Showing posts with label electronic communication. Show all posts
Showing posts with label electronic communication. Show all posts

Friday, February 5, 2010

Business Improvement Survey--a New Product

I just created a Business Improvement Survey using Adobe Acrobat.  It was a challenge to create, though it seems to have good functionality.  Working from a variety of client experiences dealing with organizational development and change, I developed a six-part survey to focus on core questions that need to be resolved for change to be successful and supported.

I decided to market this survey via an eBay auction to get people to try the survey.  The cost will be small and it can be used as a self-help survey by most organizations needing to deal with change.

Of course DrM-Resources will provide support for those people trying out the survey if they should wish extra support.  The survey will get clients preferred pricing on any of the other services offered by DrM-Resources.

This blog entry is more than a promotion for the survey (though that would be a good use of the entry, anyway).  This marks one of the first times DrM-Resources has partnered with eBay to help consumers get access to affordable tools they can use to help their businesses improve.  Not only can they get the tools on eBay, they will soon get preferred pricing on the other DrM-Resources services soon to be made available on eBay. 

DrM-Resources and Joelmonty.net already use PayPal for invoicing and payments, and Skype for webinars and other interactive events.  It is only natural to add eBay to the mix.

Monday, December 7, 2009

Codes, Code-Breakers, Electronic Communications, Pearl Harbor Day

December 7th is remembered as Pearl Harbor Day. Codes, code-breaking, and electronic communications played a vital part in World War II.  Codes and code-breaking have been around since the early Egyptians.  With the advent of electronic communications--first radio, then Internet and digital communications, codes and code-breaking have become always more complex.

There has been some confusion as to how much of the Japanese plans for "Operation Z" (Pearl Harbor Attack) the USA was aware of before the attack.  Some of this came out in the movie, Pearl Harbor.

Dan Brown, in his 2009 novel, The Lost Symbol, uses the concept of codes, code-breaking and electronic communications in much of his book.  Encryption as a way of communicating secretly has been an important art throughout the ages to hide "sacred mysteries" as well as to communicate war plans, strategies for business, and anything else anyone wants to conceal.

In today's world of YouTube, the Internet, e-mail, blogs, LinkedIn, Twitter, FaceBook, and more, it seems hard to believe that we have any secrets we want to hold on to.  On the other hand, we don't want an identity thief to take our social security number, credit card number, etc., so we all have some privacy issues we would like to control.

Many programs do have encryption capabilities, though most of these programs can be decrypted by government agencies when they have a need to do so.

We are encouraged to think of anything we share on the Internet as being "public."  That is probably the more accurate way to thinking about what we "publish" via the Internet.