January 8, 2007, 11:23 pm · 0 comments · Filed under: Life
Can your web browser do this?
You’ll never get rich digging a ditch, nor building Dashboard widgets.
A Kryptonite™ lock can be defeated in 11 seconds, but you still lock your bike, right?
Gaining Twitter followers is a little like losing weight. You have to try.
Over or under? It’s the age-old question when it comes to the orientation of toilet paper rolls.
I am a web developer, recently returned to the States after 3 years in New Zealand. I’m into my family, photography and frisbee sports.
The average person thinks he isn’t.
–Father Larry Lorenzoni
Apple · AppleScript · Business · Coda · CSS · Dashboard · Design · Google · InSTEDD · JavaScript · jQuery · Life · Marketing · Music · New Mexico · New Zealand · Open Source Software · Photography · PHP · Politics · Ruby on Rails · Scree · Subversion (SVN) · Twitter · Usability · Web Development · Widgets
CSS Fast Nav: Because (perception of) speed matters! · Personal Branding for Introverts · Stupid WebKit Tricks · Add an interactive legend to a MarkerManager managed Google Map · Dude. Mikeyy can’t even spell his own name. · Dashboard Widgets for Fun and Profit · Animating your iPhone web application · How-to recover from checksum mismatch errors in SVN · Why Apple can afford to charge so little for Snow Leopard · The first 48 hours of PHP Function Reference, by the numbers
CSS Fast Nav: Because (perception of) speed matters! · When is a global variable not a variable? · Our misguided culture of cool · InSTEDD: Open Source Software that saves lives · Add an interactive legend to a MarkerManager managed Google Map · Personal Branding for Introverts · Moments of Rangitoto · Some Twitter conventions · Why Apple can afford to charge so little for Snow Leopard · Stupid WebKit Tricks
Twitshirt is a tweet on a shirt. Buy the one below or check out my most recent tweets.
There is truth. The rest is fashion.
See a random Twitshirt-worthy tweet.
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My bias is for references over “cookbooks.” I want to know all of my options, not just one way to do something. Show me the why as well as the how and I am happy.
JavaScript: The Good Parts · Object-Oriented JavaScript: Create scalable, reusable high-quality JavaScript applications and libraries · JavaScript: The Definitive Guide · Designing with Web Standards · CSS: The Definitive Guide · Prioritizing Web Usability · The Elements of User Experience · Web ReDesign: Workflow that Works · Don't Make Me Think: A Common Sense Approach to Web Usability
I’ve hosted this website with pair Networks since 1997. They rock.
This blog is powered by…software I wrote.
Feeling generous? Knock yourself out!
What was it Groucho Marx said? “I don’t care to belong to a club that accepts people like me as members.” Well, that’s, like, the exact opposite of how I feel having been accepted into Method Arts! Yep, that’s yours truly there on the About page. I am so freakin’ flattered to be keeping company with some great web professionals. For those unfamiliar with it, Method Arts is a consortium of free agents who come together occasionally to create great websites. Mark, Brian, and Vincent all know their stuff cold. I foresee some hardcore synergies in this band of brothers.
Even before this happy affirmation, the stars seemed to be coming into alignment in support of my freelance life. It’s funny because a few weeks ago, I was seriously fretting about whether to take the leap.
I’ve had this experience before. In 1997, I was contemplating leaving my first career as a college student affairs administrator to make the jump into techdom. I had made a minor name for myself within the profession as the co-founder of StudentAffairs.com, a resource website for student affairs professionals (a Lycos Top 5% site!). I sure enjoyed building websites, but I didn’t know if I really had what it took to make my living at it.
At the same time, I also had a burning desire to travel the world. Mid-year I had applied for a resident director position on Semester at Sea, a university program on a ship where students voyage around the world (literally) in 100 days studying a full liberal arts curriculum.
After a lengthy interview process, I was informed I would be an alternate for the Fall 1997 voyage. I was a little bummed, but took it in stride and that day sent out an email to everyone I knew letting them know I was going to be leaving student affairs to start the next chapter of my working life, as a web consultant (it’s a good thing we’re naive when we’re young or we might not try half the things we do!).
It is my sincere belief that the Universe rewards you when you take a step towards what you really want. The very next day, I found myself writing another email with the subject “What a difference 24 hours makes!” Semester at Sea called back to tell me they needed me after all.
So, I got to go on the trip of a lifetime as my transition between seven years in college student affairs and my new life. It couldn’t have worked out better if I had planned it.
Sometimes, when things seem the toughest, life is actually just working out the kinks in preparation for the next situation, one that fits a little better than the last.
So it is I find myself, on day 9 of Newfangled Telegraph, welcomed into Method Arts, looking forward to a big adventure of a year in 2007. Thanks, guys!
This entry was first published on Newfangled Telegraph, my former freelancing website.
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