I Am Certified
This Time A Lion
Craning My Neck
A trip to LinkedIn
I was lucky enough to visit LinkedIn’s Chicago offices (525 West Monroe Street, Chicago) last week, organized via DePaul’s Kellstadt Marketing Group. I got a quick tour of the offices, and then got to hear about the nature if their work from a panel of account executives, managers, planners, and consultants.
Based upon the presentation, there are two areas of LinkedIn that I feel I need to investigate:
There were also some nice touches that I noticed touring the offices (which have a distinct Google vibe to them).
A vending machine contains various computer accessories that a LinkedIn employee might need. The employee simply has to swipe their ID card to get the external keyboard, cable, battery, mouse, etc. that they need. A clever idea that allows for employees burning the midnight oil to get an essential item with a minimum of fuss.
The tech desk / help desk has a simple kiosk where you can provide feedback via happy and unhappy faces.
The halls have been decorated with murals and designs that incorporate Chicago iconography and places of meaning.
Lastly, all the employees have adjustable height desks. I did not take a picture here, as I did not want to alarm those happily at work. However, this particularly impressed me. I liked how LinkedIn employees could easily adjust the height of their desks and move from sitting to standing. I don’t know which type of desk they used, but it looks like they could be NextDesk Terras.
I had several questions that I wanted to ask that day (Lynda.com, certification, growth issues, etc.) but the questions were not the right ones for the panel. However, it was nice to meet some new folks and see how they work.
Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell
I enjoyed the book (Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell), and I am looking forward to seeing this…
Theatre District
Chicago
Open-Sankoré Alternative: OpenBoard
Open-Sankoré does not work with OS X Yosemite. If you run the program in OS X 10.10, Open-Sankoré closes immediately. The only workaround I have discovered is rolling back to OS X 10.9 (Mavericks). The Open-Sankoré website does not provide much insight on when this issue might be fixed. However, it looks like there may be an alternative…
Using Google Translate, I can see that SEM-Logistics and Christian Oihenart have released a version of OpenBoard that works on OS X Yosemite (although there is apparently a small bug in the display of the dock). I have not installed or tested OpenBoard, and have no idea how well this might work, but it is now on my radar.
Update: 30th July, 2015
The old link to OpenBoard is dead. This new one seems to work.













