Living Life As Business

When a new business is created, someone had an idea to provide an income and be worth doing. No one starts a business, or should start a business with an idea which is distasteful. Any new business needs every opportunity to succeed, and if it is not fun for the owner, it will likely fail. Succeeding initially means long hours over a long period even before the doors first open, so a new business idea should be something one really wants to do.

As a business idea grows, it begins to flesh out and become real. Plans are formed around steps needed for value added item the business is going to produce. As plans are written out and looked over, new steps are added.

As opening day gets closer plans become more detailed as equipment, suppliers, requirements, location, customers base is finalized. For some business startups, some obvious details items are overlooked until it is discovered something is not working as it should. If anything pertaining to the business is changed, overlooked, or freshly discovered, the plan is updated as needed.

Eventually the doors open and enough time goes by when there are no surprises. No one is expecting the unexpected. One day, suddenly, without warning something goes wrong and a crisis is born. It may be anything from building problem, a utility matter, illness, or unforeseen supply problems going wrong when it is least expected.

Panic sets in and the business owner focuses on how to fix the problem.  A solution is arrived at, implemented, and the crisis is under control. Everyone starts to relax, and shortly it is back to business as usual. Eventually something else happens, and the process of crisis recovery starts all over again.

Running a business has a lot in common with day to day life although it is not obvious. Each of us in our own way is a start up business in some form. How successful we are in the business of our life, depends on how we manage unforeseen circumstances, and what we do to avoid repeat situations.

One of the tricks successful business use is periodic review. Review of what is done, how it is done, and can it be done better, is a continuing focus of successful business. This same process applied to our life can used to help us be more successful.

Reviewing our day, week, month, what ever length of time works in our life is a good habit to start. What should be reviewed is dictated by our unique and individual lives, but there are fundamental areas of our life we all should be monitoring.

What has been done for example. What was done in the last period of time in our review period. How did we improve our life, control personal resources, and limit stumbling blocks whenever possible. Could we have done anything better?

How is our time, money, and energy being used. Is there any slice of life which needs more time given to it. What is, or what has turned into a time waster(s) we can cease to do. Time wasters come in many forms, and a time waster for one person is time well spent for another. Knowing what is and is not important for us is a key to our success.

What was done well, and what could be done better is something we should learn and understand. We have interactions, arguments, and frustrations which we have handled very well. We also have days when we were not exactly a glowing example of the proper way to handle issues. Defining and understanding when we were doing our best, and those in which we were not allows us to prepare for the next time a similar problem starts to happen.

Living is a dynamic process; our individual life should not be managed by how we feel at the moment. Not feeling like doing something that needs to be done, is as bad as overdoing something that should have been ignored. Setting calendar review periods to review what is going on in our life provides better direction, and helps us learn so we better manage our life problems.

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Recover Missing Linux Boot Loader

Because I like to tinker with Linux, and use different distributions, I have been multi-booting Windows 7, and three different Linux distributions using Grub 2 as my boot loader for a about a month now. As with all things Linux off the mainstream, tinkering and  multi-booting is a problem waiting to happen. Yesterday it happened again – with gusto.

One of the three linux distributions on my hard drive wanted a distribution upgrade. I allowed the upgrade, but was not happy with the results. Something in the upgrade went wrong and the system was very sluggish. Because all three distributions were XFCE or XFCE/Gnome, I thought perhaps a KDE distribution would be a fun change.

The Linux using KDE distribution I was installing had no option to not install Grub Legacy during install. How bad could this be I thought to myself as I let Grub legacy be installed. Perhaps for a Grub using expert it is not big deal.

As for myself, it was a problem. After some tinkering trying to recover gracefully, I went from Grub 2 with four main boot options, to two Linux only boot options, to no boot loader at all. All boot loading options were destroyed.

Parted Magic , saw my hard drive as one big blank space.

Screen shot from Parted Magic home page screenshotsI use a method I developed out of similar desperation as a result of past tinkering gone bad to fix my no boot loader dilemma. It is not the best, prettiest, or quickest way to fix a boot loader manager problem, but it works and is simple.

The best method I have read about is ‘Chroot’ing into a failed system and recovering the system. Reading about Chroot from the man page and random postings does not sound simple to me. There are probably other methods of fixing a non booting hard drive too, but I am not aware of them.

I developed my fail safe, easy way to recover my non booting hard drive through trial and error recovering from my past errors. I am only a system administrator for my home computers, so speed, elegance, and efficiency are not top priorities for me, though I have improved from days of old when I would wipe the hard drive and do a complete install starting with Windows.

My recovery system method is simple, and it saves the day at the expense of thirty minutes and for me an extra linux install.

I always have a Parted Magic CD , and an Ubuntu CD around. These two cd’s are part of my all around fix serious problems emergency kit. Both of them are about a year old, so I do not think they need to be the latest and greatest.

Here are the steps I use to recover from boot failure for a simple minded Linux user like myself. Recovery from times when my tinkering creates problems of epic proportion for myself. Times like today when I once again lost all ability to boot to either Windows or one of three installed Linux distributions on my hard drive.

Using Parted magic cd either reformat any current Ubuntu partitions for an Ubuntu re-install, or create two new small partitions using empty drive space for an initial Ubuntu install. Designate the two partitions as /root and /home and of course use the /swap partition you already have from previous installs.

Ubuntu is the best distribution I know for finding, identifying, and listing all operating systems on a hard drive. When Ubuntu installs Grub, it will find and list all bootable partitions on your hard drive, at least in my experience. Install Ubuntu to the two partitions you created or have made available using a manual install as you do not want to wipe out your hard drive.

You now have recovered Windows and all Linux operating systems on your hard drive. Ubuntu itself does not take up much space and you need not change anything or delete Ubuntu unless the space it takes up is needed. If Grub was your previous boot loader, you can boot into your Linux of choice and re-install grub and make a new configuration file.

If Lilo was your previous boot loader, it is best not to try to re-install Lilo as Lilo does not do well  over writing Grub boot data.

05/22/10 – PCLinuxOS includes MBR recivery on the live CD. Might want to check it out, it is a great Distribution, my second Linux install, and one of my recommended favorites.

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Lose New Years Resolutions Find Year Long Intentions

I am guessing like most people, you have defined your resolutions for the next year. How do they feel?  Most likely your resolutions are maintenance type resolutions to take care of something with your physical self.

Resolutions such as losing weight, quitting something, or exercising more are common resolutions that are made each New Year. These resolutions are for the most part hollow, and generally groundless.

New Years resolutions are rarely followed over the whole year. The first days and weeks resolutions are fresh and part each days focus. As weeks three, four and beyond arrive, resolutions that were made so firmly, start sliding down the what is important today scale.

Should any of these resolutions really have been be made? Are any of these resolutions really important in life? Are those resolutions only space fillers or place holders, forgotten by the end of the month? Most importantly, do resolutions make anyone feel good way inside where it counts?

Perhaps it is time to make real choices that mean something, and will potentially make a real difference each and every day of the next year, and every year after. I suggest my rule of three to help make real resolutions. This rule of three creates a timeline of the year. Use the rule of three to split the year into: this week, this month, and this year.

Instead of making resolutions, add value to your life this year and create intentions. An intention is to have a course of action, resolution is simply finding a solution but not acting on it. When creating your intentions, make intentions having a path making real changes in your life.

Pretend it is possible this next year may be the last year you will be alive. If the idea of this next year being your last year alive is scary, think about people you knew or heard of, who thought they would be here this year, making yet another list of resolutions to be forgotten after a few weeks. Being alive means accepting we may be one of those people that someone alive pauses to think about this time next year.

Now that resolutions are out and intention is in, it is time to take the next step. Look at your next week, starting tomorrow, the day after, or whatever day you pick as the start of your week. What can you do to make a real difference in your life that will make you feel and those around you feel good? What will you intend for the next month that can not be done in a week? What will you intend for the remainder of what may be your last year that you can not do in a day or a month? What changes can you bring into your life that will actually mean something.

Here is my New Years rule of three. What are you going to intend for the next week? What are you going to intend for the next month? What are you going to intend for the next year? Thinking in this way is acknowledging our mortality, and focusing our intentions in manageable periods. Combined in this manner intention becomes a powerful reality, and a life tool everyone can use.

Each of our lives are unique, as are our life situations. Below are some suggestions of what you may wish to intend in your life. Intention will improve your life, and the lives of all who will enter and leave your life next week, month, and year. Read these thoughts over and change them for use in your life or use them as starting points for totally new intents in your life.

Resolutions are generally weak and lead to yet another failure on the list of many. Thought out meaningful intentions are powerful life changing tools which make you grateful to be finally alive.

Here are some thoughts to help create intention for your personal use:  Tell a parent, sibling, or friend what you really want to tell them; Find out peoples names who are peripheral in your life, and tell them how they change your life for the better by doing what they do; Be grateful and respectful to the once living things that are now your food; Learn about a people or culture you know nothing about; Learn more about your spiritual self.

Learn more about your religion and why you believe what you do; Read autobiographies, listen to audio books, or watch movies about people you admire; Learn another persons culture and beliefs; Create quiet time to be outside; Buy, plant, and care for a plant(s); Plant or place a potted flower in a needy public place and take care of it; Find someone you can help each _; Attend a church you have never been to; Eat a meal of food you have never eaten; Talk to strangers, strangers have something important to tell you about your life right now, ask them what it is. Look for ways to make a difference in someone’s life.

Here is an easy to remember thought: ‘To be resolute is to be unwavering, to intend is to have action and purpose. I create my life with intent.’

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