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- September 13, 2007
20ish Movies for a Desert Island
September 13, 2007Read moreI was browsing Corey Marion’s blog, catching up on the inner lives of the peeps at IconFactory, and saw that a number of their crew have posted their lists of top 20 movies to have on a desert island, plus a few guilty pleasures. The lists, to my mind, are like comfort food for the eyes, and it reminds me of some good ole’ days back in grad school when I watched Ged cut together video excerpts from some of his favorite movies into one seamless sequence. Ged, Corey, and Anthony Piraino have all posted their lists publicly, with the kind of personable commentary you’d expect from the nice guys at IF. I haven’t made my list yet, but don’t let that stop you from enjoying theirs! To start, I’d probably pick Ratatouille (really close to my soul in a lot of ways, saw it 3 times practically back to back) and The Last Starfighter as a guilty pleasure (early 3D computer graphics, arcades games, and high camp space opera, oh yeah!)
- September 12, 2007
Four Classes of Adults
September 12, 2007Read moreThere’s a children’s book called Half Magic by Edward Eager. My sister claims that we both read it when we were kids, but I found I had pretty much forgotten everything that had happened in it (as usual), so it was like new to me. I’m fond of children’s books that are about lazy summers spent exploring and having adventures, and Half Magic is pretty much in that vein. It was also written back in 1954, so the slight oddity of language to my contemporary ear makes it all the more enjoyable. It’s also quite an observant book when it comes to noting adult behavior; this excerpt regarding the four kinds of adults that the children are aware of is, I think, right on the money (emphasis mine):
The four children generally divided all grownups into four classes. There were the ones like Miss Bick and Uncle Edwin and Aunt Grace and Mrs. Hudson who—frankly, and cruel as it might be to say it—just weren’t good with children at all. There was nothing to do about these, the four children felt, except be as polite as possible and hope they would go away soon. Then there were the ones like Miss Mamie King, who—when they were with children—always seemed to want to pretend they were children, too. This was no doubt kindly meant, but often ended with the four children’s feeling embarrassed for them. Somewhat better were the opposite ones who went around treating children as though the children were as grown-up as they were, themselves. This was flattering, but sometimes a strain to live up to. Many of the four children’s school teachers fell into this class. Last and best and rarest of all were the ones who seemed to feel that children were children and grown-ups were grown-ups and that was that, and yet at the same time there wasn’t any reason why they couldn’t get along perfectly well and naturally together, and even occasionally communicate, without changing that fact.
It took me a while to figure out why this passage struck me so, and I eventually realized that it was because I felt it seemed to generally apply to the making of connections with other people.
- Some people, like Miss Bick and Uncle Edwin, you just merely try to get along with because there just isn’t a connection of any kind. You come from such different worlds with such distinctively different personalities that no connection, however tenuous, is likely to hold. So you talk about the weather, and silently exult when someone’s cell phone rings to break the awkwardness.
Then there are those people, like Mamie King, who really do want to get to know you, and they go a little too far and make you uncomfortable by crossing certain boundaries. You know, like that guy at the bar who insists on telling you the intimate details of his life story, or the girl at work who laughs a little too quickly and loudly at your jokes. And in the reverse, when we find ourselves reaching for something—anything, really—that will get us through that endless two minutes on the elevator ride up to the office by cracking the same tired old jokes…sigh.
The people we get along with in a social sense are good people, but they’re never quite that close because we’ve got to watch what we say. So these people aren’t so much like the teachers that expect the best of us; as adults, we expects that other adults adhere to certain norms of civility and etiquette. Conformity, in other words. Of course, it’s wonderful when you fit in, but it’s also kind of a strain because you can’t tell your favorite dirty jokes, relate something Bobby said on King of the Hill, or express a heartfelt sentiment like, “You know, Hillary Clinton is kind of hot” and not have it taken the wrong way by someone. Your safe areas of conversation are lawn care, mortgages, sports, and top 10 television shows. Comfortable, but kind of limited.
The best people of all are those ones that accept you as you are. They’re your real friends, and you’ve decided for whatever reason that you get along and there’s nothing more to discuss. Say anything around them, and it doesn’t affect the way they feel about you and vice versa. They are indeed the rarest of them all, and the ones to keep around you.
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p>I’ll have to re-read Harriet the Spy next; I believe my sis left a copy here for me somewhere.
- September 12, 2007
Kickstarting a Freelancer/Collaboration Network
September 12, 2007Read moreI’ve been putting this off for months, putting out a call for people who do awesome work, so they can meet other people who value the same.
“I’m too busy to design the right program,” I hemmed.
“It needs to be just right, with a nice website,” I hawed.
Well, waiting is for chumps! I need to meet people now, as in yesterday.
Freelance Network Prerequisites
What I don’t like about most freelancing sites is that they’re oriented toward job listings and database searches. Boring! What I like to see is the actual work, and hear what people have to say about it. And then I like to know how to contact them, or refer them to someone else.
So the approach I’m thinking is that of an interviewer, both in the job sense and in the journalistic sense. For that, we need a kit of our work in a succinct form. Once the kit is available for review, I would then evaluate each kit from the perspective of how I see the value, and how I would use it. I would then write this perception—which should always be positive—as a note somewhere on my own “kit page”. The idea: by collaboratively creating and reviewing each other’s kits, we not only get to know people’s work, we also share how we can imagine using it under what circumstances. I think there’s something positive to note about everyone’s work.
Here’s the kit checklist:
- Pick three (3) pieces of your best creative work, code fragments, or what have you, that represents your professional best. They should be complete and self-contained source files and source code, if applicable. We are looking for a complete assessment, not a surface one.
Write a few sentences about each of those pieces that describe: what you did, why you were doing it, what it was for, and how it performed in the field when other people actually started using it.
Put all the pieces and text on a website where it can be downloaded by anyone.
Provide some preferred means of contacting you.
The idea behind this is that people will hire based on what they can imagine being done on their behalf. To exercise that imagination, people need to see what you’ve done and draw their own conclusions. Guessing at what those conclusions might is a big part of marketing and self-promotion, but I know from experience that what people find interesting about your work is often something you never thought of. Here’s the review checklist:
- Contact the person who’s kit you’ve downloaded, and say that you’d like to do a quick IM, phone, or email kit review. Voice or face-to-face is better I think than text, but that’s just me.
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The goal of the kit review is to react honestly to things you like about the work and how you’d apply it in your own projects, while you are talking to the person. Hopefully you actually like the kit you’ve downloaded, so you will have good things to say. Since you’re looking at the source files too, assuming you’re familiar with its operation, you’ll also get a sense of how that person works. I can tell a lot about someone’s experience and level of expertise by looking at their work, personally. Most important is to listen to your gut: I like this. The person who’s kit you’ve downloaded will understand how their work is perceived by others, which is immeasurably valuable to someone just getting started or trying to crack the freelance market.
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After reviewing the kit, go to your own kit page and write up the kit review, with a link to the person’s kit page. Say what you specifically liked about it in a few words. Be honest. And only review people that you would consider working with yourself in the specified context.
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p>So that’s what I’m thinking of doing…I had hoped to have my website set up for it by now, but I thought I’d just prime the pump to see who was interested. I don’t even know what I’d put in my own kit page yet.
I’ll formalize this a little more later, but in the meantime feel free to comment or suggest other approaches.
- September 11, 2007
101 Reasons Freelancing Rocks
September 11, 2007Read moreI was alerted to this link of 101 Reasons to Freelance, which I clicked on out of mild curiosity. It’s actually a pretty good list, and by the end of it I was like, “Yeah, being a freelancer rocks!” A nice boost for a dreary Tuesday, though I will still need to hit the coffee shop if I plan to keep working :-)
- September 11, 2007
Blog Action Day is October 15
September 11, 2007Read moreI got a nice email from Leo over at Zen Habits telling me about Blog Action Day, which is coming up this October 15th. The idea is that bloggers can collectively converse on a topic of global relevance. You know, the power of the blogosphere, much mocked by the so-called Old Media, but reaching a more literate and plugged-in demographic. I’ve been experimenting with more community participation activities as part of my social networking goals for the year, so I figure participating in Blog Action Day will help me along in unpredictable and exciting ways!
The topic of this first Blog Action Day is something that is not on my mind a lot: The Environment. I suppose the reason this is the case is because I live in southern New Hampshire, and we like the Environment just fine so long as it doesn’t get in the way of our civil liberties, or people from out of state tell us how we should be taking care of our own backyard, thank you very much. But that’s politics, which is another topic I avoid thinking about unless it is actually in my way. What’s more interesting to me is how The Environment affects people personally, and therefore how our manipulation of The Environment can be a course of action.
I’m open to suggestions on some topic related to The Environment to write about…if anyone would like to toss me a few challenges to write about in the comments (kind of like what we did with The Bee Story a few months back), this might be a fun way of getting even more people participating. So go ahead, make some outrageous, silly, or even serious claim or statement (it doesn’t matter if you believe in it or not)…the challenge will be to integrate everything into some semblance of coherent speech.
You can read more about Blog Action Day over on the official website.