Skip to main content

My favorite quote on time



"Man alone measures time. Man alone chimes the hour. And, because of this, man alone suffers a paralyzing fear that no other creature endures. A fear of time running out."

I can truly identify with this. The way we stress ourselves out on deadlines, timelines in today's life without realizing how these artificial borders we draw in the time dimension hurt our own health, our relationships, our family and our own happiness. 

What is more important is to pursue what is your true passion. When you do something because you love it, you no longer consider it work, you no longer worry about timelines. Neither you realize time flying by nor will you regret it. 

Comments

  1. Couldn't agree more. The more we are able to measure time minutely (in nano seconds), the less we seem to have it. Before clocks, meetings were at sunset or when the sun was above your head by the riverside and no one was late to the meetings :)

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Workaround to bypass Salesforce SSO

One of the best practices for implementing Single Sign On for your Salesforce org is always ensure there is a way your System administrator can login via the standard login page side-stepping the SSO configuration.  Reason for this is if ever something goes wrong with your Idp provider's service and the SSO authentication responses are not coming as expected, all your users are unable to login. That is, if you have setup your My domain to prevent logins via standard Salesforce login urls (login.salesforce.com). This includes the System administrator as well. Only if your system administrator can somehow login, then he or she can disable the SSO settings for your domain and allow login via the normal login page as a temporary measure. What do you do in such a situation? Well Salesforce has built a workaround for this which is not well documented anywhere (probably for a good reason :) ). I found out about it from a colleague at work. If your my domain url is - https://Com...

DBAmp for Salesforce - salesforce integration for SQL Server DBAs

Recently i got the opportunity to explore a tool called DBAmp for integration with Salesforce. I found it to be a very useful tool which will help with any data manipulation requirements in Salesforce. Following are my learnings from the exercise. Hope it helps any of you who may need to work with this tool -  DBAmp is a SQL Server package that can be used to integrate with Salesforce. The site where this software is available is - http://www.forceamp.com/ Overview: It essentially installs on top of an existing SQL Server database and provides an OLE DB connector that can be used to connect to Salesforce. Behind the scenes, it executes API calls against Salesforce for any SQL server command it receives. Thus we can create a connection in SQL server to Salesforce org and pull data into tables in the database just as if we are querying against Salesforce tables directly. Use cases for DBAmap + Salesforce: Many use cases exist for using this tool against Sales...

Asynchronous Apex webservice callout - Continuation pattern

In my last two posts, we went through a basic example of consuming an external web service in Salesforce to generate a stub class and then using that stub class to call the webservice from a visualforce page controller. Integrating Salesforce with SOAP webservice - Apex callout Integrating Salesforce with SOAP webservice - Apex callout part 2 In the above example, our callout was synchronous. The user as well as our code (system resources) are going to wait for the webservice to reply and our code to process the response prior to be able to do anything else. If the external webservice responds within 1-2 seconds, no harm done. This should be fine. However there are chances you will encounter webservices in business scenarios that will take longer to respond. This may be because they have to do a significant amount of work prior to responding back to Salesforce. Maybe they process huge number of transactions and during peak loads, their response is slower. All possible scenar...