Skip to main content

A Year at IMD: November

By the time that we reach the electives and the program is winding down, there is enough time to celebrate the triumphs and reflect on a life beyond the rigors of the toughest MBA program in the world:

01 Nov - Back to School Jitters
02 Nov - On Capitol Hill
03 Nov - London Deja Vu
04 Nov - Text Messages
05 Nov - Final Bonus Diary Entry - What a Guy (Fowkes) Day
06 Nov - Happy Birthday Meera! (better late than never)
07 Nov - New Faces in the MBA Auditorium
08 Nov - The Journey of the Entrepreneur
09 Nov - Just Like Old Times
10 Nov - Brazil and India and China, Oh My!
11 Nov - The Last Case Study
12 Nov - Advice For The First Time at the White Horse
13 Nov - Night is Falling
14 Nov - Witnessing Undeterred Delhi
15 Nov - Fathers and Sons
16 Nov - The Norden ICP Project
17 Nov - ICP Flashback: Storming the Desert
18 Nov - M+M: An IMD Birthday Salute
19 Nov - Germans in the House (Party)
20 Nov - Coming Full Circle
21 Nov - MBA 2010
22 Nov - MBA 2006
23 Nov - Leaving a Legacy
24 Nov - That's All Folks...
25 Nov - Graduation Day
26 Nov - Dancing the Night Away
27 Nov - Missing Sailing
28 Nov - Signing Off

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

A Little Bit of Proust

Somehow I started to read Proust. The blame goes to Alain de Botton , a writer whose witticisms deconstruct modern thinking and make intellectualism seem but a trifle and a whim. He wrote a book in 1997 called "How Proust Can Change Your Life" which distills the enigmatic French novelist into a self-help dispenser of pithy ideas. How clever I found Mr. de Botton to be when I dipped my toe into the vagaries of Proust; I picked up volume one of "In Search of Lost Time" and instantly fell into the deep end. What author dares to run sentences onward into the stratosphere that sometimes seemingly mellows behind the stars of a bright night, but never so much as an introspective person that wretches for the meaning of a simple thought, sometimes stumbling, but always emerging strongly as that same night in starry sky, almost an homage back to Van Gogh, whose rich paintings greatly represented the mood of a generation - and generations often afford a few mis-steps in l...

Try Something New: 750 Words

If there is anything universally redeeming about writing, it is the ability to delve into the inner thoughts of one's own psyche and come back with perspective on feelings, motivations, and desires. In this way, journaling as the specific form of writing that provides this redemption can be a worthwhile pursuit. One might suppose that the internet world would offer various tools to make journaling simple, easy, and relatively painless, but that has not always been the case - until now. I came across this from Lifehacker, who was promoting the site back in March: 750words. The site is run by a former Amazon product manager who has an interest in journaling for the creative process and data visualization. Mash those things together, and you have an interesting site that is built around the premise that creative juices get flowing by consistently writing 3 pages worth of stuff on a daily basis, which translates to roughly 750 words. Logging in by using your Google or Facebook use...

Netscape, We Hardly Knew Ye...

In 1995, I started using email. In my first college days, my friend Virge anointed me with a playful email handle - toddity. She never told me that your email address was somewhat permanent, and I spent the rest of my university days with an username that amused most who got a message from good, old Eudora. At that time, I used Netscape as my web browser. Fast forward almost 15 years. I moved on first to Internet Explorer (Microsoft had a monopolistic hand in it), and then to Firefox from which I am penning this blog entry. Somewhere along the way, Netscape was acquired by AOL and sent down the river on a slow obsolescence. Until next week, when Netscape will end up on the scrap heap with Prodigy, Compuserve, and Excite@Home. How much the internet has changed. I can wax poetically on blogs and social networks, but I can also remember messageboards, usenets, IM, forums, web 1.0, HTML, and the world wide web when www. was a foreign concept. The concept is still the same - connec...