Archive for the ‘musings’ Category

Thinking about a career change

Saturday, February 4th, 2012

Three months ago I left my job of 14 years, where I’d worked on the same product with many of the same people since I started part-time in college. There were a lot of things that I had loved about that job, and a lot of things that I still thought were great, but I had this growing sense that it was time to move on. The only problem was, I had no idea how to do that. Of course I was aware of some of the basics — I hadn’t been living in a vacuum — but I didn’t know firsthand where to start and how to proceed.

I set out analyzing my feelings, figuring out what my options were, and creating a plan for how to go forward. I rarely use pen & paper anymore, but this was one of those tough brain-dumping exercises where I needed to blurt ideas out freely on a pad, then spend time later exploring them and fleshing them out. After lots of days & hours working through the ideas, tossing some out and adding new ones in, and talking them out with Chrissy and others, I settled on a plan that I could believe in.

My next step was to document the plan, and to keep revising it as I went along in my job hunt. I didn’t get very far with that: fortunately, I found a great new job very quickly. So I guess I could say that the plan worked very well, or that I just had dumb luck and never really put the plan to the test. Either way, I thought the plan was useful in building my confidence and in focusing my sights on a specific goal. If you’re interested, see below:

The plan in LucidChart: http://bit.ly/A0oLp8 (Click Open this Example to zoom in.)

Click the image below to see the chart full-size, or download it as a pdf file.
job and career change plan

If you’ve read this far, maybe you’re in a similar spot. I know it’s a very scary place to be, but it’s also exciting to have such an opportunity to steer your future. I hope my chart can help you in some small way, and I wish you the best of luck!

Product search

Tuesday, January 31st, 2012

Last weekend I set out to build a shelf for G’s room. My main goals were to custom-fit it to a particular wall in her room, and to keep the cost low. I’d done a few shelves like this in our last house, using melamine boards from Home Depot or Lowe’s.

After sketching my rough plans, my usual next step is to drive over to Home Depot and look at what boards they have in stock. I then adjust my plans on the fly while standing in the store aisles. This time I decided to try doing that step at home, via the web. That way I could know the exact cost ahead of time, compare other stores’ prices, look at alternative materials, and decide whether to buy vs. build.

Home Depot’s site made this appallingly difficult to do. After 5 minutes of drilling down through vague category names, I gave up and tried keyword searching. That turned up a donut machine as the top result by relevancy for “melamine“, as shown in the below image. (The model number contains “MDF”, and MDF must be a synonym for melamine — but why is Home Depot selling donut makers anyway?)

product search results from home depot

I persevered and clicked through several pages of results on the Home Depot site, eventually finding the few different boards that I had in mind. The exercise made me think, though, that there is potential for a retailer that can provide a great user experience and great results for this kind of situation.

Jurassic Park source code

Friday, January 20th, 2012

Jurassic Park is on AMC right now (one of Chrissy’s all-time favorite movies). Dennis (aka Newman) is hacking away at a computer, just before he explains that some systems may go down, and runs out to drop off the dino eggs. I decided to pause and take a look at the code. It was blurry when paused, but I could pick out a few strings keywords, some comments, and regexes. A little bit of googling, and I found the exact file:

ftp://128.208.240.87/pub/fromRoger_G3/OPTICALS/Backup-3_optical/Backup-3B/MPW/Examples/Examples/CheckOutActive.txt

Surprisingly, I didn’t find any trivia sites or references to this fact. So, here’s my first, tiny, and probably last contribution to the pile of movie trivia available on the internet. Click the thumbnail below to see the code up close.

Jurassic Park source code

Now that I’ve posted an image which contains both a copyrighted movie and copyrighted source code, I feel I can take the SOPA & PIPA thing more personally. (Not that I didn’t take it seriously before, I just need to experience things myself in order to take them to heart.)


# CheckOutActive - Check the active window out for modification
#
# Usage: Called by a user­defined menu item
#
# CheckOutActive uses the ProjectInfo command to determine the
# parent project for the file open as the Active window. Once this
# project has been determined, the file open as the Active window
# can be properly checked out.
#
# © Apple Computer, Inc. 1988
# All rights reserved.

End

# Request a comment before we check the file out. It is still possible
# that the checkout will fail because the lastest revision on the trunk
# is already checked out for modification by someone else.

(Set comment "`Request -d "{Task}" "What changes will you make?" || Set error {Status}`")
If {error} == 0
Evaluate "{®3}" =~ /(,([0-9.]+[a-z]*)*)®4[0-9.]+/ # {®4} contains the branch
If "{comment}" ‚ ""
Checkout -t "{comment}" -c -m -project "{®2}" "{Active}{®4}"
Else
Checkout -c -m -project "{®2}" "{Active}{®4}"
End
If {Status} ‚ 0

Update Aug 2016 — Got this message from Lawrence D’Oliveiro at http://www.geek-central.gen.nz :

Came across your blog item about the source code extracted from the Jurassic Park screen shot.

I can tell you what language that is: it’s MPW Shell script. This was Apple’s integrated development environment that ran native on the old (non-protected, non-Unixy, not-quite-multitasking) MacOS. I used it for many years from the 1980s into the 1990s, to write code in Pascal, then Modula-2, then C. Those “Checkout” commands are for the integrated version control system, called “Projector”, which I never quite figured out how to use.

The simple power of b-sides

Saturday, September 17th, 2011

The digital native generation has never experienced owning music in the form of a physical tape or disc. CD’s have become relics, as useless as 8-track tapes. Growing up in the 80’s (the heyday of the cassette tape), moving to CD’s in the 90’s, and then to streaming radio, podcasts, and downloads in the last decade, I have to acknowledge the leaps & bounds that the music industry has made in improving the quality, portability, and durability of their product. However, since I spend a decent amount of my time listening to DJ’s playing old vinyl, I sometimes ponder other aspects of what was better, worse, or just different with the old modes of distribution.

One big difference: iTunes lets you buy any single song, one at a time. We’ve always had singles, and record companies have always pushed individual songs rather than whole albums, but we’ve lost an important piece of the concept: the b-side.
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Commuting isn’t so bad, part 1

Friday, September 16th, 2011

For much of my career I had a 5-minute commute. I wondered how coworkers could stand spending 2 hours a day in their cars. In 2010 Numara moved, bringing my drive to 20 minutes. Not ideal, but I still felt lucky to have a relatively short drive. This year, my family & I acted on a really great opportunity to move. One of the few downsides that I feared was my commute: it would be 50-60 minutes each way.

I asked friends about their commuting habits, and searched the web for advice. I am amazed at how quickly I’ve adapted my daily rhythm, so much that I actually look forward to the drive on most days! I’ve been jotting down some of my trials, successes, and failures over the past 3 months of learning to commute, and I figured I’d share them in occasional blog posts.

I’ll start with a simple tip: snacks & drinks.

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Do it without titles

Friday, September 9th, 2011

Dear Gmail,

Why do you insist that every mail I send should have both a subject and a body?

I just want to send a single nugget of thought, sprinkled with #hashtags. I don’t want to spend extra time typing out a meaningless extra field (especially if I’m mailing from my phone and trying to finish before the light turns green).

If you expect to continue in your pivotal role as the glue between all of my apps and devices, you should stop hassling me with these silly warnings.

P.S. Most of the rest of everything you do is reliably awesome.

P.P.S. I stole the subject of this post from another blog, Launching a start-up? Do it without titles.