Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Not sure how many hours I've been working, but I don't care.#

I think this must be one of those moments for me where things come together nicely and I just kinda chill about life and live for enjoying everything. I'm not too sure how many hours I've been working since I started my job, I'm not too keen to figure it out either. All I know is that it's probably over 60 a week if you count at home time on the computer reading up, writing, doing email, you name it. I'm feeling like I'm getting loads done and despite having to wind up again to the normal level of multi-tasking that's required I honestly think I'm getting a lot done. At some point it's going to have to calm a bit since I can't keep up this pace. I don't think there's any reason I can't get a little more economical with my time though and gradually balance stuff out.

Speaking of which, damn, do I need to get back to the gym. I've been maintaining my weight but I can already tell I'm losing some of the tone I had gained just by not working out for 2 months regularly. I do miss going to the gym for an hour a day, it's an awesome stress relief when others don't come as easily, oh and gaming isn't much of a relief sometimes. At least not when I get my ass blown off by some punk kid yelling out racist comments.

The only thing I really dread at the moment is the commute. I know some people have crazy commutes at close to 2 hours or more. For me though, if I'm in the car for more than 30 minutes each way I start feeling like there's better things to be doing with my time than sitting in the car waiting for people to learn how to merge.

Despite all the great little things that come with working for the jolly green giant that is Microsoft, I don't really think my team nor my review would take kindly to me suddenly deciding to cut one more car from the road by working from home. Meanwhile it does seem like I've been in the new role for quite some time, in reality it's been 3 months, not 3 years... unless I count contracting time.

One thing I seem to very poorly at is having a good idea of how much time I'm going to actually have available. I mention this because I had intended on chronicling the initial year or so of actually what it means to be FTE. In some ways I guess I've not really failed since my writing has been sparse that in itself is a good indication of what life is like in year one.

I'm a little biased in my perspective and experience as well having been around here a little while, I can't begin to imagine how much that has actually helped me built up momentum.

Considering it's now going on quarter past 2AM, I'll quit rambling and go to bed.




Home Life | Personal | Work
Tuesday, April 29, 2008 12:54:42 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [0]

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Quarter life crisis... sort of decided for me.#

Well it's crazy how quickly things can change. Only two months have gone by since I wrote about the so called quarter life crisis that I feel I've been going through. In that time I've sat and thought, a lot, and I've still not really come to a firm gut feeling on the subject. Maybe I'm not supposed to and that's the entire purpose in life anyway.

One hundred day breaks which Microsoft contractors are required to take after a year of gracious service have become a total love hate thing for me. I love that it's like a paid vacation sort of. I hate the struggle to pay bills. I love that I can get stuff done. I hate that I don't get enough done. I love the time to relax and think. I hate that after that's done I can get bored. I've heard full time employees (FTE) that go to contracting praise the decision as the best thing since MSFT's closing price xmas '99. Meanwhile contractors, myself included, can complain like mad knowing the income and benefits could be better plus for some there's always the hope a FTE position will open up.

With that said, I guess I've not felt one way or the other about the direction I've been taking lately. The best I can do is just go with the flow like always, kick back relax, and just do whatever my gut says is right for me in this moment.

On January 3rd from noon till around 3:45pm I let God roll those cosmic dice as I entered into my interviews for a FTE position at Microsoft (yeah that sounds ominous doesn't it). First off, I was expecting the interviews to last a lot longer, I've done a full 8 hour interview at both Apple and Microsoft before, so this seemed short. The questions all felt straight forward and I think I did an okay job of staying relaxed and actually enjoy the entire process. Since really it should be enjoyed and experienced so that regeardless of outcome I can learn from it. Oh and it certainly helped I had a 40oz water bottle filled and refilled, water == moist mouth and calmness. Though, I will say, it's a good thing I had a chance to use the loo. One thing that did stick in my mind is that early on I was asked what my 1, 5, 10 year plan was. Geez, what an open question, you want to give your honest answer but want to make sure the answer you give gets you the job as well. How to word it, how to make it right. Then later, in my closing interview I was asked if I wanted to revise my answer since I've had some time to think about it. Well crap, was this a chance to correct an answer they weren't quite looking for? Who knows. Maybe I'll get to ask at some point. But the point I was going to make was that when this question was asked twice I didn't even really think about my previous post or thoughts regarding all that. Maybe my brain just kicked in and without consciously realizing it I verbalized exactly how I felt about my next 1, 5, and 10 years. I really don't know about the next 10 years, seems impossible for me to visualize at this point in life. I have an idea of where I'd like to be so long as I continue down the road I'm now. So yeah, I'll go with that for now.

Five days later I got a voice mail that started my neurons firing with analysis a couple hours after that I got a reply to my email. Just like that at 2:56pm, definite direction... Interviews went well and I was being offered the position. Like my original offer to come up and work with the eHome team, I think I took about 14 seconds to make a decision. Two days later I got everything in writing and finished up my side of the paperwork. Right now I'm just waiting for the 28th to come by and the real stuff to kick in then.

I'm going to go out on a limb here and guess after I've settled, I'll feel like the entire experience, and the 13 years leading up to this point is akin to falling in love. Or maybe that's just the romanticism coming out in me. What I'm trying to say is that it seems like so many things, like falling in love with the right person, is a struggle that has no end in sight. After that moment where everything clicks into place looking back in hindsight one might think, "well that wasn't so bad".

Maybe in 10 years I'll be doing something completely different, maybe I'll be completely embedded into the road I'm currently paving, who the hell knows. Right now I'm definitely feeling energized and have a renewed sense of enthusiasm about everything. Yeah, I'm still a cynic, but heck, maybe even that will change.




Home Life | Microsoft | Personal | Work
Wednesday, January 16, 2008 1:51:10 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [1]

Thursday, October 11, 2007

Well I guess I'm getting that vacation...#

One of the complications of being a contractor at least for the Borg is that you have to take a 100 day break after every full year of service. Unfortunately the cycles of the various projects and such don't always fall in line with ongoing work. Some contracts require 6, 7, or 12 months. Others really actually require someone full time all the time. Right now I've been on one of those contracts. My previous stint with the MCE beta team lasted 1 full year. Then I had my 100 days, then I came back to the beta team, switched to the CSI team, and I've been on contract now for I guess 8 months. Originally scheduled to have my contract end in March next year I've bumped it up and my last day with the CSI team is next Friday.

A lot of personal stuff has gone on lately and I've been feeling like I need a real break for a while now to just go out and do stuff and find myself again. Plus things actually kind of work out better this way. Because the CSI teams needs someone in my position full time, I'd essentially be out of my job and unable to come back after my 100 days because someone else would've already been trained and hired. Luckily though, the MCE beta team still loves me and wants me back so by ending things now I get a nice win win.

I can have the vacation I need, some time to go out and be dumb, then after 100 days, in February start back up on whatever it is they're going to have me working on.

So anyway, I guess this is post to follow up to the last. I'm getting that vacation. I'm sure after like 30 days or so I'll get bored and want to go back, I do always kinda miss it and look forward to getting back after 3 months.

Oh well... Guess I better start figuring out where I'm going to go for a bit, maybe down to California. Haven't gone surfing in ages. I've also wanted to try sky diving as well, not sure I can afford that one though. Come to think of it, not sure about the surfing either since I can't afford a board for one time use, lol.




Home Life | Work
Thursday, October 11, 2007 7:20:55 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [0]

Sunday, July 29, 2007

What ever happened to the weekend.#

I need a vacation... That is all...




Work
Sunday, July 29, 2007 3:17:57 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [0]

Thursday, June 21, 2007

While on the topic of lunch...#

I've been trying to bring in lunch more and more lately. Mainly so I don't go out, get more work done, lose some weight, and save some money from the cafeteria. I've tried Healthy Choice, Lean Cuisine, Stouffers, pretty much everything.

Just for the record, Lean Cuisine is by far the best. It may lack some flavor sometimes and the portions might be a bit small. But you know, I never feel hungry after. Plus pretty much everything is under 500 calories and low in fat and crap so it's not all bad.

I just had a Healthy Choice french bread pizza. Honestly, I don't think I'll be grabbing one of those again. The flavor is still in my mouth and I can't get rid of it. It's sort of weird tasting, metal / tomato / radioactive isotopes / bad onions. On the plus side it was only like 340 calories.

Sometimes I wish the cafeteria would just sell Lean Cuisines and call it a day. $2.50 per meal, sorted.




Work
Thursday, June 21, 2007 10:35:00 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [0]

Friday, June 08, 2007

The one caveat for working in building 50. Really really bad food.#

The cafeteria blows. It really does. I'm not saying they don't have days where the food tastes good and is a good value. What I am saying however is that it's just totally hit or miss. I'm pretty sure the B50 cafeteria at Microsoft is one of the few that can actually mess up a salad bar and sandwich.

As an example the other day I went to get a sandwich that I order pretty much every day, how in the world does the lady get tomato from green pepper or mayo from dijon mustard!? A day before that I went to get some salad, problem was, it was all half frozen and the chicken strips tasted like plastic. I typically walk by the pizza because you can literally see pools of oil sitting ontop of the cheese as the pizza warms under the lamps. Then there's the grill, about the only thing that usually goes right. Problem is that the lines are ridiculously long so you stand there for 15 minutes waiting for your burger. Vegetarian options are extremely limited as well. Typically there might be some soup, and maybe one tofu dish. Today there was a tomato soup. Yay, not. In fact while we're at it, lets look at the menu for today:

Breakfast

BC Breakfast Quesadilla $2.25
  Banana Berry Smoothie
Fresh Bananas and Strawberries Blended with Yogurt and Honey Protein Powder is Optional
$3.00
Soups of the Day Old Fashioned Tomato (Vegetarian) 1.95/2.60/3.05
  Clam Chowder 1.95/2.60/3.05
Wild Greens BC Baked Potato $1.65
Pizza Roasted Chicken, Sun Dried Tomato & Smoked Gouda
Savory pizza topped with roasted chicken, sun dried tomatoes and gouda cheese
$1.90
  Julienne Vegetable and Sun dried Tomato
Italian Marinated Vegetables with Tangy Sun dried Tomatoes and a blend of cheeses
$3.50
Deli BC Santa Fe Chicken Pita $4.75
Entrée Swedish Meatballs over Egg Noodles Served with a Side and a Roll $4.25
Grill Beer Battered Fish and Chips
Beer Battered Cod Filets, Served with French Fries
$5.35

Eurest the food service provider typically tries and come up with some fancy menu but more often than not can't get even the most basic dishes right. Any steamed or seasoned veg is usually dry and plain or soggy and the flavor is over bearing. It's just a total mess. Dom has said it was better when Microsoft subsidized the cost. I'd like to think so, since Eurest sure loves charging me $5.70 for a sandwich one day then $4.90 for the same exact thing the very next.

So sometimes I'll go out, problem is that B50 has next to nothing within walking distance, save a teriyaki and I think there's a deli up near that as well. That leaves driving. So you consume gas, take 20 minutes to get there and get back, the food is always better, most of the time cheaper, and overall more satisfying.

At this point though I honestly feel like my best option are the 3 for $8/9 Lean Cuisine meals that I get and can bring into work. Even they taste better, and they actually save me money, I get my food no matter what in under 8 minutes and it's a good size portion and I don't feel like crap after I eat it.

I know I'm not the only one, it's practically a running joke with people here in 50. I'm just amazed Eurest hasn't been thrown out with their bad food.

And finally for a company that has somewhere around $30 billion in cash laying around you'd think that Microsoft would be able to get lunch right.




Rants | Work
Friday, June 08, 2007 11:29:16 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [0]

Friday, April 27, 2007

Hate annoying Flash ads? So do I! Try my new gadget, FlashBang...#
Last night around 3AM I was browsing the web and listening to Dark Side pretty loudly. I suddenly heard a really loud gunshot come from my speakers that literally made my heart skip a beat. I look a bit lower on the page and notice a really annoying Flash movie ad that just starts playing without me doing a thing. That's when I said enough is enough and decided to do something about it since it's obvious people who create Flash will continually use sound without user interaction. Flash really needs to remember sound levels across sessions to prevent someone from giving themselves a heart attack. To prevent Flash ads from loading and playing sound as well taking over the top layer of a page I created FlashBang.

FlashBang is a very simple application. Upon installation it adds an icon to your standard toolbar in Internet Explorer. Clicking the icon then toggles Flash on and off. The application accomplishes this by simply adding or removing a registry key. This is pretty much the same thing the new Manage Add-ons does in Internet Explorer with SP2 except it requires that you refresh the page for the changes to take affect. The plus is that it doesn't require more than two clicks so enabling and disabling Flash is quick and easy. When you disable Flash you'll see an icon in the lower right hand corner of the window as seen here.

The system requirements are that you are running XP with Service Pack 2 OR Vista and have the .NET Framework 1.1 or later installed and of course that you're using Internet Explorer. The application is provided on a free of charge and free to distribute basis. I will gladly accept donations of any amount via PayPal.

Make payments with PayPal - it's fast, free and secure!

Download: FlashBang (updated 4/27/2007 12:01AM, please uninstall previous versions first)

If you have any questions or comments feel free. :-)

UPDATE: Renamed from TorchFlash to FlashBang thanks to Dylan Greene.

Also, it looks like there is a minor bug in that if you have IE open while you're installing FlashBang the icon won't be activated in IE by default. Please be sure to close all IE windows before installing FlashBang. If you run into this little bug go to View then Toolbars then Customize, scroll the list and Add FlashBang to the toolbar.

If you've uninstalled FlashBang you can still Disable and Enable Flash using the Manage Add-ons feature of Internet Explorer found under the Tools menu. You may need to visit a site which normally has Flash to see Flash pop into the list. Really though, this is all the app actually does to block Flash ads. Sadly it means disabling all other Flash and not just the ads. Other options include a nice big hosts file, or also use FireFox which has some other ways of blocking ads through CSS and such.

UPDATE: I'm releasing a minor update to FlashBang which will fix any issues regarding installation on a machine with only the .NET Framework 2.0 installed. At this point if you have 1.1.4322, 2.0.50727.0, or later installed, FlashBang should work without any issues. To check which version of the .NET Framework that you have installed run the following at a command prompt " reg query hklm\software\microsoft\asp.net ".

UPDATE: Now installing on Windows Vista! I had to update the Visual Studio installer to recognize Windows v6, aka Vista. FlashBang will now install on Vista without any known issues... well, other than the UAC stuff. I do NOT have $125 to get a cert to code sign these free apps since well, I've only had $5 donated thus far. Until I can get the app code signed anyone running UAC will be bugged while installing FlashBang, and bugged again when they go to toggle Flash on and off in IE. On the plus side, there is a check box in the Protected Mode prompt in IE to quit prompting about the app in the future. I suggest people check that box till I can get a cert and code sign my apps.




Designing | Ideas | Internet | Rants | Work
Friday, April 27, 2007 2:08:31 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [12]

Put a dimmer on Silverlight with my other new gadget, LightSwitch...#

To coincide with the release of the Vista installable FlashBang, I'm also releasing an app to complement it. Even though WPF/E has yet to really take off, I'm sure Silverlight will start gaining some momentum. In advance of that I'm releasing LightSwitch, which oddly enough does the same exact thing FlashBang does for Flash, but for Silverlight content. The system requirements are the same as FlashBang, and they are that you'll be running XP with Service Pack 2 OR Windows Vista and have the .NET Framework 1.1 or later installed and of course that you're using Internet Explorer.

The application is provided on a free of charge and free to distribute basis. I will gladly accept donations of any amount via PayPal, and please note I do need the donations as both LightSwitch and FlashBang are both unsigned apps users of Vista will see unwarranted and nasty messages till I can afford a cert and get the apps code signed. So any funds that I receive will go towards the $125/yr that's required to maintain the cert.

Make payments with PayPal - it's fast, free and secure!

Download: LightSwitch (updated 4/27/2007 12:01AM, please uninstall previous versions first)

If you have any questions or comments feel free. :-)

Note also, it looks like there is a minor bug in that if you have IE open while you're installing FlashBang or LightSwitch the icon won't be activated in IE by default. Please be sure to close all IE windows before installing either app. If you run into this little bug go to View then Toolbars then Customize, scroll the list and Add FlashBang / LightSwitch to the toolbar.

If you've uninstalled either of the apps you can still Disable and Enable Flash  and Silverlight using the Manage Add-ons feature of Internet Explorer found under the Tools menu. Really though, this is all the app actually does to block the content. Sadly it means disabling all other good content and not just the ads. Other options include a nice big hosts file, or also use FireFox which has some other ways of blocking ads through CSS and such.




Designing | Ideas | Internet | Rants | Work
Thursday, April 26, 2007 11:03:08 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [0]

Wednesday, May 31, 2006

1000 or so Vista Pearl Exercise Balls invade the Redmond Campus...#

So I'm driving back from Northgate Mall to pick up one of these devilishly delicious apple pie apples from the Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory. I get a call from Justin saying that I need to get to campus. It's around 10pm so I figure this must be interesting.

Get my way over there and there's 100's, 1000 even, of these big blue Vista pearl exercise balls everywhere. Sadly I don't have my camera with me so I can't take any photos plus it's too dark anyway.

I grabbed one, put it in the car, made my way home. Can't wait to see just how massive the roll out is and to see how many are left tomorrow morning.




Microsoft | Vista | Work
Wednesday, May 31, 2006 10:15:07 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [0]

Thursday, June 30, 2005

Still not been doing too well on the sleep and memory front.#
Had yet another follow up a couple days ago. Sadly things haven't improved. Stopped taking any sleep aids during the week simply because I can't function. Though the past 3 weeks have been okay since no matter what I wake/stay awake at 7:30 to get by around 8:30 which is good. On the weekends I either take the prescribed stuff or the turkey pills, mmm turkey. Anyway, it's odd since while this seems to be working and I don't feel tired. I just feel like I'm not exactly all there, mind is off somewhere and I'm functioning as a zombie. Woke up this morning thinking it was September and a Sunday. Maybe it was the dream I was having or something. Short term memory keeps going up and down, mostly down.

On the plus side I managed to actually start three of the major projects I've been looking to start for a while. Oh and the extra one at work which I'll hopefully be able to finish in a month or so. Think it'll be good, plus we could probably use it at work, well if I can actually pull it off.

It's been a while since I was last writing daily. On the public blog think I probably should start up a bit more. Definitely learned a thing or two since being inside eHome that would make for good solution posts for random issues with WMP and MCE.

All else is good, it seems. I suppose I could use a bit more company sometimes on the weekends guess that'll get solved soonish. Oh and for the record, it's 12:30 and I'm not in the least bit interested going down to the cafeteria for lunch, what a shock.




Home Life | Work
Thursday, June 30, 2005 11:31:16 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [0]

Thursday, November 13, 2003

Uni choices, UW, SLO, SJSU, UCSD... It's driving me mad.#
This has been bugging me for a while now. I've talked to Jonathan Kay, Dominic Hopton, Galan Bridgman, Kyle Mulligan, my gramps, myself and who knows how many others asking for advice about what I should do?

First a little background about me for those who don't really know me or those who haven't poured over AuroraVisions (my CV type site). To begin with I never went to high school. Heck I barely went to a third of the 8th grade which ended up being my last year of K12 schooling. I won't get into the reasons now but basically I just wasn't happy at school and was extremely unimpressed by the quality of what my school district had to offer at the high school level (at the time the only computer class was typing, which iirc was on 286/386's).

In addition to my great distaste for the lower bowels of the American school system at 13 I was working my ass off doing web design and server administration. I did this in addition to keeping up my regular school type skills and at 16 I took my GED. I was really happy about that at the time, especially since I only missed two questions. Looking back now I wish I had taken my SAT's and started an AA degree right after that but I didn't. I kept working and working and working.

So jump forward to September 2001 and I end up at the University of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology (a mouthful or UMIST for short). It's a really good uni in Manchester, England it has also recently merged with the University of Manchester to become, from what I'm told, the largest uni in Europe. It's also supposed to be in the top five for all of the UK. So I did a full year there, my results left a lot to be desired. Of course if I had left and come back right after the first semester ended I would've been at a 2:1 level (I think that's like a 3 or 3.5GPA). Instead I grew increasingly frustrated with the course but I continued on till the end of the year. I really didn't like the way things were taught there and was really unhappy with the lack of communication and the quality of material from my supposed mentors at the university. They liked using this really big moral speech at random about plagiarism and how we shouldn't even help others with their code for we might be accused of plagiarism and would be caught. Forget the fact that the entire first year of the Java module was taken directly from a single book; slides, code, examples, everything. Why in the world am I paying £10,000 a year in tuition to learn Java and the purpose of object oriented programming when I could've bought a book off Amazon for £30 and taught myself? Ergo, the course and uni wasn't for me.

The second semester was worthwhile I suppose. I wouldn't have ever been apart of Project Hurricane if I had come back early. So far that's one of the coolest things I've gotten out of going to England for a year. Plus I made some good friends, closer than friends ;-), and got to do loads of cool things through Microsoft UK. Having baguettes and crepes in Paris wasn't bad either :-). The only downside to staying was that because I was so annoyed with the course and got thrown around by the exam and coursework tutor in the end my 2:1 turned into something I'm not very proud of. But since when are INNER JOIN's not valid SQL? And why in the world would I only get a 38.5% on a piece of course that was checked over by my other tutor to confirm that I should've had a 76%? Anyway that's all history and hindsight.

Where am I at now? Well I'm stuck in that big fork in the road called life. I've really got very little time to procrastinate and decide what I want to do though which makes things all the more difficult. The worst part about this is that the more and more I think about going back to uni the more and more I'm unsure of whether or not I really really want to do a BSc. Computing Science. But then I ask myself why? Is it because I don't like the fact the most of the CS courses are mostly theoretical and not enough practical? Is it because most only teach Java or something even worse? Or maybe it's because I just don't think I'm up to the math involved in the course. I've always had a major gripe about how at uni math and computers go hand in hand. For what I want in my future they never will. So all that thinking as almost got me wanting to do another degree, maybe in photography, I've been really keen to get into that medium a whole lot more.

I'm still looking at other courses but the only thing that keeps me peddling back to the Computer Science is the lonesome fact that most employers I'm looking to work for want a BSc. in Computer Science or equivalent. This includes Microsoft. I've been told from various people I know there that this isn't always the case and that plenty of people are hired who have another degree, I'm just still not sure. What's the deal with this?

Overall I tend to think of myself as a pretty well rounded guy in terms of my interests and what I actually can and love doing with technology and computers. I do just about everything, hardware, networking, server admin, ASP.NET, GUI, user experience, graphics work in Photoshop, support, you name it - I do it. I'm still learning to be a super hard core programmer like Dom but for the moment I'm teaching myself to be a better programmer in C# as well as all the ins and outs of SQL. Hopefully redoing all my sites and packaging it up into something that can actually be used by others might move things along :-).

So finally, what it all boils down to is that I've got to decide what university is right for me and figure out the best way to apply when my background isn't that of the stereotypical high school grad.

I've been thinking about UCSD for the main part because my cousin is going to be stationed on Coronado Island. Most likely we'll be able to share an apartment to save cash and from what I can see there are some pretty good jobs down in the San Diego area to get me through college till I hopefully move up to Redmond ;-). The only concern with UCSD is that I've been told that their CS department isn't all that great in terms of practical application of knowledge and from what I can see of the course it's pretty heavy in the math/theoretical basis of computers. Plus I think it's also a bit more difficult for me to get into considering my background, sigh.

Next I was thinking about SJSU, I don't know too much about it other than it's location close to Silicon Valley (talk about any number of jobs) and also it looks as if they've got a computer science course that has a little more practicality to it. There's also plenty of modules to do in photography as well that are also apart of their BA in Photography. I've also just noticed that they've got a program in Digital Media as well. That's pretty darn cool.

Not too far away I've also got Cal Poly (SLO). From everything I've seen about this uni so far I like. It's highly practical and they say that they really have you doing real world things right from the start. The CS course looks as if it has plenty to offer with not *too* much math. Generally I guess I just seem to be okay with the way the uni comes across. Like SJSU they've also got what looks like a pretty good arts program as well.

And of course any Microsoft wannabe would have to include UW. Main reasoning here is to just get up to Washington. Plus I would think that the close proximity to Microsoft would mean that they might cater more towards courses with a stronger emphasis on Microsoft technologies. But then again it could just be like all the rest? That's what I'm not sure about.

So the more and more I think about everything the more and more confusing things become. In the mean time I can at least complete converting my web resume at AuroraVisions.com to Word and PDF form and start working on a portfolio but I really have to make sure I send in my application online by November 30th. That's the deadline for most of the Cal State Universities.

If anyone reading has gone or is going to, teaches or has taught at, or just as something to say about any of these universities or just would like to help me along the right, or left path in the road please please comment, IM, or email me. I sure as hell am not turning around and walking back where I started ;-). As soon as I come upon some revelation I'll be sure to travel back in time, tell my younger self about it along with the lucky lotto numbers for yesterday. Till then live long and prosper.




Designing | Friends | Home Life | Ideas | Media | Microsoft | Outside | Photography | Work
Thursday, November 13, 2003 7:54:35 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [1]

Tuesday, October 07, 2003

Project Hurricane .NET goes live...#
I've been pretty busy the past couple of hours and can't believe I forgot to post about Project Hurricane going live yesterday. I wanted to do it before midnight so I'd actually be posting the same day, but oh well. Dom and Mark did all the coding for it. I did the the CSS and graphics/GUI. So really all the credit goes towards those guys. Oh and please, if you don't like something, axe them, I didn't code it :-P. Seriously though, they did a damn good job. Here's the standard blurb about what PH is:

"Project Hurricane is an online community portal built using the .NET Framework. It is an easily deployable skinnable community for students by students."

And did I mention, like WinFS in Longhorn, it's going to solve ALL of your problems, yes Jon, even yours! So don't delay, activate today!




Hurricane | Microsoft | Work
Tuesday, October 07, 2003 4:48:44 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [2]

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