Archive for November, 2007

Thanksgiving Day List

Thursday, November 22nd, 2007

Things I’m extremely grateful for (I would fight and die for them):

  • Liberty–I’m blessed to live in one of the world’s most free countries.
  • The Gospel of Jesus Christ–I’m grateful for its guiding principles as well as its ability to heal pain and change people.
  • Brittany–I’m grateful for a wife who loves me and loves the Lord.
  • Family–I’m grateful for parents, siblings, and even in-laws who all somehow put up with me.
  • Friends–I’m grateful for the fun and the support they provide.

Things I’m grateful for (I would pay good money for them):

  • Recreation–skiing, snowboarding, wakeboarding, biking, hiking, camping, climbing, etc.
  • Nice Cars–fast, refined, quiet, luxurious sport-sedans are my favorite.
  • Motorcycles–nothing quite like a cruise with my wife up the canyon on a summer’s afternoon.
  • Sports–the NBA playoffs are probably my favorite.
  • Technology–electronic devices are cool, but the Internet is freak’n awesome.
  • Books–careful, they are addicting.
  • Movies–two hours where I forget all my stresses.

Things I’m grateful for but shouldn’t be:

  • Maple Bars–I have a love-hate relationship with whoever invented that dang delectable.
  • Tan Skin–It’s nice to look at and gives us confidence, but I guess it will kill us some day.

Henry Ford Had No Limiting “Mind Sets”

Saturday, November 17th, 2007

Earlier this week Ford Motor Co. flew me to their headquarters in Dearborn, Michigan to be interviewed for a position as a financial analyst. In total they brought in 150 potential recruits and called it the Ford Talent Management Conference. We were put through an array of different interviews: group, case, technical, and behavioral. Between the interviews we were given two awesome experiences:

1. First, we toured Ford’s proving grounds where we saw an array of future vehicles still clad in their camouflage coverings. We were then allowed a quick test drive in a Ford Fusion around one of the many test tracks. Finally, the proving ground experience reached its pinnacle as I was sitting next to a professional driver in a Shelby Mustang GT500 sliding sideways through turns–what MotorTrend reader hasn’t dreamed of day like this?

2. The other rewarding experience was a tour of the Rouge Factory. This is the factory where the F150 is built today, but its heritage goes all the way back to the Model T. The scale of this factory was enough to boggle my mind. It is huge!

Henry built the first Model T in 1901. In 1903 he started Ford Motor Company (he had already failed with two other companies). By 1913 he was producing the Model T on an assembly line that brought production time down to 98 minutes per car and lowered costs to the point where he could sell the cars at a price most Americans could afford. In 1916 the price of a new Model T was $360 (down from $850 in 1908). These accomplishments alone made him legend–he was the head of a wildly successful company that employed thousands and changed the way the world looked at manufacturing.

Henry wasn’t done. Frustrated by the company’s reliance on outside suppliers for things like steel, rubber, and glass; he envisioned a factory where nothing but raw materials came in, and finished cars went out. In 1918 he started construction on the Rouge plant. When it was finished in 1928, it had it’s own shipyard, steel mill, glass plant, and electric plant. It employed over 100,000 people! The Rouge had become the world’s largest factory.

At the conference’s end I was not offered a job, but I didn’t leave feeling empty handed. My mind was and is full of new inspiration–I was reminded that changing the world is possible.

Teamwork: Be an Asset not a Liability

Sunday, November 4th, 2007

BYUi has a tackle football program with eight different teams that all play each other nine on nine. Because I’m married to a BYUi student, they are allowing me to play. It has been fun to fulfill the childhood dream of suiting up in full pads and getting out in the middle of the action. At the same time it has also been quite humbling. I am by far the smallest guy on my team and one of the smallest in the league. None of my gear fits. My shoulder pads hang three inches off of each shoulder and don’t allow me to lift my hands above my face. My jersey is an extra large (better suited for a lineman). My pants are a size too big and sag off my butt like a child’s soiled diaper. My cleats are hand-me-downs from my younger, and much larger brother (they are a full size too large).

Because of my quickness (most of which is negated by my gear) my team put me at corner-back. I have the simple job of guarding the other team’s best athletes one on one in the open field. To this point, I have played in three games. During which, I’ve had two touchdowns scored on me, been beat on a host of different deep plays, missed a couple of key tackles in the open field, and been benched twice.

It hasn’t been all negative of course. I have made a couple of nice tackles and broken up a few passes. I’ve had a couple of shots at getting an interception, but both situations required me to catch the ball above my head. When I couldn’t get both hands up because of my shoulder pads, I had to reach up with just one hand and bat the ball down (still a nice defensive play).

So what’s the lesson I’m learning? This is the first time that I can ever remember being a part of an organization where I’m looked at as a liability instead of an asset. I hate it! I want to make sure that I’m an asset to every team I involve myself with.

There are three games left in the season. I’m trying to find some shoulder pads and cleats that fit. I’m going to play my heart out and do everything I can to be an asset.

For $10 per year wordpress.com will let you use your own domain name.

Saturday, November 3rd, 2007

As I mentioned before, my wife Brittany recently started her own blog at wordpress.com. I love the service and had only two worries with it:

  1. I think that someday it could prove important to own the content of your own blog instead of leaving it to wordpress.com or whichever blogging service you use (I have nothing but a hunch to back that up).
  2. I’ve heard that search engine optimization on your own name is much more effective if you have your own domain (once again I don’t know how true this is).

I just figured out that you can register a domain name through wordpress.com and apply it to your blog (you have to pay for the registration of course). You can also use any domain name that you own through another registrar.

I had already bought http://brittanycrane.com so I directed it to her blog then through wordpress I set it as her blog address. I guess wordpress.com will still be the true owner of her blog, but at least problem number two is solved.

Learning how to use flikr

Saturday, November 3rd, 2007



Right after we got engaged.

Originally uploaded by crane.brittany

I have photos on multiple different computers. I have them on DVDs. I have a bunch on facebook as well as pyxlin (my private online journal). It’s time to consolidate. I know there are lots of different photo sites, but I’m choosing flickr because I can post photos directly to my blog, my journal, and facebook (these seem to be the places I need photos most).

This test post is for me to figure out how to blog using a flickr photo (this particular photo is of my wife and me right after I proposed).


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