, the system feels unnatural to me now, we'll see how it goes.

== Next developments: ==

* I need some extra work to put onto the projects, to gain better control and planning
* I want to explore better the filing system. Both the reference A-Z and the 43 folders for tickling.

I will keep you posted!


Pending: Join MBAmarket.com

Posted June 8th, 2007

Thanks to Nick, who send me a link to a very interesting new community:

MBAmarket.com - The premier online MBA Community
MBAmarket.com is a brand new online community for potential MBA students, current MBA students, and MBA alumni. Our goal is to bring the MBA community together and provide a marketplace for all members to benefit from.

I post the link because I think it can be interesting for some of my readers, and it is similar to one of my early initiatives in the Spanish sector of MBAs.

However, DISCLAIMER, I have not joined yet therefore I do not endorse it.

The end of the first year of the MBA is becoming a Grand Finale, very intense, with little time to join any extra community (facebook is demanding enough ;) ). But I thought it was worth posting the link, delivering the news early. Maybe others with more time want to join.

Please let me know how it goes, in case you join


My Volvo on Google Maps

Posted June 7th, 2007

I am astonished!

I just found my old Volvo, the one I drove in the USA, perfectly captured in the new “street view” application in Google Maps.

Here is the screen capture:

Picture 2.png

And here is the link to the walk online.

Of course that is where I lived in Stanford, and that proves that pictures were taken either 2005 or first half of 2006. Unbelievable! I was playing with the application and everything looked so familiar, because even my car was there!

Now I feel a little bit spied!


Processing 35mm photos, so old-fashioned!

Posted June 6th, 2007

Today I did something totally old-fashioned! I went to a shop to process two picture films! Yes, 35mm camera film. Unbelievable, I know. I felt like a Flintstone character :D

Here is the story: I had a couple of those relic films running around the house. One of these “to do items” that lay around the house but never get around doing. From the time when I actually had a 35mm camera, circa 2003!

So I went in, I got a receipt for my two camera rolls, completely ignorant of their content, waited for one hour, and got a CD with the results… What did those rolls contain?

Surprise, surprise! I got 2003 pictures of a picnic, the climbing of a small mountain, a family gathering in Barcelona, and my wife posing. Nothing unusual, but quite fun nevertheless! It was like a time capsule, only 4 years ago. I was pleasantly surprised that, after almost 4 years, the pictures still hold, with reasonable quality (the camera was not that great to start with!), after moving twice during these years.

Funny thing about technological innovations: They become the default after a while! Now, it seems unthinkable to wait to develop the images, or the need to go to a shop to get the satisfaction of viewing the images. Actually, I expect yesterday’s stream party to be already published and distributed on “the facebook”!

This is how technology changes the experience and the defaults! :o


the entrepreneurotic @ London Business School

Posted June 4th, 2007

Welcome to the second era of this blog! As of lately, I was posting less and less, because my life is getting more and more demanding, time-wise. This is mainly due to me starting up a business while learning at the MBA. And while I keep my own notes about the startup process separately, I had less and less stuff to share to you, my MBA reader.

While I am still fully involved with the MBA, lots of my bandwidth is allocated to the startup . That’s why I am rebranding my blog, in a double effort to communicate clearly what I do and to revive my own interest in writing here!

That’s why I will write about both subjects now: Entrepreneurship and the MBA.

And why entrepreneurotic? First, because it sounds fun, and second because it offers a glimpse to what being an entrepreneur feels like. According to the definition of neurosis:

Neurosis: Neurosis, also known as psychoneurosis or neurotic disorder, is a “catch all” term that refers to any mental imbalance that causes distress, but, unlike a psychosis or some personality disorders, does not prevent rational thought or an individual’s ability to function in daily life.

Certainly, there is a little bit of “mental imbalance” in wanting to learn at an MBA and set up a business (there are interesting sinergies though), distress is involved, but rational though is not impaired at all (or so my grades and daily functioning suggest).

:D And I have lots of fun doing it! :D

Off topic items:

  • Tomorrow is the stream party, to celebrate the 1st year together.
  • On Sunday, my study group will celebrate the 1st year. Our performance and relationships is a remarkable achievement of teamwork of all involved. Some groups have no interest whatsoever in celebrating, or seeing each other anymore, for that matter. Our performance and enjoyment of each other deserves a well earned celebration.
  • Admits WE: So fresh! So happy! So engaged! It was great to meet many of the admits. Moreover, many people read me!

Final thought: Last Friday was one of those perfect MBA day: Amazing lecture of Advanced Marketing Strategy, with an awesome speaker (best class speaker so far, clearly) and excellent opportunity to network with YPOers.

I came to the school for days like Friday :D


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