Sunday, 6 May 2012

Keep Walking!


You are allowed to walk as slow as you want, as long as you do not stop. Winners are those who when they hit a "hump" drive slowly and not park at the "hump".
Me and Alphe Maphosa in Mamelodi.

The old fairy tale of the Rabbit and the Tortoise racing comes to mind, although the rabbit was super fast, it got distracted, whilst the Tortoise kept at it one slow step at a time, and when the Tortoise hit the finishing line the Rabbit was miles away because he got side-tracked and distracted, the Tortoise won the race.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZeydbhoYo-0

Here is the moral of the story:  'You will win if you do not quit, winners never quit and quitters never win'.

Bapedi bona bare "Lebelo ga lena motloga pele", while Ecclesiastes 9:11 reminds us that "the race is not to the swift or the battle to the strong, nor does food come to the wise or wealth to the brilliant or favor to the learned; but time and chance happen to them all".

So this morning I purpose to stay on my track and run as swiftly and as consistent as I can and should. That is what I am going to do with my time and chance today, I am going to Keep Walking.

Thank you Alphe Maphosa for reminding us of this great truth yesterday at Rivers of Glory in Mamelodi.


Thursday, 5 April 2012

University Towns & Cities

During my visit to Ann Arbor, home of the prestigious University of Michigan and Michigan State University. I remember someone saying Ann Arbor was a college town, what I understood they meant was that the population of the city is dominated by the university' population.

Thinking about Tshwane / Pretoria this morning, I asked "is the capital city becoming a college town?" You only have to be in the CBD during any weekday to see how the student population dominates the streets of the capital city. It is a no brainier really, the city host three major universities. One of those is the largest Open Learning / Distance Education Institution in Africa. Add to that most if not all the  national research institutions make their home in the city too -  Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), Human Science Research Council (HSRC), The Agriculture Research Council (ARC), The Medical Research Council (MRC) and Council for Geoscience, just to mention the first five that came to mind.

However the dominance of the CBD by the student population stems from the new and abrupt private colleges which have become a salient feature of the capital city. Although not unique to Pretoria, the private post-matric education business seems to be blossoming here. My theory which is speculative at this point is that, most of the students who find their way into these colleges are the residues of the three main players, who must (need) find an alternative place to learn. They end up in these new establishments. It makes sense, the main three can only take so much, but then what happens to the rest, and that is the question that we need to seriously ponder on.

In India they have strict regulations of these private providers, that ensures that the quality of training at these private institution is continuously assessed. In South Africa that vacuum remains due to lack of political will, inept bureaucracy or both. Pseudo accreditation from an over burden and over whelmed CHE/SAQA/Umalusi consortia is not sufficient.

Quality control measures need to be enforced for every single private college operating in South Africa, much less the capital city, which is slowly turning into a college town.

The strength and potency of a college town is the creation and consumption of new knowledge, which leads to innovation, but for that innovation to flourish, the knowledge output needs to be managed not only regulated but managed.

For a town which has so much research capacity it is sad that we have not found solutions and methods to maximize the output from these private colleges.

No wonder we always complain about lack of skills and yet the city is full of young knowledge seekers, in pursuit of skills. Something is amiss!

Wednesday, 4 April 2012

Shipping and fun.

Yesterday We got closer to shipping our art. Day by day I am appreciating that I am an artist and I lead a team of artists. And real artists ship. Ask Seth Godin. We met the client and showed him the work in progress. They seemed to be pretty pleased with the work so far. We were also quite happy to get to this point with our work, it took a while to be here but now we are in a good place.

Yesterday morning also saw my first production-geared SpringMVC work. I know understand why it is the most popular Java Web Framework. I still had some Hibernate unhappiness but nothing that a season artist like me could not solve. I am so happy to have finally freed myself from the Struts 1.x shackles. Its been a long time coming!

I was further able to set a few TODO Items on my task list this morning. and I am happy that 50% of them have been marked as complete. Oh setting it up this blog was one of them, now that is done too, I am seating at a pretty 75% of work completed on the list.

I also read and shared this interesting piece from fastcompany.com. After reading it, it felt good to be working for a startup.

My night includes a soccer match at Loftus, Mamelodi Sundowns and Lamontville Golden Arrows, yep our hoodoo team, but hey we need the points today, hoodoo team or not a draw just wont be good enough. Mushin Etrugal our hoodoo coach, coaching our hoodoo team. Yet Still We Rise.

Will update the score later!

I will also start writing the software training manifesto tonight.