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13 Dec 20:56

Why I Slack

by Rands in Repose

Earlier this year, I ran a survey to get ideas about how leaders could mobilize. 1311 of you filled out the survey which mean I’m certain the results are full of good ideas and inspiration. It also means I have to mine them.

An obvious mobilization tactic was a mailing list. Sure, it’s old school, but everyone has email and it’d be a low friction approach to gather both current and aspiration leaders. I spoke at MailChimp a few years back, so I mailed the CEO and asked, “What’s the right way to set-up this mailing list?”

To his credit, Ben immediately responded with, “Why don’t you set-up a Slack?”

Right. Duh.

The New Slack Progression

Slack teams are absolutely free to set-up (brilliant), but this makes them 100% disposable (unfortunate). Friends are currently reporting “advanced Slack proliferation” where’ve they filled their Slack client with various teams. I’m currently active on five different teams, but I’m pretty sure I’ve got accounts on another five where the Slack evaluation lifecycle looked like this:

  • Invite arrives. Hooray!
  • First login. Awesome!
  • Introduction. I’m here!
  • Day #2. … so what?

For the teams I’m no longer actively participating in, the rule appears to be if I don’t have a personal connection with the team – either I’m running it, it’s full of close friends, or it’s my work – I’ve no compelling reason to return on Day #2, so I don’t.

I’m currently “running” two teams via Slack: Leadership and Destiny. The Leadership team currently has 1123 members with 100 channels. Destiny currently has 130 members and 16 channels. I consider both teams to be a success primarily because it’s been many weeks (or months in the case of the Leadership channel) daily vibrant conversation continues, the user base is still growing, and, well, I like to hang out there.

There were challenges on Day #2, but let’s first talk about Day #1:

Just a Bit of Social Friction

If you want to join one of the Slack teams, you need to send me an email.

This a laborious task, but one that I believe is essential to getting committed humans in the door. Yes, there is a web application that automatically sends an invite to the interested parties, but I want you to send a mail for two reasons.

First, while it is not necessary, I like when folks tell me why they want to join the team in their email. I don’t ask for this reasoning, but folks often send short stories about how they got into leadership and what they want to learn. While I rarely respond to these mails except with an invite, these brief introductions humanize an otherwise anonymous email address.

Second, practically, I don’t want to be a part of a community where I don’t have the time to personally invite every single human to the conversation.

Slack is not about scale. Over at Leadership, of the 1000+ users, we regularly have 200+ people actively writing on a daily basis. Divide those 200 by the 30+ regularly active channels and you’ve got a manageable set of conversations going on regarding 1:1s, hiring and interviews, presentations – heck – there is even a bookclub.

Choosing to send me a mail and having me manually respond adds just a bit of social friction to the first day, but with each new manual addition to the group, I feel I’m personally adding another human to the mix – not another number.

Make It Their Home

Day #2 is tricky because upon return to the team, the enthusiasm of Day #1 has passed and you realize the channel is full of strangers. There is no curated front page that highlights the interesting things that happened since you were last there.

Here are four Day #2 strategies:

  1. Out of the box, Slack default channels are #general and #random. I’ve added two to the default set-up: #intros and #dailychallenge. The purpose of the first is obvious. Take a moment to introduce yourself – say as little or as much as you like – but, announce yourself to the community. It’s a small bit of ceremony that reminds us that there are humans behind the words.
  2. Slack gives you flexibility in terms of how you configure your team as well as who has access to do said configuration. On both of my teams, I’ve left all of this power in the user’s hands. This has resulted in some brilliant hacks. The Slackbot on the Leadership channel gently corrects poorly used gender pronouns. Over at Destiny, we’ve set-up a bot that looks up Destiny gear for us. By leaving the configuration of Slack mostly up to the denizens of the team, they treat it as they would treat their home.
  3. The first day enthusiasm often spills over into the second day with a simple request, “We should have a channel about X!” My response is a consistent and firm, “Channels are free.” Anyone can create a channel. Yes, this does mean there is a graveyard of channels amongst the 200 channels on the Leadership channel that were active for 24 hours and died, but it means that there are a handful of well-populated channels that have daily active conversations that would not have existed if channels required approval.
  4. On #dailychallenge on Leadership, we post a daily question on the topic of leadership. The point? Give the humans a daily reason to come and converse. After running #dailychallenge for a few weeks, I handed off the baton to an active participant on the channel. Now, each week, a new Slacker runs the challenge for the week only to nominate someone else for the next. This model of an active engaged leader posting an interesting question each week day, #dailychallenge is guaranteed to have a healthy conversation on any given day with a fresh new voice each week.

The Day 2 strategies are designed to connect the community and to put the power of where it goes squarely in the hands of those who best know where to take it.

Why Slack Now?

Slack is IRC. It’s a fresh coat of paint on an idea that has been around since the late 80s. The question is: why now? Why does an idea that has been around for years gain traction now?

For a set of technologies that has been designed to connect us regardless of where we might be on the planet, the Internet is increasing impersonal and hostile.

The signal to noise ratio emitting from massive communities like Reddit or YouTube is awful. Even with legions of well-intentioned humans dedicated to enforcing basic rules of conduct, it’s still work finding the right signal and even when you do, you’re often wading through some of the most offensive parts of human behavior.

I Slack because I like hanging with my tribe. My tribe is a knowable set of humans who not only have common interests, but also shared values. This combination results in healthy and productive discourse with very little effort. There are hundreds of people on both the Slack channels I tend and we’ve had exactly *zero* incidents resulting in someone being removed from the community. This doesn’t mean there haven’t been flare ups, but when that occurs, it doesn’t escalate – it’s debated. It’s resolved. We learn and we move forward.

We’re ready for Slack because we want to feel connected. We want to make the world full of strange people feel more personal. I’m very happy to report in the months I’ve been Slacking that the group of humans I call friends has – for the first time in years – significantly grown.

08 Dec 01:29

'Let's Encrypt' Now Offers Free HTTPS Certificates To Everyone

Let's Encrypt's free service program open as public beta for everyone.
03 Dec 05:12

Sony Is Trying To Push A Power Menu Restart Option To AOSP As A Developer Setting

by Ryan Whitwam
Corey G

Another nice example of Sony making reasonable changes to their tree and trying to upstream it.

power

Google has steadfastly refused to add a reboot option to the power menu in stock Android over the years. In fact, it removed everything other than "power off" from that menu in Lollipop. Users have been asking for a reboot option forever, and now Sony is asking for it too. Sony has opened a bug tracker issue and submitted a patch to add it, but Google does not appear to be biting.

Read More

Sony Is Trying To Push A Power Menu Restart Option To AOSP As A Developer Setting was written by the awesome team at Android Police.



12 Nov 18:56

Comcast now charging for data in 15 states, acknowledges caps aren’t necessary

by Joel Hruska
Corey G

Very appropriate choice of graphic.

Comcast-Feature
Comcast is testing a program to charge existing customers even more money for so-called "Unlimited" data plans on wired connections. Exceed 300GB, and your monthly bill could wind up jumping by $30-$35 if the trial program takes off.
12 Nov 18:51

'Secure Spaces' ROM Brings Multi-Domain Isolation, 'Hidden Spaces' To Nexus 5

Graphite Software, the maker of Secure Spaces for the Blackphone, announced the downloadable Secure Spaces ROM for Nexus 5.
06 Nov 19:27

New Android adware tries to root your phone so you can’t remove it

by Ryan Whitwam
malware
Time to panic? No, probably not, but the newly detected Shuanet Android malware is a clever bit of evil.
01 Nov 17:43

CyanogenMod 13 (Based On Android 6.0) Will Include Support For T-Mobile's Wi-Fi Calling

by Michael Crider

tmoT-Mobile users with the latest devices (and sometimes with the latest software updates) appreciate the inclusion of Wi-Fi calling for those areas where the network doesn't reach or can't penetrate indoors. Of course, the fact that Wi-Fi calling is available is a good reason to abstain from flashing custom ROMs, even on multi-carrier devices like the latest batch of Nexus phones. Apparently that won't be a problem for much longer, at least if you're a fan of the CyanogenMod ROM.

Read More

CyanogenMod 13 (Based On Android 6.0) Will Include Support For T-Mobile's Wi-Fi Calling was written by the awesome team at Android Police.



30 Oct 13:25

Git

Corey G

Hahahaha.

If that doesn't fix it, git.txt contains the phone number of a friend of mine who understands git. Just wait through a few minutes of 'It's really pretty simple, just think of branches as...' and eventually you'll learn the commands that will fix everything.
25 Oct 20:48

Apple tells judge it's "impossible" to unlock a device running iOS 8 or higher

by Lee Munson
Apple says it doesn't have the "technical ability" to unlock a modern iPhone and would rather not take a look at older models for fear of tarnishing its reputation.
09 Oct 21:43

Google OnHub Rooted, Turns Out To Be A Chromebook In Router's Clothing

by Ryan Whitwam
Corey G

Chromebook bones? Interesting.

wm_2015-09-07 14.11.29

Google hasn't said much about how its new OnHub router works—it's a mysterious black box (blue cylinder, technically) with inactive radios and updatable firmware. The modders from Exploitee.rs have gotten their hands on an OnHub, and it didn't take long for them to root it. Interestingly, they rooted it like a Chromebook because that's sort of what the OnHub is—a Chromebook with no screen acting like a router.

The modders discovered the OnHub's close relationship to a Chromebook by dumping the SPI flash and eMMC from the board.

Read More

Google OnHub Rooted, Turns Out To Be A Chromebook In Router's Clothing was written by the awesome team at Android Police.



08 Oct 11:52

Hurricane Joaquin From the International Space Station

NASA Astronaut Scott Kelly captured this photo on Oct. 2, 2015, from the International Space Station and wrote on Twitter, "Early morning shot of Hurricane #‎Joaquin‬ from @space_station before reaching ‪#‎Bahamas‬. Hope all is safe. #‎YearInSpace‬."
24 Sep 21:51

Court rules cell phone passcodes protected under Fifth Amendment

by Joel Hruska
Passcode 1344 iPhone
A federal court has ruled that passcodes for cell phones are protected under the Fifth Amendment.
20 Sep 20:13

Video: Ocarina of Time's Kakariko Village Gets a HD Makeover In Unreal Engine 4

Video: Video: Ocarina of Time's Kakariko Village Gets a HD Makeover In Unreal Engine 4

One of the best efforts yet

18 Sep 20:33

D-Link Accidentally Leaks Private Code-Signing Keys

by Michael Mimoso
Private keys used to sign D-Link software were included in open-source firmware published by the company.
16 Sep 04:06

Good Morning From the International Space Station

Corey G

Alright, I'm ready to go up there.

NASA astronaut Scott Kelly shared this photograph on social media, taken from the International Space Station on Sept. 10, 2015. Kelly wrote, "#GoodMorning Texas! Great view of you, the #moon , and #Venus this morning. #YearInSpace"
15 Sep 13:06

TSA master luggage keys are 3D printed after photo published online

by Lisa Vaas
TSA-approved locks weren't all that unpickable to begin with, but now you might as well use zip ties on your luggage.
01 Sep 17:43

Microsoft backports privacy-invading Windows 10 features to Windows 7, 8

by Joel Hruska
Dual-booting Windows 7 and Windows 8 -- both operating systems side by side
Microsoft is back-porting its telemetry-gathering software to Windows 7 and 8. When users ask for new features, this usually isn't what they have in mind.
25 Aug 11:07

Adorable Yeti Game Lets You Be The SkiFree Monster

by Philippa Warr
Corey G

!!!!!

Oh hi COME BACK

Remember SkiFree? Remember the peeing dogs and the trees that got in the way of everything and the yeti? I loved SkiFree. I think it was the only Windows game I played because I liked it and found it funny rather than because it was a master class in getting you addicted.

A mere two and a half decades later you can now play as the yeti thanks to the adorable Ludum Dare entry, Mr Yeti’s Fast Food [official site]! Look at this cute death monster :D

… [visit site to read more]

20 Aug 03:32

Testing on Deck

Corey G

All those switches..

In 1939, President Franklin D. Roosevelt designated August 19 as National Aviation Day in honor of Orville Wright’s birthday, directing citizens to celebrate the day with activities that encourage an interest and appreciation for aviation. NASA's heritage in aviation research goes back more than 100 years.
14 Aug 18:27

Sony Adds The First 64-Bit Devices To Its Open Device Project

by Ryan Whitwam
Corey G

More of Sony doing things right (except marketing).

AOSP_Xperia_Z3-_660x384-660x384

Sony is ahead of most other OEMs when it comes to its support of open source. It contributes significantly to AOSP and even releases binaries for many of its devices so developers can build AOSP ROMs for them. Today, Sony is announcing support for the first three 64-bit devices in the Open Device project.

The new devices are the Xperia Z3+, Xperia Z4 Tablet, and Xperia Z4 Tablet WiFi. Technically, we're talking about a phone and two versions of the same tablet, but it's nice they're supporting the mobile data version specifically.

Read More

Sony Adds The First 64-Bit Devices To Its Open Device Project was written by the awesome team at Android Police.



13 Aug 18:38

CyanogenMod Download Site Revamped With Proper Device Names And Recovery Downloads

by Ryan Whitwam
Corey G

FINALLY they are building CM recovery after it being mentioned in their wiki for years. Now if they could stop signing the builds with test keys..

nexusae0_CyanogenMod-Logo.jpg

Like it or not, CyanogenMod is still one of the most popular, well-supported custom ROMs out there. However, downloading the necessary files to flash it could be an exercise in frustration. See, the CM download page only listed device code names, but now it uses the device names you actually know.

Previously, you'd need to go look up your device's code name on Google before you could easily find it in the CM repository.

Read More

CyanogenMod Download Site Revamped With Proper Device Names And Recovery Downloads was written by the awesome team at Android Police.



11 Aug 18:32

Huge Flash Update Patches More Than 30 Vulnerabilities

by Dennis Fisher
Corey G

30?!

Adobe has released a massive update for Flash, the application that has become the Internet’s problem child. The update contains patches for more than 30 vulnerabilities in Flash on Windows, OS X, and Linux. Adobe pushed out the fixes on Tuesday afternoon, the latest in a long series of fixes for Flash in the last […]
10 Aug 21:26

HTC declared effectively worthless; LG’s profit margins fall to a penny a phone

by Joel Hruska
Corey G

I'm a fan of the fragmentation visual they used

HTC-1
HTC's stock has fallen to the point that the company is considered to be worth less than its own cash holdings. HTC, however, is far from the only Android OEM in a bad situation.
06 Aug 19:11

Why some video game ports are spotless while others are train wrecks

by Grant Brunner
Vita Borderlands
Why are some ports nearly spotless, while others are train wrecks? Are the PS4 and Xbox One really just dolled-up midrange PCs? Let's bypass the noise and hear the story directly from the devs themselves.
16 Jul 19:37

New Bill Would Grant Lifetime Credit Monitoring to OPM Victims

by Chris Brook
A group of lawmakers are proposing that victims of last month’s expansive Office of Personnel Management hack receive lifetime fraud protection and credit monitoring.
12 Jul 20:45

USA Network's New Show 'Mr. Robot' Shows Accurate Android Hacking, Including SuperSU And Flexispy

by Michael Crider

imageHave you seen Mr. Robot? The show is only three episodes in, but it's already shaping up to be a surprisingly awesome hacking drama. And I don't mean "hacking" in the CSI/NCIS/Scorpion "120WPM and 60 flashing windows" kind of hacking - the protagonist and his Anonymous-style compatriots use real methods and technology, mostly relying on a combination of known vulnerabilities, social engineering, and brute force attacks to play at being cyber-vigilantes.

Read More

USA Network's New Show 'Mr. Robot' Shows Accurate Android Hacking, Including SuperSU And Flexispy was written by the awesome team at Android Police.



11 Jul 20:00

OPM Director Resigns After 21.5 Million Social Security Numbers Stolen In Data Breach

OPM director Katherine Archuleta resigned after 21.5 million people had their data compromised in a hack under her watch.
02 Jul 16:07

Lights of an Aurora From the International Space Station

NASA Astronaut Scott Kelly captured this photo of an aurora from the International Space Station on June 23, 2015. The dancing lights of the aurora provide spectacular views on the ground, but also capture the imagination of scientists who study incoming energy and particles from the sun.
11 Jun 02:41

Claymation Adventure Game Armikrog Due In August

by Alice O'Connor
Corey G

Oh man, The Neverhood returns!

After two years of writhing and squirming in its Kickstarted cocoon, Armikrog [official site] is almost ready to emerge as a beautiful plasticine butterfly. The claymation adventure game will launch for Windows, Mac, and Linux on August 18th, developers Pencil Test Studios have announced. Their numbers include Doug TenNapel – the chap behind Earthworm Jim and ye olde claymation adventure The Neverhood, which Armikrog was billed as the “spiritual successor” to. Come have a look at how it’s shaping up (shape, like a plasticine shape) in a new trailer.

… [visit site to read more]

29 May 14:35

[Android M Feature Spotlight] External Storage Can Be 'Adopted' As True Internal Storage Or Accessed Normally With No Additional Apps

by Ryan Whitwam
Corey G

Wow, unexpected, but awesome.

Samsung_16GB_UHS-1_microSD_card_thumb.jpgYou know how Google hates microSD cards and everything they stand for? Well, Android M might signal a change of heart. In the dev preview, there's support for adopting removable storage as part of the system and treating it as internal. You can also plug in and use USB drives on stock Android without any additional apps.

11 22

The storage adoption appears to only work with microSD cards, which you don't have in any Nexus devices—this is all based on the SDK and developer documentation.

Read More

[Android M Feature Spotlight] External Storage Can Be 'Adopted' As True Internal Storage Or Accessed Normally With No Additional Apps was written by the awesome team at Android Police.