Gift Idea – Show Your Colors with a scarf from SportsScarf

By Mike Maddaloni on Monday, November 26, 2007 at 05:00 AM with 2 comments

LSU scarf from SportsScarfHappy Cyber Monday! This is the day when people are supposed to jam the Internet and buy items online, as compared to Black Friday where people jam the malls and shop traditional brick-and-mortar stores. In this spirit, I thought I’d share today a gift idea from one of the eCommerce clients of my consulting business, Dunkirk Systems.

SportsScarf is the leader in specialized, full-color scarves promoting your team, school or business. If you are familiar with European soccer and have seen the fans wearing scarves with their team logo or country name, then you know about these scarves. You are seeing them more and more in the US every day, and the best ones come from SportsScarf.

A great gift idea is a scarf for yourself or someone else for their favorite NCAA team or nationality. If you own a business, you can custom order scarves with your logo and branding. Check out their Web site for complete custom order options and information.

Not only do they look great, but also they come in handy with the cold winter months ahead.

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Gift Idea – Give the Blues from Nite Train Band With The High Voltage Horns

By Mike Maddaloni on Sunday, November 25, 2007 at 05:00 AM with 0 comments

cover of Best Man by Nite Train Band With The High Voltage HornsMany of you are either giving or receiving digital music players of various brands for the holidays. But you need music to put on them, and this is where today’s gift idea comes into play.

Nite Train Band With The High Voltage Horns is an awesome blues band based in the Albany, NY area. My good friends Ken and Marla Briggs are members of band and their latest album is titled Best Man. It is 10 rocking blues songs and a must-have for all blues and general music fans.

Listen and see for yourself on their MySpace pages and their Web site. If you like it, you can buy it from CD Baby, DigStation and iTunes. And if you’re in the Albany area, check them out and tell Briggsy that Mikey in Chicago sent you!

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Happy Thanksgiving

By Mike Maddaloni on Thursday, November 22, 2007 at 05:00 AM with 1 comments

Happy ThanksgivingTo all my readers and their family and friends, a safe, healthy and Happy Thanksgiving day! If you are traveling, by now – hopefully – you have made it to your destination and are well on your way to spending good times with those around you.

The accompanying picture is of the dining table and centerpiece from last year’s Thanksgiving, made by my lovely wife. This year I will try to get a picture of the complete feast to share next year.

Don’t eat too much, and a safe return trip!

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2 Smart Cars in One Parking Space in Frankfurt

By Mike Maddaloni on Wednesday, November 21, 2007 at 05:00 AM with 4 comments

2 Smart Cars in One Parking Space in Frankfurt

logo for Wordless Wednesday

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My Take-Aways from The Crucible

By Mike Maddaloni on Sunday, November 18, 2007 at 05:00 AM with 0 comments

Growing up in Massachusetts I was well versed on the story of the Salem with trials in the town on the north shore of the east coast of the Bay State. But like many things in your backyard, I have only been there once, and that was just a few years ago. The story of the witch hunt came back to mind as I read The Crucible, the play written by Arthur Miller in the 1950’s. Little did I think beforehand I would find lessons of business as well as life in its pages.

Miller’s play was written at the time of anti-Communist sentiment and inquisitions in Washington DC, and these events inspired Miller to write The Crucible as he saw parallels to the inquisition of a few hundred years earlier. The book version of the play has a detailed introduction describing both time periods and how the play came into being, and is an excellent context to the play as well as a recap of history.

My greatest take-away from the play is a quest for the truth. It is needless to say the entirety of the witch trials were based on hearsay and emotion and not the truth. This is not to say business should be totally devoid of emotion or compassion, rather in the face of insanity and chaos that can slip into a business setting, a quest toward facts will more likely than not be the best path to take.

Another take-away from the play is considering the impact of your actions on your environment. Even if a decision you might make is unpopular and pursuing its resolution is the best course to take, you can take steps to minimize its impact on the community you are in. This can be everything from being completely covert to completely transparent. The way information is delivered as well can satisfy those who may not agree with the decision. Sometimes the medium is the message.

Speaking of community, I read this book as it was a gift from Chicago’s One Book, One Chicago program. This is an excellent promotion of literacy around the Windy City where thousands of people are reading the same book at the same time!

I enjoyed The Crucible and recommend it to anyone. It is a well-written story accurately retelling a dark period of the early history of the US. Its script format helps the reader get deeper into the characters and see the story as someone living at that time. Though Halloween has passed, read it now, and then re-read it next October.


This is from The Hot Iron, a journal on business and technology by Mike Maddaloni.


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