Goodbye Romeo

Our old dog Romeo died last week and we are missing him. Romeo and Juliet were born in 1996 from a neighborhood stray who crawled under the garage of our old house.  There were seven pups of wildly varied ancestry. We found homes for the other five.

Romeo was mostly white with pale yellow patches. He had a curly tail. Romeo’s big bony head and broad chest showed clearly that his father was a pit bill. Romeo was not very smart but was always sweet tempered and gentle. We used to say he had a 30-second-reset on his brain because it took Romeo a long time to learn not to jump on people and to sit on command. However, Romeo was a good watch dog and knew when to bark. He seemed to know the difference between our regular postal carrier and anyone new, even from the back yard.

We have some friends whose daughter loved Romeo. When Beth was 4-years-old, we had to rescue him repeatedly from her shoving balls into his mouth. Romeo never wanted to play fetch but she kept giving him balls. He was very patient about his ball collection.

Juliet was always the smarter of the two dogs. She learned young to climb chain link fences with her toes and to open gates with her nose. Romeo always followed his sister even when his hips and back leg began to hurt him as he got older. Juliet is now getting used to our new 8-month-old puppy, Redda. We have been giving Juliet many special treats and quiet time for resting away from her effervescent new pack mate.

It is hard to say goodbye to a good dog, even when he is old and in pain and the time has clearly come.

Jessica and puppies, 1996

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Paul, John, Romeo, Redda

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Romeo’s last day

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Images Copyright 1996-2010 John Plocher and Katy Dickinson

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Weird Worm – What is it?

Living on the Guadalupe River in San Jose, California, we often see raccoons, opossums, Jerusalem crickets, squirrels, black snakes, toads, mallard ducks, Canada geese, plus song birds and hawks of all sizes.

This week, our neighbor Jamie called John to come see something interesting on the street. John took pictures of an odd very long and thin pinkish-tan worm, about 1-1/2 feet in length (45 cm). It was very lively – wriggling all over the rain-wet pavement. I saw something like it several years ago at night when it was too dark for detail. We are still trying to figure out what it is.

Suggestions?

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Images Copyright 2010 John Plocher

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Planning Poker and SEED (Estimating and Rating Tools)

I went to a breakfast meeting of the PM PM SIG (Project Management Special Interest Group) today to hear Kevin Thompson of cPrime talk about “Wideband Delphi (Agile) Estimation for Project Managers”. It turned out to be a fun talk about an easy-to-use estimating tool called Planning Poker by Mountain Goat Software. I was surprised by the similarities between the Planning Poker estimation method and the participant selection method we have used for many years for Sun’s SEED worldwide Engineering mentoring program.

Planning Poker

Planning Poker is based on the Delphi estimation method pioneered by the Rand Corporation in the 1940s, then refined by Barry Boehm in the 1970s.

I volunteered to participate in the demonstration during this morning’s meeting. I pretended to be an Expert on Chickens. I was quizzed by a team of three estimators who had to decide how many chickens would be needed to feed dinner to twenty people. Here is how we used the Planning Poker estimation cards:

  1. Discuss the work to be done, clarify details, each estimator gets a set of cards
  2. A Facilitator asks each estimator to pick one numbered card from their set (each card has one number: 0, 1/2, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13…).
  3. Once each estimator has picked his card, the Facilitator asks that all the cards be shown
  4. If estimates differ (for example: two people estimated 5 chickens and the other estimated 13 chickens), assumptions which drove selection of the low and high numbers are discussed
  5. More operational definitions and details are requested from the Expert as needed (for example: I said that one third of the twenty diners were vegetarian but the chickens were very small)
  6. The estimation cycle repeats until there is agreement (our group agreed that 13 chickens would feed 20 people)

This method reduces bias of team members just agreeing with each other’s estimates for social or hierarchical reasons. Since everyone picked his number card in private then turned over the cards simultaneously, each had to make a first estimate based on his own understanding.

SEED Selection

Here is how SEED selection for Recent Hire mentoring terms works:

  1. Each SEED application is read independently by at least two executive Selection Committee members. Each member ends up reading about the same number of applications.
  2. Each Applicant is ranked H-High, M-Medium or L-Low, with roughly 1/3 of the names in each category. For example, if there were 84 applications and 7 on the committee, if the goal is 40 Participants, each Selection Committee member would read 24 applications and have more-or-less eight High, eight Medium, and eight Low rankings to distribute.
  3. The committee gets a week to make their evaluations. Then, they meet by phone for a one hour meeting. During the first half of that meeting, a Facilitator says the name of each applicant and the two Selection Committee members who have rated that person give their rating: H, M, or L. After all applicants have been given two ratings,
    discussions follow.
  4. Discussions are often around differences of interpretation of the application materials and relative value to Sun Engineering of the applicant. Energetic discussions happen when the same Applicant is rated High by one and Low by another.
  5. Another common discussion is about how many Medium/Mediums to include to achieve an appropriate and balanced diversity among the Participants. Diversity of demographics, geography, and professional area are all considered.
  6. All SEED applicants rated H,H and M,H and L,H are accepted and also some rated M,M. SEED does not accept applicants rated L,L (low by both reviewers) or M,L.

Because the Selection Committee are all executives who may be rating staff reporting to other committee members, keeping the ratings private until the actual phone meeting helps reduce bias of members just agreeing with each other’s ratings for social or hierarchical reasons. As with Planning Poker, discussions start with outlying values rather than discussing all the details and assumptions for each rating.

Using Planning Poker or the SEED selection method means that potentially complex decisions can be made very quickly and with relative ease. This makes it easier to recruit team members, especially in the case of SEED where the members are very busy executives.

Read more about the SEED mentoring program in Sun Mentoring: 1996-2009 by Katy Dickinson, Tanya Jankot, and Helen Gracon (Sun Labs Technical Report TR-2009-185, August 2009).

Planning Poker set
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. PM PM SIG
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Images Copyright 2010 Katy Dickinson
Links updated 25 March 2014

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“On Leadership” – Ivan Sutherland’s SEED talk, now on YouTube

I am very proud to announce that the SEED worldwide Engineering mentoring program just published “On Leadership” – its first public video. Thanks to SEED Matthias Mueller-Prove (in Germany) who first suggested making Ivan Sutherland’s important 2006 SEED talk public.

A Sun Labs team including Mary Holzer, Sheri Kaneshiro, and Alan Lancendorfer took SEED’s rough internal video and created a polished product which is now available for free viewing as the featured video on the Sun Labs home page. Tanya Jankot and Sheri Kaneshiro created the original 2006 video for SEED. John Plocher and I followed my daughter Jessica’s instructions on How to Post Videos Longer Than 10 Minutes to YouTube.

If you want to see the video of Ivan Sutherland’s 2006 SEED talk “On Leadership” on YouTube, link to the play list to see all 8 segments in sequence. This video is Copyright 2006-2010, Sun Microsystems (uploaded with permission).

In his inspirational talk to SEED’s annual meeting, Ivan Sutherland (Sun Vice President and Fellow, Internet pioneer, and Turing award winner) speaks from a lifetime of experience working with many of the leaders and key innovators in the field of computing. Ivan answered the following questions from the SEED audience:

  • “Where does change belong: managing change or leading change?”
  • “What is the future of Computer Science (in the next five years)?”
  • “Is leadership a property of nature or nurture?”
  • “What makes people want to become leaders?”
  • “How does ambition fit into leadership?”
  • “Can one person encompass both leadership and management?”
  • “Is leadership the same in different situations?”
  • “What is the difference between taking the lead and being a leader?”
  • “Does being a leader once qualify you for all time in the future?”

Since I set up and hosted the meeting at which Ivan spoke, you can hear a tiny bit of my voice just at the end of “On Leadership”.

I hope you enjoy watching it!

Links updated 25 March 2014

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News from Doha, Qatar

My 21-year-old daughter Jessica arrived safely in Doha Qatar yesterday and reports that she is settling into her new apartment before starting classes at Carnegie Mellon University in Qatar (CMU-Q). She will be studying in the Middle East through April 2010.

This week’s Willow Glen Resident community newspaper published an article on Jessica’s work called “Internships help Willow Glen resident narrow career focus” (8 January 2010, by Mary Gottschalk, p.18). The half-page article describes her summer 2009 internship for the World Organization for Human Rights USA in Washington, D.C. and even mentions WP668, our backyard caboose. Jessica is quoted about her internship: “I expected to be dealing with coffee or filing. A lot of my friends were doing piece work and were not trusted with real responsibility…. I learned so much about human rights and how we litigate in the United States. It’s exactly the kind of work I want to do.”

Jessica, Paul, WP668 

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Family at San Francisco Airport, SFO 

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Jessica & Matt, SFO 

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Jessica at SFO 

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Images Copyright 2010 Katy Dickinson

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Bringing history to life

My father-in-law, retired pastor Rev. David Plocher, recently won an award from the Concordia Historical Institute for an article he published in the “WELS Historical Institute Journal” documenting his grandfather’s missionary work with Apache Indians in Arizona during the 1890s. There was an article about the award in the Waterloo, Wisconsin, Courier, dated 6 December 2009. Dave’s original article was published in two parts (April and October 2008), with the title “Apache Lutheran Mission Beginnings from the Letters of John Plocher.”

Both Dave and my mother-in-law Naomi have been researching family history since they retired. Since 1981 they have been charter members of the WELS Historical Institute. Dave found his grandfather John (Johannes) Plocher’s letters nearly by accident in the archives of the Wisconsin Lutheran Synod’s seminary in Mequon, Wisconsin, when he was helping Naomi to write an article. Dr. Arnold Lehmann translated the original German script into German Dave could read. Then Dave spent two years translating the letters into English. Dave also discovered his grandfather had created an Apache-English dictionary in 1893 (the dictionary is now in the Newberry Library in Chicago).

My husband John Plocher is named for his grandfather. His youngest brother, Martin Plocher, was for ten years principal and teacher at the school their great-grandfather founded on the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation near Peridot, Arizona. The school is next to the church Johannes Plocher built over 100 years ago on a foundation of local peridot olivine with tufa walls.

Some pictures John took on the Apache reservation during a 2002 visit:

Peridot, Arizona, San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation photo: copyright 2002 John Plocher Peridot, Arizona, San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation photo: copyright 2002 John Plocher
Peridot, Arizona, San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation photo: copyright 2002 John Plocher

Photos Copyright 2002 John Plocher

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Rescue Dog

Today, we brought home our new puppy. Redda (her original name, which we may change) is an 8 month old strawberry blonde collie-pit bull mix. She is smart and sweet and submissive so we think she will make a good addition to our two older dogs, Romeo and Juliet. Romeo and Juliet are 14-year-old litter mates. Romeo’s health is failing so we wanted to introduce a new member to our small pack before he died. Redda came to us from Andy’s Pet Shop in San Jose, California. Andy’s is an adoption center for homeless or rescued pets.

We visited Redda at Andy’s several times. We brought Juliet to Andy’s for a visit and we brought Redda to our house to visit Romeo before we decided that the three dogs would get along well. They have had a good day together. Tonight, we take Juliet and Redda for their first neighborhood walk together.

Juliet in John’s lap after her bath

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Romeo and Juliet and John

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Redda at Andy’s Pet Shop

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Images Copyright 2010 Katy Dickinson

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