There’s a powerful metaphor here, and it’s especially powerful because they are using sheep to do this.
But, it honestly begs the question: “Who’s really in control? Are you or is the technology that you’re using?”
If you’re not, then perhaps you should change your strategy (or maybe you should simply get one).
[VIDEO IS BROKEN]
JakeSchwein says
I dont know who is controlling who but that is one of the best and creative ideas I have ever seen!!
Andy Darnell says
Holy Cow… er… sheep
razibhasan says
Technology should be controlled. Not me!
Graham Brenna says
Okay…
A: HOLY AWESOMNESS BATMAN!!!
B: This is another post that comes just at the right time. For about 6 days my church's server had been down! The majority of our staff had to login to "webmail" to check their emails and I, as the IT person who knows very little about networking and DNS and all that jazz had to install OpenOffice on as many of their local hard drives as possible. Then I had to give them all access to our server's file cabinet via simple windows networking. (Easy for me… way difficult for them). In my personal office space I've created my own computer network between my 2-3 computers that I have setup in there… I've made it so that I don't ever have to log on to the server in the same way the rest of the staff does… so of course… when they can't be productive… guess who's workspace they want to use?!?! haha…
sorry I guess I'm venting a little bit (the issue has been resolved so I am happy again). But it goes to the point that, at least for the last 6 days or so, the technology has controlled me. We had to bring in our server's architect to fix the problem… he was "stumped" for about a day and a half… that's how bad this one was…