What Black History Month Means To Me

About 5 years ago I was facilitating a technical training
session for some young people in Newark, NJ. Some in the group had
strife with a few others over some petty differences. I stopped the course and
began to draw a similar graph to the one attached to this post. I didn’t fill
in the labels except the above years on the X axis and Null to High on the Y axis. I
then drew a thin red line that hugged the X axis for most of the length with a
slight uptick at the end.

 

I asked the young people what did the red line symbolize and
after talking together they volunteered to me that the line represented
slavery. After figuring out what slavery prevented we then labeled the graph as
attached. The point was made that the access that we currently have is
relatively recent compared to the centuries of having nothing. I asked them to compare
their current petty grievance to the centuries of privation and incalculable
pain suffered by our ancestors. I asked them what they thought our ancestors
would want us to do with the opportunity sitting in front of us. For the great sacrifices made what will we do?

That is what Black History Month means to me.

Associations & Information

An organization that may be beneficial to join is https://www.infragard.org/

It is a direct partnership between the FBI and
the private sector to protect the United States from threat. They share some
level of compartmentalized information with private citizens in exchange for
partnership and information collaboration from experts in the private sector
that cross many different disciplines. After undergoing a level of scrutiny with
a background check membership can be granted. I’ve been a member since the turn
of the century and have found it invaluable to my previous security practice.

http://www.privacyrights.org/data-breach provides updated views of regulatory and non-regulatory
breaches of privacy data by multiple organizations that allow you to get a view
of trends.

http://www.dhs.gov/government-emergency-telecommunications-service-gets
gives a private citizen access to the resilient POTS (plain old telephone
services) in cases when the normal access trunks are overloaded or otherwise unavailable. You could dial from a normal payphone during a disaster and be able to complete a call where someone else is unable.
If you can show that you can provide necessary service during a national
disaster you will be assigned an access number.

 

5-14-14 Archive.org is a great place to visit if you want to see how a website appeared many years ago. For instance www.cnn.com has active page URL click-throughs that date back to 2007.

Archive.org is also a great reasoning point for convincing children and adults that once something is on the Internet it will always be there so circumspect is the way go.

 

Theories in use vs. Espouse Theories

In 1974 Argyris and Schön pioneered research under
the theories of action in their
seminal publication “Theory in Practice. Increasing Professional Effectiveness”
that would define how people plan out and then take and review their actions.
Two contrasting theories of action are formed unknowingly in most people; theories-in-use
and espoused theories. There are theories that are implicit actions (theories-in-use)
of what we do inside of an organizational system and there are theories that
are verbalized (espoused) to represent what that given action will be. These
theories are applied by many well-known modern-day practitioners.

When a person is engaging her environment and
receives a query on what course of action she will take, the answer that she
will ordinarily access and verbalize is housed in her espoused theories. The
espouse theory is the one that forms her reality and belief system that she is
most closely aligned with to access a response between the two theories of
action. The actual activities that comprise the actions that she carries out
are housed in the theories-in-use. The two theories combine to present what are
known as theories of action. The challenge to the practitioner is to be aware
of the differences or gaps in their espoused theories vs. theories-in-use.
While gaps between the two theories are normal, understanding the distinctions
between the two is important to developmental awareness. Argyris’s “Inner Contradictions of Rigorous
Research” makes the case that congruence between the two theories creates
greater capability and work effectiveness.

 

(http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/the-daredevil-of-niagara-falls-110492884/?no-ist)

Imagine a close friend of yours is a tightrope
artist. The artist says that he is bored with doing the same old tight rope
trick and now wants to put a person in a wheelbarrow and walk across the distance
of two high-rise buildings. You access your espoused theories in response that
is tied to your inherent belief of how exciting this would be to see and you
let your friend know that it sounds like a wonderful idea. Your tightrope performing
friend then tells you that he is glad you feel this way because he wants to put
you in the wheelbarrow! Now you find that your espoused theories are not quite matched up to your theories-in-use
because if you are the only one that your friend will do the trick with then
the trick is not a wonderful idea. (The famous Charles Blondin experienced
something similar. See above.)

How does being aware of our own theories-in-use and espoused
theories create greater work effectiveness at work and in life? What are common incongruence
between theories in use and espoused theories in the workplace and in life?

 

What is Net Neutrality

Check out the 2 min video on Net neutrality.

Net neutrality explained, once & for all - CNN Video

The FCC has doubled down on net neutrality rules.

One element of net neutrality is connected to the concept of democratization
of services so that the large-scale companies cannot pay their way to better
Internet Bandwidth while the individual user suffers from throttled or reduced
bandwidth. This can potentially level the playing field for the individual Internet 
user by preventing large scale providers from throttling their bandwidth.

Vinton Cerf and Tim Berners-Lee (the inventors of the Internet) are
supporters of Net Neutrality.

Will the potential skewing of service differentiation make
service better for all? Does it help, harm, or have no effect on business or personal usage? What are your thoughts?

 

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