 Monday, March 17, 2008
Today I was taking a little time to look through the web logs for the blog and found it very interesting to see which posts were the most popular. It's always interesting to see how people get to your blog and what search terms they used. After reviewing this data I decided to make a quick list of the top 5 technical posts. So what I did was compile them by both visits and search results. I think my favorite part about this list is it's all over the map as far as technology goes. The fact the number 1 post is about trying to write software using a Microsoft language on an Apple computer is my favorite part.
5. Playing with Google Maps: It seems that I'm not the only one that gets a kick out of playing with google APIs.
4. Teaching XSL and AJAX to work together Part I and Teaching XSL and AJAX to work together Part II: Yes, I know these are actually two posts, but it's a series, and I thought I'd listed them together. XSL and AJAX work well together with just a few tricks.
3. Browser Troubleshooting 101 Part I and Browser Troubleshooting 101 Part II: Another series of post that came about from training some of our help desk people on how to trouble shoot browser issues.
2. Searching Indexing Services with ASP.NET and C# and Searching Indexing Services with ASP.NET and C# Part II: Yet another series of post. This one came out of a project that I had write for our Board of Director. They needed an extremely fast search function for the Extranet application they used. This series of post also comes up almost daily in search results.
1. Writing in C# on Mac OS X: After listening Scott Hanselman's Hanselminutes Podcast I had to try playing with Mono on my Beautiful Wife's Mac. This post was the result of that playing around and the post shows up every day in the referral by search category.
I hope you found this quick list helpful. Happy Coding
 Friday, March 14, 2008
It's amazing to me how much time I get to code these days. Actually I should say how little time I get to code any more.
Yesterday for example, I spent a couple hours in Excel (ick, sorry, not a huge fan of the whole Office Suite), at least 25 minute in TrackIt (Task Tracking Software) a few hours in SQL Query Analyzer and about 15 minutes coding in C#. The only reason I got the 15 minutes was I wrote a little console app to write some very long SQL Queries. Mostly because I didn't want to have to write them by hand. The rest of the day was spent working on an issue a user had, duplicated it and we reported it to the vendor.
I find that more often then not most of my work days are these kind of tasks. If I'm not fixing a users issue, and creating a fix (most of the time it's a browser setting), I'm coordinating with vendors on updates of their software they need to make or service issues that come up. This leaves few and fewer hours in the day for doing the part of my job I love, writing code. Heck for writing HTML pages, AJAX, Javascript and XML I still rather hand code. I use HTMLKit for this kind of work, and it's brilliant!
I've recently started reading and putting into practice the task management principles of GTD (Getting Things Done ) and I find I'm becoming more productive and getting through my task much quicker with greater follow through. Initally I felt that by being more productive and getting these task done quicker I'd have more time to code. Of course that hasn't quite been the case. A former boss use to say "no good deed goes unrevised", and believe me, truer words have not been said.
Where I work being Sr. Web Developer means wearing lots of hats. I do web development of course, but I also do server management, log management, vendor management and about ten other things that just aren't coming to the top of my head. Don't get me wrong, I'm happy to get to work on all these things. They help my to be more well rounded and I'm grateful for the opportunity to learn all these things. But the thing that got me in to Web Development in the first place was the code. Or more importantly learning to code.
You see simply writing code that I've written before isn't what I'm after. I mean anything I have to write more than twice, I've already created a template in CodeSmith to do. You see what I'm after is the learning that goes with a big new project. Pushing yourself to learn more, be more creative and to write applications that people really use.
So I've decided, like all things of this nature, I just have to take it back. I'm going to start slow, and see if I can set aside 1 hour during the work day to write new exciting code that makes me think and learn. I'm going to try the first hour of the day. 8am the coding hour. What do you think? Happy Coding
 Friday, March 07, 2008
I got a call from my friend RP today. He had a story to tell me that he was sure I could appreciate. You see he rides his bike to work almost everyday. However his ride home isn't along traffic filled streets, with hundreds of cars puffing out smog. He rides right along the marina. He gets some great photographs on his rides to and from work. If you look at his work you can tell that birds are the majority of what he shoots and posts. Well a few days ago he posted a pick of a seagull. He half joking said, please feel free to print it out and use it on your dart board. RP grew up in Florida along the beach. He grew up fishing and surfing, so he knows that seagulls are rats with wings. Well today, that changed, he saw a seagull that was in a bad way. Apparently this seagull had a lure that was hooked in it's beak and his feet. In the water this little fellow wasn't going to make it. So RP did what most people wouldn't, he hopped off his bike, ran down and fished the seagull out, took him to the boathouse near by and free the bird from the lure. He did a good thing, even though he doesn't like seagulls. This made me think of a time that I hopped into a fountain to rescue a pigeon that I didn't want to see drown. Like RPs dislike of seagulls, I detest pigeons. I mean "pig" is right there at the start of their name. So why don't I like pigeons? Well I didn't always have the desk job I have now. I worked with my Dad for many wonderful years. However the jobs weren't always wonderful. On one rainy cold night we got a call from a client, a bank that isn't around anymore, anyhow in one of their loan offices there was a mess to clean up and patch. You see the building had a flat roof. The pigeons had found a way between the roof and the ceiling. Well with the rain, there were lots of pigeons in that nest. Lots of pigeons equals lots of pigeons poop! Well with all the water from the rain and the mess that the unfortunately this pigeon bomb, made the the ceiling collapse right on to a loan officers desk. Our job was to clean it up and to patch the ceiling and to patch the roof in the rain. The pouring freezing rain. So of course I think, strike that I know that pigeons are rats with wings. So you could see why I don't like pigeons, and I'd imagine that RP has a story like it. So why did RP save that seagull and why did I save that pigeon. Well respect for life. That's something worth respecting.  Happy Life
 Monday, March 03, 2008
Childhood dreams are important, do you remember yours? I can tell you some of mine. I wanted to fly. Fly like superman, I can't tell you how many good bath towels got used as capes and snagged on the old swing set as I'd try to jump of the swings and grab the "cape" to fly. I wanted to be a computer programmer (yes, honestly I was a geek from way back. I'd check out byte magazine from the local library and then type in the programs into the Apple IIe they had in grammar school) I wanted to be a photographer. I was always fascinated with cameras and how the worked. I took pictures in my head all the time as a little kid. Well now that I'm a "grown-up" I've looked back and can see that I've actually achieved some of my childhood dreams. By day I'm a Sr. Web Developer, so definitely get to program computers. In fact I get to program for all computers that have an internet connection. How cool is that? Of course my hobby is photography. (Hobby is used in the most generic way, but obsession is much closer to the truth.) I've taken more pictures of the Boy then I can count (10 or 20 gigs worth). If you want to see some of my work, I have a photoblog, feel free to take a look. I feel pretty fortunate about both of those things. However I don't think I would of ever realized that both of these things were childhood dreams if I hadn't sat down and watched Randy Pausch's lecture. Randy is a pretty interesting guy. A Professor at Carnegie Melon, and a leader in the Virtual Reality field. His lecture is called " Really Achieving Your Childhood Dreams". It's part of a lecture series called "Last Lecture". The concept behind this series is simply this, hypothetically if you knew you were dying what would your last lecture be? However Randy has a little twist on this, you see he is actually dying of Pancreatic Cancer. His lived longer than the 6 months that this doctors gave him, but mostly from his courage. This is one of those inspirational things that I think everyone should watch. The repised version of the lecture that he gave on Oprah is embedded below, his full length lecture is here: Really Achieving Your Childhood Dreams
 Good In = Good Out
 Friday, February 29, 2008
Fred Potatoes
This morning for breakfast I had a yogurt. (I'm sure you're thrilled to know that, but wait there is a point to it.) So this morning The Boy (he's not a little boy any more) saw me eating this for breakfast, and he proceded to lecture me on that not being enough of a breakfast. Then he started to list off alternatives that would be acceptable. Oatmeal, Eggs, a bowl of cereal with Soy Milk (yes he was that specific) or even "Fred Potatos"! Of course he meant Fried Potatoes, I knew that. But this one really made me laugh. Not because he misspoke but because it was the first time in a long time I've heard him say something like this. The little kid goof up of words. I adored them when he was 3 and now that he's 7, I don't get to hear them that often. Soon they'll be gone. But today I'm relishing in Fred Potatoes. A ShaveLast night The Boy asked me if it hurt to shave. I was a little startled by this question, but I answered no, it pulls a little but it doesn't hurt. He simply said "ohh". So I explained how to hold the razor and which way to move with it as to not cut yourself. While I was answering his question in my mind's eye I journeyed back into the house I grew up in, that little house on the main street and the alley. I saw the 14 year old version of me and my Dad teaching me to shave. I remembered the way the afternoon sunlight fell into the room, the way breeze through the house felt, the smell of the shave cream, it all flooded back and drenched me like a huge wave. Talking with my Beautiful Wife about the Boys question last night she suggested that I show him how to shave. He hasn't really seen me shave. I'm the kind of guy that does all that stuff in the shower. So this morning I changed my routine. I took my shower first, then got dressed and asked him to come in as I was going to shave and I wanted him to see how to do it. So he ran in there, and I shaved in front of the sink, and showed him how to put on shave cream, which direction to use the blade, the whole bit. You know the stuff us adults take for granted. I even showed him on his arm that the blade doesn't hurt going in the right direction. He looked a little nervous at first, but after he saw that nothing happened, it stood there amazed. It was the best shave I've had in a long time. The Other Three Words There are three words your Dad always told you that you never listened to. I don't mean "I Love You", those words we can't ignore, and I'm happy to tell you I heard those words often. No I mean the other three word. You know them, "No", "Listen" and "Be Careful". "No", which of course taught us that we don't need everything we think we want. No also taught us that there was always a good reason behind his answer. Not just that he wanted to see us miserable, which of course we all thought as teenagers. No meant learning self-control. "Listen" which means, don't just hear the words, listen to the meaning and the way they are said. Listen means don't think about what you are going to say as we are talking to you, just recieve what I am saying to you. The older I get the more I understand that to listen, is very valuable advice. "Be Careful" Okay, you caught me, be careful is actually a two word phrase, but I never heard one without the other. Be Careful seems simple, but it's really a phrase that is inviting you to think. Think about what you are doing. Does it makes sense? Will you hurt yourself? Will you hurt others? All three are really great advise. Well Dad, it's taken almost 35 years, but I think I'm starting to get it now.  Have a great weekend everyone!
 Wednesday, February 27, 2008
Everyday we are bombarded with information. We get online and there are all these great websites with tons of useful information. Some of them very specific to our interest. At work we have to deal with the avalanche of email we all get everyday. There is so much thrown at us from every direction that information overload in inevitable. It feels like we are trying to Drinking from the Firehose. Most of us are classified as "Information Workers", which basically means we add value to information we gather and receive. Let's face it, most people you know work behind a desk in a cubicle. It's very rare for people to work outside and have something tangible to show for their work at the end of the day. A long time ago I had to come to the conclusion that if the electricity goes out, my work simply doesn't exist. Also in software development, to stagnate is to go backwards. Technology moves fast, and that again requires a ton of new information everyday. So how do we keep up with all this information that coming at us. Well you make the pipe smaller. That sounds good but how do we do that? Yesterday we talked about email so today lets talk about the websites. Most of these websites or blogs have RSS feeds. An RSS feed is simply the content of the website without the wrapper that can used in anyway the reader sees fit. Now we gather a list of the sites we read most often and we pull all of the data together with a RSS Reader. I personally use Google Reader. This lets me access my feeds from where ever I maybe be without having to have a RSS Reader client installed. However as we discussed yesterday we have to limit how often we access this information and how often it access us. I read about 40 sites a day through it. Not a lot by some, a terribly large amount to others. Either way if the reader is open all day long it will take all our attention just like email would. I personally try to only check it twice a day. I find skimming through the Feeds in the morning while I drink my cup of coffee is a great way to ease into the day. Then in the afternoon, around 2 or 3 when my focus seems to wain I take skim through whatever was updated. So lets talk about skimming for a minute.To steal a phrase from Stanley Spadowski's Funhouse, I'm trying to find the marble in the oatmeal this is what skimming does for me. I find the three or four post a day that really interest me and I find relavent. There is some really great content out there in internet land the secret is make sure you're drinking from the garden hose, and not the firehose.  Happy Hunting
 Tuesday, February 26, 2008
Hi Y'all, it's been a while, you know it, I know it, lets move on. I've been reading a lot of blog post lately that have to do with being more productive. There are a whole laundry list of them, zenhabits.net, lifereboot.com, 43folders.com, Tim Ferriss ..etc. Of course I'm aggregating these sites through Google Reader (an amazing time saving tool if it's used correctly if used incorrect, a time vacuum). One of the common threads that I'm seeing with these sites/blogs is that they are helping Common Sense make a comeback. Now it seems to me that Common Sense and the business world as we know and work in it have very little to do with each other. For example, lets say your have a company policy that says all emails and calls need returned within the business day. This is pretty typical of most places. In itself this is not a bad policy, but what ends up happening is you have Senior staff that expect instant responses to email. Now email is being used as a poor substituted for Instant Messaging (Which is a whole other subject). So now you have your email client open all day long. You have the little outlook window popping up to say hey look at me, and you are living in this world where you are trying work and concentrate with a non-stop distractions of emails popping up. Whether they be legitimate work emails, spam or bacn. So we've all learned to live in this haze of email clients flashing message in our face like flashing lights and ringing bells in a casino. Well this makes no sense, no sense at all. Well there are growing number of people are demanding that Common Sense makes a comeback. And you know what, it is. So lets take my email example. There is tons of material written on how to handle email, but I think none are quite as good as what Merlin Mann is doing. His Inbox Zero concept is brilliant and is something I think everyone could truly use and gain from. I highly suggest that you watch the video as well. Lets talk about eating habits. Something I've not been very good about as of late. Well Zen Habits, had a great post on this topic. It's called " A 12-step Program to Eating Healthier than ever before". I high suggest reading it, it's well worth the 15 or 20 minutes it takes to read it. The best part about it, is it reminds you of things you already know. Eat more fruit. Eat more vegetables. Eat at home. This is all Common Sense stuff, yet he softly reminds you that you already know it, and gives you a new way to try it. For example Number 6 of the steps is pizza, who doesn't love pizza, I know I do. So check this out. 6. Make pizza instead of ordering. Homemade pizza is the
best, and if you haven’t made it yet, you should. The simple way is to
get a ready-made whole-wheat crust, although making your own tastes
even better. Start with the simple version, though, as you don’t want
to make things too difficult. For the simple version, just add some
gourmet spaghetti sauce (not Ragu), cut up some veggies (I like
tomatoes and mushrooms and spinach and olives, but you can use
anything, even potatoes). Brush the veggies with some olive oil. You
can add grated cheese or soy cheese if you want, though it’s not
necessary. Bake till it looks cooked. Mmmm. -Exerpt from zenhabit.net
You can't tell me that doesn't sound better than that greasy delivery pizza that they are pushing on Tuesday nights with their 10 pizzas for 20 bucks deal, and it takes the same amount of time. So to recap, Common Sense is making a comeback....Thank goodness! Happy Life
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