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jrosell’s posterous

 

Definició d'innovació

Introducció per primera vegada en el mercat d’un producte, o d’un procés modificat, a partir d’una idea, invenció o reconeixement d’una necessitat, i que ha estat acceptada pel mercat

A einnova tenim la tagline Innovación en Internet para tu negocio

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Curiós missatge d'avís de manteniment de Grooveshark

To those of you who were redirected here, we apologize.

In an attempt to befriend Asian investors and increase office morale, we here at Grooveshark established some connections with the Chinese black market and imported our very own black-and-white Giant Panda (hereby known as "Pickles"). Unfortunately, due to circumstances no one could have foreseen, Pickles became agitated at the fluorescent lights and near-constant belly rubs and began clawing at our computers.

Pickles is currently thrashing about in the server room, causing the technical difficulties and temporary outage you just experienced. As soon as our interns return from Pier 1 with synthetic bamboo, a picnic basket and an oversized net, we will be able to return the servers back to normal and, if we can, rescue the coder that Pickles has taken as a prize.

Thank you for your patience.

Teniu bambú a mà?

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Instal·lació de fonts de Windows a Ubuntu

To install a ttf from your ~/ :

 

Code:
cd /usr/share/fonts/truetype
sudo mkdir myfonts
cd myfonts
sudo cp ~/*.ttf .
sudo chown root.root *.ttf
sudo mkfontdir
cd ..
fc-cache

 

Podries agafar fonts que tens al Windows, al Office o de productes d'Adobe i posar-les al teu linux.

Actualització: En cas que no administris l'equip i en situacions en que només vols utilitzar-les desde el teu usuari, el més fàcil és copiar els fitxers al directori ~/.fonts

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Felicitats i bon #santjordi als altres 69 jordi/gina's que he localitzat a twitter (i als que no apareixen en aquest llistat)

Aquests són els jordi/gina's que tinc locatlitzats a twitter:

@antroh
@byteman
@Dallonses
@eslogico
@galu
@glztt
@j0rdi
@jfg1978
@jlopez
@jordi_andreu
@jordi_bertran
@jordi_dd
@jordi_perez
@jordiarcarons
@JordiBages
@jordibaste
@jordiborda
@jordicamos
@JordiCervera
@jordicosta1
@jordicrisol
@jordicuminal
@jordidemiguel
@jordiduarri
@jordievole
@JordiFC
@jordigracia
@jordigraells
@jordigran
@JordiJubany
@JordiLon
@JordiMayoral
@jordimoreso
@jordinovell
@jordiorange
@jordipapiol
@jordipeiro
@jordiperales
@jordiperez
@JordiPM
@jordiporta
@jordireche
@jordiriera
@JordiRius
@jordisalvia
@jordisampera
@jordiserra
@jordisn
@JordiTorquemada
@jordiv
@jordiverdura
@jorgemarquez
@jorx
@JoTGi
@JPlanas
@jroquer
@jrosell (jo mateix)
@jsadurni
@jsole
@jxrdii
@mcroyaldeluxe
@millanjordi
@newpatriks
@omiset
@Plastidecor
@potespasta
@purnas
@sellasferres
@urtasun8
@yuribcn

 

Actualització: No tinc perdó, em vaig deixar alguns Jordis. En concret: @jalabop, @jordi_Sbd i segur que molts més.

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Fonaments de la teràpia gestalt per desenvolupar el potencial humà

  • L'aquí i ara: viure i sentir el present. Viure i sentir la realitat.
  • L'adonarse (awareness): és el pacient qui s'ha d'adonar del que li passa. Només es necessita ser conscient per canviar (si es desitja) una conducta.
  • Acceptar el que som: no buscar ídols, no acceptar els ‘hauries’ (excepte els dits per un/a mateix/a), ser responsable dels propis actes.
  • Donar més importància al ‘com’ més que al ‘per què’: ¿Com et trobes?, ¿Com et trobes en aquesta situació?, ¿Com et trobes ara?
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    LinkedIn per PIMES: 10 Ways To Use It

    1. Acquire new customers through online recommendations and word of mouth. Satisfied customers are the best source of new customers. Increase your word of mouth referrals by asking your happy clients to write you a recommendation, which will be published on your LinkedIn profile and will be broadcast to their entire LinkedIn network.

    2. Keep in touch with people who care most about your business. Sites like LinkedIn help keep your business alive in the minds of the people who care most about your business. LinkedIn is effective for two reasons: the business intent of LinkedIn users and fewer status updates, which mean you stay on top of mind. Tip: You can also increase the impact of your status updates by syncing your LinkedIn and Twitter accounts.

    3. Find the right vendors to outsource services you’re not an expert on. Think of the number of times you’ve asked your colleagues if they knew of a great web designer or photographer. LinkedIn makes it easy for you to find and vet vendors through the network of your peers. Additionally, you can also trade services with your vendor connections on LinkedIn; sort of a mutual referral system.

    4. Build your industry network—online and in person. Search LinkedIn’s Groups directory to find industry associations and networks to take part in. For example, if you’re in the event planning or wedding industry, there are over 530 groups. In addition, LinkedIn also surfaces popular events in your industry calling out local events that your connections are attending. Imagine being able to find only industry events that your prospective clients are attending.

    5. Get answers to tough business questions with a little help from your real friends. Small business owners deal with challenging questions on a slew of topics each day. LinkedIn Answers and Groups let you find answers to those vexing questions quickly by tapping into the wisdom of your network (LinkedIn tells me there are over 200 different categories on Answers including one dedicated just to small business and over 2000 groups on small business related topics). Wondering whether your recent office purchase is tax deductible? Check out hundreds of questions on related topics here.

    6. Win new business by answering questions in your area of expertise. Use the many forums on LinkedIn to share the knowledge you’ve gained in your area of expertise. This is a great opportunity to win new business or at least find prospective clients to pitch your business to. Prospective customers will find your answers when they use LinkedIn’s advanced Answers search. And don’t forget, what goes around comes around. Don’t forget, this is a great way to soft pitch your skills and expertise.

    7. Raise funding. You can use LinkedIn to find mentors or potential investors for your startup because there are over three million startup professionals and over 12M small business professionals on LinkedIn and it’s always good to stay in touch with folks who’ve been there, done that and willing to mentor you. Once you’re connected, your participation on LinkedIn (answers, status updates or group conversations) may even cause them to consider investing in your small business.

    8. Network with peers in your industry for repeat business referrals. LinkedIn Groups is a powerful medium to find peers in your respective industries to network with and to find complimentary businesses to share referrals with. For example, mortgage brokers can find real estate agents to partner with on relevant groups and as most small businesses know, these partners are your best source of referrals that can turn into repeat business. With over 2000 groups dedicated to small business topics, you’re sure to find a relevant group to network.

    9. Convince potential customers of your expertise by sharing unique blog content. Small businesses smart enough to create unique content on their expertise (either with a blog or twitter account) should link to it from their LinkedIn profiles. Or take it one step further by promoting featured blog content to LinkedIn members on the site (for e.g. with small text ads). You can specify exactly who will see your ads—Executives or VPs—and include a link to your profile so they know who’s behind this content.

    10. Keep your friends close and your competition closer. Over 150,000 companies have a company profile on LinkedIn, the “public profile” for companies. These pages surface key stats on companies; recent hires as well movers and shakers. Not only do company profiles give you unique insight into your competition, they also give you an opportunity to stumble upon potential hires by browsing through company pages.

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    Índex enllaçat a documents de text d'OpenOffice.org

    Com es crea un índex connectat en un document openoffice.org? Els índex són molt importants en els documents escrits, però quan estan en format PDF convé que hi hagi un índex clickable que porti a la part del document d'interés.

    Asumeixo que tens un OpenOffice.org 3.1 configurat en català

    A la barra d'eines de formatació s'hi troben els encapçalaments. La manera més fàil de generar un índex és utilitzar correctament aquests estils (Visualitza / Barres d'eines / Formatació).

    Quan s'aplica l'estil hi ha les opcions Per defecte, Cos del text, Encapçalament 1, Encapçalament 2, Encapçalament 3 i Més...

    Hia diferents tipus d'estils d'Encapçalament. L'1 es dirigeix als encapçalaments més importants (ex: títols de capitol) i el 2 i 3 serveixen per etructurar el contingut.

    Seleccionant Insereix / Índex i taules / Índex i taules... s'obrira una finestra on pots editar el teu índex. La pestaña entrades és el que serveix per crear un índex enllaçat.

    A la secció d'Estructura, coloca el cursor en el petit cuadre de text d'abans del botó E#. Apreta el botó enllaç. Amb les fletxes Mou-te a l'últim cuadre de text de l'estructura i apreta el botó enllaç.

    Per últim un cop apretat el botó Tots els nivells pots acabar pulsant D'acord.

     

     

    Basat en How-to: Create a linked index with Openoffice

     

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    Estats Units certifica l'autenticació de Google per iniciar sessió a llocs web governamentals

    Google's identity, security, and privacy specifications have been certified so that a user can register and log in at U.S. government websites using their Google account login credentials. The National Institute of Health (NIH) is the first government website ready to accept such credentials, and we look forward to seeing other websites open up to certified identity providers so that users will have an easier and more secure time interacting with these resources.

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    Solaris s'ha convertit en una demo a 90 dies

    In order to use the Solaris operating system for perpetual commercial use, each system running Solaris must be expressly licensed to do so. An Entitlement Document comprises such license and is delivered to you either with a new Sun system or from Sun Services as part of your service agreement. Customers who did not receive an Entitlement Document with their new Sun system or through their service agreement must register each system running Solaris with Sun. Before you install Solaris on additional systems, you must first register those systems to receive an additional Entitlement Document.

    The registration process to receive an Entitlement Document is part of the Solaris download process, with the Entitlement Document being returned to you via e-mail. For this reason, YOU MUST PROVIDE A WORKING E-MAIL ADDRESS AS PART OF YOUR SUN DOWNLOAD CENTER ACCOUNT. If you fail to do so, you will not receive an Entitlement Document and will only have the right to evaluate Solaris for 90 days.

    The Entitlement Document is an adjunct to the Software License Agreement (SLA) that always accompanies the Solaris Operating System software. The SLA sets forth the terms under which Sun Microsystems, Inc. allows an end user to use the Solaris software for evaluation purposes for 90 days and is a binding legal agreement between Sun and the end user. End users should be sure to review the SLA in its entirety; any legal questions should be directed to the end user’s own legal counsel. Please note that because the entitlement granted by Sun is nontransferable, end users may not give the Solaris software to any third party. The new owner is responsible for obtaining a Solaris Entitlement Document.

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    Ser un blogger únic [19 Starting Points for Being a Unique Blogger]

    1. Voice – your style of writing. Manolo the shoe blogger was the first blogger I remember reading with a really unique voice (he writes in the third person).
    2. Topic/s – Manolo again an example of uniqueness in this – his two topics when he first started were ‘celebrities’ and their ’shoes’. John Chow perhaps is another example – who ever heard of a make money online blogger who documents his food and talks about cars?
    3. Design – the way your blog looks is a great way to make an impression, grab attention and stand out from the crowd.
    4. Being First – not easy to do but if you can be one of the first blogs in a niche it can help you stand out. ProBlogger would be my own lucky example of this – at the time no one else was blogging about making a living from blogs.
    5. Your Blogs Name – sometimes it is just the name of a blog that makes it stand out whether it be by being confronting, funny or otherwise.
    6. Being a ‘Character’ – the Fake Steve Jobs blog comes to mind as one blog that was unique not only by the content being great but by the blogger blogging as Steve Jobs and keeping his real identity secret.
    7. Use of Media – some bloggers mashups of different types of media set them apart – clever use of video, imagery, audio and text all together in a post can have a real impact.
    8. Depth of Content – a number of bloggers that I follow set themselves apart by producing content that obviously has a lot of thought put into them. Instead of quick and short posts that do nothing much more than link to other sites they carefully and thoughtfully ponder a topic and produce content that is deep and thought provoking.
    9. Frequency of Posts – it strikes me that some of the most popular blogs product A LOT of content. Engadget and Gizmodo being two examples. This high frequency of posting makes them prolific and means that if a story is breaking in the gadget space that you’d be certain that they’re covering it. On the flip side some blogs take the opposite approach – their new posts become so rare that people value them highly and share them prolifically.
    10. Vaults of Resources – some bloggers become successful because their blogs are just filled with such rich resources. These bloggers might not have as much original thought but they are passionate about gathering information and resources from others and sharing it with their network. People read them because they save them time by researching and gathering the information that the rest of us need but don’t have time to find.
    11. Community Focus – some bloggers go above and beyond when it comes to their readers. They put the rest of us to shame by the way that they pay personal attention to everyone, interact with every comment and seemingly know every person who reads by name.
    12. Opinion – one of the easiest ways to make your blog is to share your opinion. Your opinions won’t always be unique but the combination of them and the way you express yourself will be and will often set yourself apart from other bloggers who just report news.
    13. Usefulness – some blogs are insanely useful. I know we’ve covered this earlier in this series but it needs to be said again – useful blogs build themselves a solid foundation for success.
    14. Originality – its amazing how some people just have an ability to explore a topic that everyone else has talked about but put a new spin on it! I sometimes feel this way about Seth Godin’s blog – his ability to make me have light bulb moments around simple concepts is amazing.
    15. Personality – I’m finding this one hard to define but some bloggers just ooze personality. Perhaps another way to describe it would be that they have Mojo or are charismatic. They are just infectious with the way that they write and interact.
    16. Personal – as you read some blogs you sometimes get a spooky feeling that its almost like the blogger is there in the room with you. They blog in a way where you can almost hear their voice and feel as though you’re in a conversation with them. They share on a level that goes beyond just the transference of information – they share of themselves.
    17. Expertise – some bloggers rise to the top of their fields because they are simply authoritative and have real expertise in their field. They are well read, have extensive experience and have forgotten more about their topic than most of us will ever know about it.
    18. Connectors – other bloggers are successful because they are so well connected in their niche. They not only know a lot of people but they have a gift in helping others to connect with those in their network.
    19. Prolific – some bloggers are unique because… well they’re everywhere. These bloggers seem to have the ability to be in more than one place at a time – they blog, they’re active on multipole social networks, they are at conferences, they are guest posting on other blogs, they’re in forums…. they are everywhere!

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