Monthly Archive for August, 2006

Now I got myself started!

I got my self all riled up with that last post!  I started out telling everyone I began using Flock on Windows XP again and it ended up getting me pissed off at things that don’t work.  I’m IM’ing with my best friend talking about mobile phones and, somehow, it let me to ranting about shit not working again!

See, he got a new phone.  A cool new Linux based phone from Motorola and he’s loving it so far.  He always does his research on things like this and he’s usually happy with his purchases (Although the RAZR didn’t last long ;) ).  Anyway, I’m interested in this phone, myself, because I’m not happy with my SLVR either.

Don’t get me wrong, the SLVR is a good phone.  It dials all the numbers well enough and the calls sound good; I’ve never complained that the reception is bad – its rather good for Cingular, really.  But the iTunes thing doesn’t work perfectly; some songs don’t play right and with some songs, the art work is wrong.  Every now and then, I need to restart the phone to fix some speaker/microphone problems.  Oh, and you know the deal with the SLVR… only 100 songs without hacking it.

And I don’t want to hack it to get 1000+ songs on there.  And I don’t want to reboot the phone to fix the speaker.  I certainly expect all the songs I copy to it play perfectly.  The artwork thing I can careless about because I can hear the song to tell what it is – I don’t need the cover art to identify the song so its only a minor annoyance.  But the point is that it doesn’t work like its supposed to and I want it to work the way it was marketed and presumably programmed (even if it was done poorly).  The SLVR isn’t my first Cingular phone that didn’t work the way I expected, however.

I signed up for the service when I got the MPx220.  Its a Windows Mobile phone that I liked for about 45 days.  It needed a reboot almost every other day.  The speakers sucked and it would turn off at random; I fixed that last one by folding a post-it note between the phone and battery to force the contacts closer to one another because they sometimes separated).  The only thing that I liked about the phone was the reason I got it: perfect synchronization between MS Outlook and the phone.  Dialing worked well too and as I dialed the numbers or the letters with the keypad, the right contacts came up; selecting the right contact was just as easy with the dial pad.

So the MPx220 sucked.  The SLVR sucks.  I’ve tried the T-Mobile MDA , too.  IT SUCKS WORSE THAN THE MPX220!!  The rebooting doesn’t happen as often but I still have to do it.  Dialing sucks because you need to use a stylus to dial (my fingers are too large to hit the touch screen accurately).  Its also really large.  I’m willing to try the Motorola Q or the Treo 700w but I’m afraid I’ll run into Windows Mobile issues again on top of their own device related issues.  My cell phones don’t work the way they are supposed to and it pisses me off!
So far, on my list of things that suck and don’t work right we have:

  1. Windows XP
  2. Windows Mobile
  3. Motorola MPx220
  4. Motorola SLVR
  5. Motorola Q (From what I’ve heard)
  6. Treo 700w (From what I’ve heard)
  7. OpenOffice
  8. Ubuntu (for lack of software… not code)
  9. Flock (for not working with extensions and the memory leak)
  10. All these “betas” out there today – all of Web 2.0, basically
  11. WordPress 2.04 (still no spell checker)
  12. 80% of the plug-ins I’ve downloaded (most are done for 1.5 or have their own “beta” bugs)
  13. All Dell computers (especially their laptops)
  14. All Compaq/HP computers (same as dell, just with even more junkware)
  15. Linksys Wireless routers
  16. TiVo
  17. Apple laptops (From what I’ve read)

The few things that I can think of that work well enough to highly recommend them to someone else are:

  1. iPods
  2. Blackberrys

THAT’S IT!

Everything else sucks because the quality isn’t there.  Why can’t people make quality products anymore?  Were the always crappy and I was too young to notice?  When can I get something that doesn’t suck?

I just want something to work the way its supposed to!

Flocking again

I never mentioned this before but I stopped using Flock a while back. There was a memory leak in it that made my system crash every now and then. I’ve got 4GB of memory in my system and Flock grew to well over 800MB on its own. I don’t know if its still there but I’ve seen two or three revisions come out so I’m giving it another try. I’m also back on Windows XP for a stint while I sync my iPod and put out my resume. It seems that OpenOffice doesn’t save MS Word files as well as I would like. Not that its a big deal most of the time but when your resume looks like crap because the formatting is all wrong, it makes me look like an idiot and not so desirable.

It kinda sucks, too. I like Ubuntu and Flock very much – I will I could use them all the time. But if the apps aren’t there, it makes it hard to switch. Now I really want that Mac Mini! I want the stability and security of the OS and all the applications but I want my iTunes music store and a good version of Office when it counts. For the record, OpenOffice is perfect for most of my needs but the docs didn’t save properly and both the PC and Mac versions of outlook had a hard time rendering my resume.

And in the end, I just want something that works. I don’t care what the OS is, actually. If Windows didn’t crash on me, I’d be using it all the time. If Ubuntu had all my apps on there I’d be using it all the time. And if my software worked properly – no matter what the OS – I’d stick with that OS in a heartbeat.

Well, I got a little side tracked, here. I guess I’m frustrated that I don’t have the iTunes Music Store on Ubuntu with a working version of Office. Is that too much to ask??!!??

P.S. Don’t tell me about WINE or some other “non-emulator” for Ubuntu. I ran it and all I could do is get streaming radio to work… badly.

Change of Themes

I’m taking a break from the saga of the motto for a while to tell you I’m going to change the theme of the site every few days to freshen things up a bit. I’ll have a poll up in a little while with a list of themes people can vote on. If I get a number of votes to a particular theme, I’ll switch to it permanently.

If things don’t look quite right, please be patient. I’m not going to tweak every theme perfectly until I settle on a permanent style.

UPDATE: I’ve given up on the changing for a while. I do want some of the features in the themes but don’t have the time right now to do dev work on the files right now. I’ll try this again over the weekend.

And Now, For Something Completely Different (well, not completely)

So I mentioned in the last post that I had lost my job – or will lose it soon – and that I am actively looking for the start of the next chapter in my professional career.  If you recall, I also said I would do things a little differently.

I don’t plan on taking a lower paying job with less responsibility.  To the contrary, I hope to find something with more responsibility (more pay would be great but I am comfortable with my lifestyle now and don’t think I have to increase my compensation just to be happy).  Anyway, I hope to find another small to medium sized financial or law firm in need to growing their respective businesses.  I guess I’m looking for companies who need someone to bring their IT to the next level – something I know how to do well and enjoy very much; I called my current gig a masterpiece but even an artist needs to grow and create again.  But I want something else from my new position – something not unreasonable but because I am targeting small to medium sized organizations, I run the risk of falling into the traps, if you will, of a one or two man department.

One of the things that made my current job harder than I expected was this I-fix-everything-personal concept that everyone – from the partners to the administrative assistants – and really made me feel like I wasn’t valued for what I was hired to do; the net effect was it made me feel like a whipping boy who was expected to drop what I was doing to fix problems with personal computers (even outside of the office).  I can’t recall if I ever mentioned some of the things I’ve been asked to do but its pretty strange.  I can’t say its as bad as that woman from The Devil Wears Prada book (yes, it was a book before the movie… but don’t ask me how I know that) but for me, it was probably a close second.

I’ve gone to people’s homes, worked on their personal (and children’s) computers, their home entertainment centers, blackberries, cell phones, and even their cordless phones.  I’ve been asked to erase viruses, porn, spam, and old software from computers that belonged to other companies.  I’ve installed all types of software ranging from photo editors (for the digital cameras I set up) to audio software; I was even asked to move iTunes files to some type of media server that didn’t support FairPlay; and if you know what DRM is, you know that it means iTunes files only work with iTunes).  So, I’ve spent hours of my personal time working for people who expected me to address their personal computer problems and I’d rather not do that again.

Another thing I’d like to avoid in my next job is being on call 24/7.  Don’t get me wrong, I love my Blackberry.  I like the size, form factor, PDA features, wireless Internet, and ease of use that everyone with a Blackberry knows so well.  But a problem presents itself when you give someone a tool to connect them to work at all times.  They are expected to be connected at all times and, therefore, available at all times.  Personal time is reduced if not eliminated.  Because the Blackberry is also a phone, the calls come at all times too.  I’ve ben called on the weekends, during my vacations, and even after I’ve gone to bed.  Because I take my job seriously – and can’t seem to say no to the bosses – I usually have to drop what I’m doing to deal with their problem.  Many times its just a simple answer to their questions but more often that I’d like to admit, I’m needed at their house or in the office (even if its through VPN).  I don’t want to be on call like that anymore and whatever I do in the future will be done without a Blackberry or with some simple understandings about my availability after hours.

Yet a third thing I’d like to change is this idea that IT guys (or me specifically) can do anything tech related.  Now I consider myself a hacker in the sense that I can figure out how things work and sometimes how to fix them and I also feel that I grasp concepts of technology better than others.  But I am no expert – I don’t want to be, really.  I’m a IT generalist, a strategist.  I’m the guy to comes in sees where things are wrong with the way technology is used or how technology can make things better but I don’t always know how to install all the technology I use.  For example, I know that you need to have redundant networking hardware to better handle device or service failures.  But I can’t program a RIP statement into a Cisco router or auto-failover statements in the firewalls.

Where I’m at, it was believed that I was some super tech who could do anything even if I didn’t know how to because I’d find a way.  So there was intense pressure to deliver something I couldn’t.  Talk about a demotivator!  Its not easy to be told to do something you can’t.  It was almost impossible to feel like I was doing my job.  Of course, there wasn’t enough money to hire the right people to do the job and I often felt that if I suggested we do so they couldn’t justify paying two technology people to do what they wanted; you can see what that would lead to.

So now, I am – for better or for worse – in a position of finding a new job.  With a clean slate and a chance to change things in my life for the better, I can find or create a job that doesn’t have those problems.  If I am fortunate, I can work for a company or person who considers me a team member to rely on and use as an advisor with trust that no matter what, I will do what I am supposed to do.  I guess I’m looking for something that will let me use my knowledge and experience to grow something – like I did before – but more in tune with my values.

But changing my work life is not the only thing that is going to change around here…

And so, with great sadness…

One of the recent events in my life that has prompted the adoption of my new motto (which I’ll get to soon, I promise) is that I have lost my job. Yes, the very job that I said sucked. And while it did suck – at times (and more times than I thought were good) – I miss it.

Actually, I still work there. See, the company I am employed at for a few more weeks (or until they run out of money) is a hedge fund who, like so many hedge funds, has closed its trading operations. I like to say they zigged when they should have zagged and that’s why they closed but its more complicated than that. Suffice it to say, they were doing well until this (Oh, God, I HATE to say this…) perfect storm happened where we got wiped out in a downward spiral of market events that only happened once… ever.

Anyway, that’s not what I wanted to say. What I did want to say is that despite me having issues with the job sometimes, I miss it already. See, I helped grow that business. As the guy to handled all their IT, I built new datacenters (and entire office spaces), created virtual offices that connected three continents, oversaw all our software development, and created company and general IT policy that brought the small organization in line with those of larger companies. I gave them the latest and greatest technology and made sure that we were compliant with federal regulations (thank you, very much Sarbanes). What I created, was my masterpiece.

And now, the office will be shut down and everyone is out of a job – including yours truly. I’m not worried about finding a job (yet). I have great skills and fantastic experience that will land me something soon. I just started putting my resume out there so I’m hoping that a few leads and contacts come through and present an opportunity that will pay the bills and excite me at the same time. If anyone out there is interested in someone who can run their IT department, contact me through the form I have for this site; I know that I can offer a lot to practically any sized organization and I’d like to show that to others again.

I’m sure that most of the other people, um, working there will be fine too. They also bring lots of knowledge and experience with them to wherever they go and they are all hard workers, too. Most of them are very young and flexible; they are interested in so much out there and if they think its cool or new to them, they will truly enjoy whatever they are doing. Those that are older and more established bring all those years of experience that will land them jobs in no time at all. I hear that some people already have new things lined up. Those people will be truly missed – they are all great people – and I hope I have the chance to work with them again.
And so, with great sadness, I close this exciting but stressful chapter in my professional life that I hope will be repeated in the next.

The next time, however, I will do things a little differently…

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