Like cleaning the toilet

You know it’s really lame when all you blog about is blogging, or the lack thereof. So to make it more interesting, I’d like to share a similie that has found relevance to astonishingly numerous aspects of my life.

“…like cleaning the toilet”

Applied,

  • “Refactoring your code is…”
  • “Calling home is…”
  • “Tidying your workspace is…”
  • “Blogging is…”

…because the longer you leave it, the harder it is to do.

Consider this post the one where I walk in with a face mask, a jackhammer and industrial strength cleaning solution. From now on, I’m going to try to blog more frequently. If you’ve got any tips on how to write more consistently, I’d like to hear it. Ping me with the old-school comments box below.

Working with a team of developers

For the last three months, I’ve been working at a web startup that’s building a social network service for events (i.e. concerts, parties, pretty much anything that has a place, date and time).

Perhaps one of the most enlightening experience I’ve had is the chance to work alongside two other excellent Ruby on Rails developers.

Now I’ve been part of cross-disciplinary teams before where there’s maybe a graphics guy, a marketing guy, a video/motion guy, and finally a web/tech guy which invariably ends up being me. Either that, or I’d slog it out alone on some pet project as the sole developer.

But working alongside fellow developers is different. Because I’m part of a team of three, and the other two are super-competent, I feel like I’m producing 3 times the amount of work for every unit of work that I put in. It’s the same feeling you get when you chant along at a thousand-strong sports match, or you when you sing along to a song playing through your earphones. Tiny, insignificant input, absolutely awesome output*.

So I’d spend two days working on a commenting feature on the site, but in those very two days, a new search feature and a swanky Google Maps feature was added to the site. 1 unit work, 3 units value produces.

Then again, isn’t that the reason why I became a software developer? To write lines of code that have the potential of infinite value.

*Though there’s also much to be said about being part of a team where 3 units of effort gets whittled down to 1 unit of value (or even less) because you’re having to clean up after the incompetencies of your colleagues. Not today. Life’s good.

Myki and tacking on pronouns

Talk about poor brand message. Off the cuff, here are just two of the many ways this could go wrong.

Myki – It’s your key
If you didn’t quite get what my means, we’re referring to you,  get it?

Myki – It’s your key
I know I said it’s Myki, but it actually really is yours.

On the topic of tacking pronouns to the front of your core brand, doing so makes it very awkward for someone to refer to it in a sentence. One would invariably have to either squelch the pronoun (and diluting your precious brand) or risk sounding like he or she has bad english.

Consider the following:

“My Myki is usually in my wallet , but I can’t seem to find it today. Can I borrow your Myki for the time being?”

“Have you been to the thefreshgrocer in Bendigo? They have very friendly staff”

“Can you believe it? He left such a lame comment on my thefacebook wall” (which, thankfully, isn’t the case)

Here’s not to say that it should never be done. In fact products like newspapers do it very well by way of frequent exposure and being an everyday product. Still their escape isn’t completely unscathed.

“Did you get your tickets to the The Age journalism conference?”

So rule of thumb – consider all the varied and wondrous ways you’d like people to talk about your brand – and try not to make it too awkward to do so. Or, as Mr. Timberlake’s character would say “It’s not cool”.

How cold is it today

image

When the train pulls in with thick fog on its windows, you forget about the bulk under your arms and thank god you’ve got 5 layers of clothing on today.

Pre-work/Post-work

These sightings have formed the bookends of most of my weekdays for almost 3 weeks now. I thought I’d share them.

Pre-work

Post-work