Tag Archive for 2012

Complainers Are Bad for Your Brain

Complainers Are Bad for Your BrainMinda Zetlin recently asked in an Inc. article, Listening to Complainers Is Bad for Your Brain, Do you hate it when people complain? It turns out there’s a good reason. Trevor Blake, a serial entrepreneur and author of Three Simple Steps: A Map to Success in Business and Life says that listening to too much complaining is bad for your brain.

In the book, Mr. Blake describes how neuroscientists have learned to measure brain activity when faced with various stimuli, including a long gripe session. Mr. Blake writes’

The brain works more like a muscle than we thought … So if you’re pinned in a corner for too long listening to someone being negative, you’re more likely to behave that way as well.

Even worse, being exposed to too much complaining can actually make you dumb. Research shows that exposure to 30 minutes or more of negativity–including viewing such material on TV, actually peels away neurons in the brain’s hippocampus. “That’s the part of your brain you need for problem-solving,” he says. “Basically, it turns your brain to mush.

Mr. Blake explains if you’re running a company, don’t you need to hear about anything that may have gone wrong? ”

Train your brainThere’s a big difference between bringing your attention to something that’s awry and a complaint. “Typically, people who are complaining don’t want a solution; they just want you to join in the indignity of the whole thing. You can almost hear brains clink when six people get together and start saying, ‘Isn’t it terrible?’ This will damage your brain even if you’re just passively listening. And if you try to change their behavior, you’ll become the target of the complaint.

So, how do you defend yourself and your brain from all the negativity? Blake recommends the following tactics:

Brain defense tactics

Walk away1. Get some distance  You should look at complaining like smoking. a complainer is a smoker spewing out toxic fumes and you are the victim of their smoking. “The approach I’ve always taken with complaining is to think of it as the same as passive smoking.” Your brain will thank you if you get yourself away from the complainer if you can.

2. Ask the complainer to fix the problem If you can’t easily walk away, a second strategy the article recommends is to ask the complainer to fix the problem.

“Try to get the person who’s complaining to take responsibility for a solution,” Blake says. “I typically respond to a complaint with, ‘What are you going to do about it?'” Many complainers walk away huffily at that point because he hasn’t given them what they wanted, Blake reports. But some may actually try to solve the problem.

3. Shields up! When you’re trapped listening to Shields up!a complaint, you can use mental techniques to block out the griping and save your neurons. Blake favors one used by the late Spanish golfer Seve Ballesteros during a match against Jack Nicklaus–a match the crowd wanted Ballesteros to lose. “He was having difficulty handling the hostility of the crowd,” Blake says. “So he imagined a bell jar that no one could see descending from the sky to protect him.

A related strategy is to mentally retreat to your imagined favorite spot, someplace you’d go if you could wave a magic wand. “For me, it was a ribbon of beautiful white sugary sand that extended out in a horseshoe shape from a private island,” Blake says. “I would take myself to my private retreat while people were ranting and raving. I could smile at them and nod in all the right places and meanwhile take myself for a walk on my private beach.

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Having worked in retail a long time ago, you learn some of these behaviors when you have to deal with the public. I practiced a combination of shields up, and let the public blather on, and then moved on as quickly as possible. It is important to develop a coping mechanism because listening to complainers is bad for your brain.

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Election Day 2012

Election Day 2012

And I will!

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Michigan Reps Graded on Tech Issues

Michigan Reps Graded on Tech IssuesTechCrunch graded each member of the House of Representatives on tech issues. TechCrunch studied how closely their voting records align with what they call consensus interests of the technology industry. TechCrunch explains that after finding patterns in technology lobbying through public records, they determined where there was industry consensus on particular bills by surveying the most prominent technology lobbies, which collectively represent most of the industry. There was consensus on 3 issues: immigration, crowdfunding, and an open Internet (SOPA).

MichiganNone of Michigan’s Rep’s earned an A from the site. TechCrunch ranked some well-known Michigan politicians way down.

John Conyers, MI-14 (D) who has in Washington for 47 years now, earned a D for his sponsorship of SOPA, (Which I noted earlier). You tweet Conyers here and tell him to do better by tech.

John Dingell MI-15 (D) who has been a politician in DC for 58 years earned a grade of C. You can tweet Dingell here. OMG yes, he has a Twitter account, probably run by some staffer.

Hansen Clarke MI-13 and Gary Peters MI-9 received grades of B.

You check out all TechCrunch’s ratings here. Hows does your Representative rate for tech leadership?

Get out and VOTE !!

 

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Endeavour Ultimate Photobomb

Gizmodo brings us the ultimate photobomb. Two kids playing basketball were photobombed by NASA’sspace shuttle Endeavour. Endeavor peeks out from a corner in the background on its last trip, across Los Angeles, en route to its permanent retirement home, at the California Science Center.

Endeavours Ultimate Photobomb
Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

UNIVAC and the 1952 Presidential Election

UNIVAC and the 1952 Presidential ElectionRobert Colburn, the research coordinator at the IEEE History Center, recalled the first time a computer, UNIVAC was used to predict a United States Presidential election in 1952. The IEEE historian says the story has been told and retold for decades.

UNIVAC computerCBS Television News used a UNIVAC computer to predict the 1952 U.S. Presidential election returns and — when the computer accurately predicted the Eisenhower landslide at around 8:30 in the election night broadcast — however, they doubted the prediction, and only hours later did CBS reveal that the prediction had been correct. It has become a classic cautionary tale of the dangers of allowing human preconception to interfere with logic and the evaluation of facts.

There is more to the story according to Mr. Colburn. The exact timeline of when UNIVAC’s made its initial prediction is not certain, but that UNIVAC’s correct prediction of a landslide victory was ostensibly ignored until later in the broadcast because of journalistic prudence and lack of confidence in the accuracy of the results.

Walter ChronkiteThe article cites Dr. Ira Chinoy, whose doctoral thesis examines the use of computers in broadcast journalism, estimates that the celebrated initial prediction of the Eisenhower landslide was made closer to 9:15. At 8:30, only slightly more than one million votes had been tallied; it took until at least 9:15 pm for three million votes to be transmitted from CBS to the Remington Rand factory in Philadelphia. CBS was receiving vote tallies from the wire services and teletyping them to Remington Rand’s factory in Philadelphia. Additional time to input the data and run the programs was required.

The 8:30 CBS segment merely gave the television audience a visual tour and introduction to UNIVAC; the second UNIVAC segment of the evening at 9:30 asked for a prediction, but the machine was not yet ready. By that point in the television coverage, the human commentators were already commenting on the surprising Eisenhower strength in the early returns. On the basis of pre-election polls, the race between Eisenhower and Stevenson had seemed to be close (Eisenhower held a slight edge), so the use of a state-of-the-art computer to predict what was expected to be a very close election had generated a lot of popular interest the blog speculates.

Dwight EisenhowerAt some point relatively early in the evening, UNIVAC predicted an Eisenhower landslide victory. However, the UNIVAC programmers decided that the prediction was too risky to release because it contradicted what the pollsters had been saying about the election about a tight race.

At 10:30, which was the third on-air UNIVAC segment, the computer predicted twenty-eight states for Eisenhower and twenty for Stevenson recalls the historian. This was a softer prediction and was in line with what the CBS commentators had already been telling their television audience. It was the first correct prediction of an overwhelming Eisenhower win that the UNIVAC programmers decided not to release because it contradicted the poll numbers.

UNIVAC logoThe 11:30 UNIVAC on-air prediction caused more drama. It reversed its earlier prediction, calling 24 states each for Eisenhower and Stevenson, and a slim 270 to 261 Electoral College vote margin for Eisenhower. But by 11:45, the prediction was corrected and UNIVAC predicted 100 to 1 odds of an Eisenhower victory.

UNIVAC made its predictions based on the difference between vote tallies and the expected vote in cities and counties, based on a statistical model extrapolated from past elections. By applying this deviation in places that had already voted to those which had not yet voted, an estimate of the present election could be obtained based on past tallies in those places. One of the ironies of the election of 1952 was that the returns from Massachusetts, one of the crucial early reporting states, were incorrectly reported to UNIVAC. That UNIVAC was nonetheless able to make accurate predictions.

a dummy control console was set up in the CBS studio in Grand Central Terminal, New York City for visual effect, its lights blinking evocativelyThe UNIVAC used by CBS was the fifth UNIVAC machine made. In the autumn of 1952, UNIVAC-5 was still in the Philadelphia factory of Remington Rand waiting for its future installation at the Lawrence Livermore Laboratories. Ironically, the author reports that because UNIVAC itself was too large to be moved conveniently, a dummy control console was set up in the CBS studio in Grand Central Terminal, New York City for visual effect, its lights blinking evocatively thanks to delay switches ordinarily used for making Christmas tree lights flash on and off.

There was some irony that a machine that debuted in the public spotlight of national TV would go on to do classified weapons work. UNIVAC contained mercury delay lines, which allowed it to store 1,000 words (45 bits each) as electric pulses in tubes of mercury. Up to one million characters could be stored and accessed on magnetic tape. It was these tapes, replacing punched cards, which made the UNIVAC revolutionary, and which gave it a tremendous speed advantage because it could access its own data instead of needing to wait for cards to be loaded. It could perform four hundred and sixty-five multiplications per second and had a clock speed of 2.25MHz.

A brief Youtube video of the CBS prediction can be seen here.

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.