Archive - Site Info RSS Feed

And We’re Live!

This weekend, I migrated this site from Nexcess (on a reseller account that I own) to WP Engine. First, I still love Nexcess. They have served—and continue to serve—me extremely well. I’ve been with Nexcess since 2006 with zero problems, issues or complaints. I’m maintaining my account with them. They’re still hosting everything not at www.brandonkraft.com for me and are still hosting my client sites. I’ll write a review of my great experience with Nexcess later—this isn’t a comparison, except the speed test.

photocredit: flickr/brunogirin

WP Engine made me an offer to try them out and I’ve heard too many good things to not explore an Austin company dedicated to hosting sites built upon the same content management system that I primarily work with now. Continue Reading…

Servant Leadership Begins at Home

This site’s theme for 2012 (and beyond?) is Servant Leadership Begins at Home.

photocredit: flickr/lovestruck94

Servant Leadership, as a term, is most connected to the work of Robert Greenleaf, beginning with his book Servant Leadership: A Journey into the Nature of Legitimate Power and Greatness. The underlying idea is that the most effective form of leadership is in the form is service. True leaders do not rule with iron fists, but serve their community (organization, business, whatever social arrangement).

Christians have the prime example of a servant leader in Jesus Christ, but this concept is not exclusively Christian. The Laozi from  ca. 5th century BC China (thank you History of Asian Cultures course) speaks of leadership in a similar vein. Indian, Islamic and other ancient writings, religious and secular, promote servant leadership.

While at the University Catholic Center, our team introduced this philosophy to student leaders and developed their skills toward leading through service. Within ministry or the non-profit world, this model is obvious. While not as obviously applicable to businesses, research is clear that companies based on servant leadership are successful.

What about at home? From my Catholic perspective, the way spouses should treat one another and parents must lead a home from a servant’s perspective. How can the concept of servant leadership, as a formal leadership model, be applied to home life? What best practices exist that help to realize this “leadership structure” within the most basic unit of society?

Being a father is to lead the house. Mothers lead too, but there are plenty of “mommy blogs” out there that speak to the trials, tribulations, best practices and philosophies of motherhood. Fatherhood isn’t as explored online and, being a dad, I can only speak personally to the masculine aspect of domestic leadership.

Over the coming months, I hope you will join me as we explore leadership, fatherhood, rearing kids, spirituality and more.

Design Notes

I’m beginning the process of redesigning my website, but since I’m not going to have a free weekend to knock it out (as I did with V’s Voice), you’ll get to see the process live. My overall goal is have a cleaner website that better promotes my content. A liveblog, of sorts, after the jump, follows, detailing the effort. Continue Reading…

Not really a cool time

I just wanted to make a quick note that it is currently 11:11:11 a.m. on 1/11/11.  I just read some folks getting excited by it all.

No.

I’m waiting until November for a random, pointless post about a moment in time that doesn’t make any difference in the world.

Umm… ignore this post though… this isn’t a random pointless post, it is a scheduling announcement.

Playing with WordPress

For the past couple of hours, I’ve been trying to tweak a couple of things on this blog that have been bugging me since moving from Movable Type to WordPress. The RSS feed (what provides my postings to Google Reader, etc) has been screwy and, I think, still does not show the entire entry even though the settings are correct. The AdSense banners weren’t right. Lots of little things.

WordPress did a nice job on their plugins. It is really easy to install new plugins. I’ve installed all kind of plugins to play with this or that feature. That’s fine, except the plugins can break large chunks of the site and it’s harder than heck to figure it out. One plugin, which had zero to do with RSS, caused those feeds to break. After spending much more time than I should have trying to track the problem, I finally deactivate all plugins. The feed worked instantly.

After a process of trial and error, figured it out and installed an alternative plugin that provides the same functionality.

I do apologize for all my recent postings being re-served to RSS subscribers. I’m trying to track that problem…

Page 1 of 1012345»...Last »