tekrat

Cole Fox Hardware - April Showers

Thursday
Apr 12,2007
I’ve always been impressed with Cole Fox Hardware’s window displays. The creativity and detail put into each one is not even surpassed by the big downtown clothing stores. For example, the latest April showers themed display has motors attached to umbrellas so they rotate, the legs of the display tables are boots, and every item is listed in detail with it’s price and even the skew number!

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  • Thursday
    Apr 12,2007

    Gopal recently blogged about ways to minimize your value to the company. The last item on the list being “Contribute to an open source project”, stating:

    Assume your full time job involves working on an open source project. Now answer me this, “what *competitive* advantage does your work bring to this company ?”. After all the code that you write automatically becomes available to everybody - irrespective of who paid for the development costs. Code thus released drops to near zero value and ergo, the process of creating it …

    While I enjoy the humor in the post, and the fact that there is some truth to the above, I would say that I’ve seen substantial benefits to having persons within your company dedicated in part or full to working on open source projects. This makes the assumption that your company in fact uses said project of course. (not all these are great arguments to the above, just thoughts on the matter). (please also take note of Gopal’s PS update.)

    • Internal Know-how: You company gains internal knowledge about the inner workings of the open source projects your company relies on. This is useful for when the shit breaks, and you need to fix it… like right now.
    • Customize: While it’s not always contributed back, having someone work on a project lends itself to customizations for performance or other gains that reside within the company or are made available as patches because they are too risky or custom for inclusion within a standard project distribution. PHP is good example of this, with a number of patches that have been proposed, not accetped, but still made available for other’s use. Facebook also has a number of internal changes to PHP that aren’t proper for inclusion within PHP itself. (while this doesn’t always adress the Gopal’s point, I think you can see where there’s a grey area of an individuals ability to do this based upon their past work with a project).
    • Quid pro quo: A number of open source projects that save companies a significant amount of money and development costs are often (but not always) the sumation of contributions made by a large body of individiduals and individuals within companies. For this type of cooperative work to continue, you need to make contributions back. You may not see the direct tradeoff for your work, but you’ll definitely build up some karma that you’ve probably already cashed out on or may in the future
    • Many eyes are better than one: When working on changes to an open source project, or creating something new, it’s often nice to have it reviewed before you put it into use for everyone to see (and possibly laugh at). It’s even better if you get it reviewed by your co-workers, your co-developers, and get it in about a hundred other peoples production environment before you decide it’s stable enough to use. It’s also great when they fix something before you do, simply because you decided to show it to them.
    • Come work for us: in silicon valley it’s important to have a name that draws in top tallent. Part of this name recognizition is working on really cool shit, and making this cool shit open source. Letting people know that you’re part of a community and not a nameless corporation is a big selling point for building to notch development team.

    Item number 2 was “Write a technical blog”, I better go shave %1 off of PHP runtime to make up for this…

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  • QuailPress 0.1.3

    • Filed under: tech
    Monday
    Mar 26,2007

    I’ve been neglecting some technical problems with QuailPress 0.1.1, but thanks to some help from a couple users it’s now fixed. The latest version 0.1.3 includes the following changes:

    • added a share button without text (per David Stickel)
    • linked author name to tekrat.com (per David Stickel)
    • removed white border from share image (per David Stickel)
    • corrected version display under options tab
    • added html source display option
    • fixed bug keeping options tab from being displayed (thank you Andrew, and David Stickel)
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  • PHP Québec ‘07

    Wednesday
    Mar 21,2007

    This year was my first time at the PHP Québec conference, and I was really impressed with the location and organization. As usual though, the wireless was a huge let down. It’s always such a challenge to get a couple hundred PHP nerds online at a hotel and I just don’t know why. The organizers presented speakers with a summary of feedback from listeners at each talk, very cool.

    My favorite talks that I saw where Andrei’s VIM talk which actually gave me some more useful tips than the talk I saw at google. I also thought that John’s Top Pecl Pics was a good.

    The flight back wasn’t so great, seeing as a lot of east coast flights where being canceled. I ended up trying to get out of flying out via Washington DC, but apparently that’s a difficult thing to change because Air Canada doesn’t like to talk to United, and United doesn’t pick up the god damned phone. So after standing in a very long line in DC, I spent the night and got on a flight to San Diego the next morning. Had a 1 hour delay in San Diego, and someone decided they should have a medical emergency mid flight, which actually let us land 7 minutes early, good to remember in the future. I had to come back 5 hours later to get my bags, as they apparently didn’t land before me as promised. It’s nice to be back in nice, medium temperature cali. I missed my Japanese test on Saturday by about 4 hours, so I’ll be taking it tonight and I’m not sure it’s going to go too well. On the good side I wasn’t stuck in Montreal with the Flu like my cohort, Lucas.

    Next destination, PHP Tek in Chicago…

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  • Morbid Gummy Bear Experiments

    Monday
    Mar 5,2007

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  • APC-3.0.13

    • Filed under: tech
    Monday
    Feb 26,2007

    I’m delighted that the next version of APC has been released, it’s been a little while since a new package was made and it’s a good opportunity to get everything back into sync especially in determining which bugs are still causing problems for people. There are a number of changes and fixes from Rasmus, Gopal, Ilia, Wez, Bjori and myself. I’m interested to see how the new locking methods work out for people, specifically pthread mutex vs. spin locks (spin locks from the Postgres project). I’ll try to get some benchmarks of my own completed in the comming week.

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  • Fun with sharp pointy things!

    Tuesday
    Feb 20,2007

    This was a lot of fun! Thanks to Yelp and Cyan for a good recommendation on where to have it done (Body Manipulations, SF), and David for holding my hand.

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  • Shure!

    • Filed under: tech
    Saturday
    Jan 20,2007

    So I’ve been going through a lot of different in ear headphones lately and I think I’ve settled on the Shure E3C’s. I initially had a pair of middle level Etymotic’s and they where satisfactory, but shorted out after a year of use. I then upgraded to the highest end Etymotics and was very disappointed, the earpieces where too large and wouldn’t stay in my ear as the long barrel shaped ear piece would get pull down too easily. Oh and the sound quality was shit. I then opted in for the Shure E3C’s and the hardware and sound quality are considerably better. The design is great, they are comfortable, and the sound quality is several degrees better then the highest end Etymotics. I’ve only had them for about a month, so we’ll see how they hold up. A close friend has had the high end Shures for well over a year now with no problems and exceptional quality.  More images can be found in my gallery.
    Shur E3C

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  • Furby creator makes Pleo!

    • Filed under: tech
    Wednesday
    Jan 3,2007

    I just read the Wired article on the Pleo, and I can’t wait. This is the latest invention from the creator of the Furby, and it sounds much more interesting! Their page states that they’ll start taking order requests on Feb. 3rd, I hope to get one as I missed out on the Furby craze and I can’t stand taking care of an animal. Seems like this is a good half way point. Besides I just like getting my hands on cool new “toys”. Doesn’t it look cute in a miniture prehistoric big lizard kinda way?

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  • Survey says “Gay Boy Tech”

    Tuesday
    Jan 2,2007

    I’ve been noticing a disturbing trend on my statistics lately. Specifically search engine keyword searches that lead people to my site.

    cute gay boys 3 17.6 %
    cute boys 2 11.7 %
    facebook share wordpress 2 11.7 %
    dirvish install client 2 11.7 %
    guy tied 1 5.8 %
    www.cutegayboys.com 1 5.8 %
    american pie 1 5.8 %
    folsom street fair gallery 2006 1 5.8 %
    gay boys 18 1 5.8 %
    targus register 1 5.8 %
    cute gayboys 1 5.8 %
    thefacebook book 1 5.8 %

    I’m not sure where “guy tied” or “american pie” came from. Really I don’t know. But it seems like I should start to focus my blog on more information about cute gay boys than anything technical, although dirvish and the facebook book seem to score pretty high as well. Perhaps it’s time for a new theme “gay boy tech”. Makes it sound like borg porn, but whatever sells.

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