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Archive for the ‘website coding’ Category

what to do with your non-existent free time

Saturday, December 12th, 2009

The websites I read seem to come up in conversations often. I’m going to post the funniest ones today so we can have a funny conversation later.

Indexed - Just found this site today. The nerd in me loves it.

xkcd - Another nerdy site, this one with comics instead of graphs.

Ok time for some fun ones:
Cake Wrecks - Sometimes I start explaining this site to people, and I can’t do it. I pull up the site for them and hear them giggle for the next 15 minutes.

Fail Blog - I can’t believe the stupidity displayed by this site. Even though I can’t believe it, I am entertained by it.

LOL Cats - I really dislike having to read text-speak on phones, over facebook, and even hearing people say things out loud that were abbreviated into this new language. When animals do it, it is hilarious.

I also talk about woot.com. It is an on-line store that sells only one item per day, unless they have a woot-off, and then they sell different items, one at a time, back to back. The site has an entire subculture following it, and I find that fascinating.

my other life

Saturday, December 13th, 2008

In my other life I write computer code. Currently that part of my life is on a hiatus or a sabbatical. My enjoyment of coding is something people puzzle over, but it really isn’t that hard to figure out.

When you learn to write code, you see examples and then you implement them. The wonderful thing about code is that if you already have a computer, you have most of what you need to execute the code. In contrast if you have a recipe, knitting pattern, or guitar tab, you have to go out and get food or yarn or instruments or special tools. If you don’t have the proper implements, sometimes there are shortcuts, like using chopsticks for knitting needles or wash tub bass instruments. The result of such substitutions usually turn off the beginner, which is why the Girl Scouts aren’t cranking out scarves with embedded slivers of chop stick or playing in jug bands.

I’ve been programming in the same languages for years, making some forays into Perl and Python. Unfortunately, the live operating system to run most of my code just started to support C++ in the mid-oughts. I found most of the bugs in their Java implementation right before we stopped using it.

During the last portion of my employment and since, I’ve been able to read and play around with Ruby on Rails, agile development, a little Merb, brushing up on my Java, as well as work with other databases. I don’t talk about it here much because this is a craft/lifestyle blog.

If you would have told me I would be doing any sort of development during my unemployment, I would not have believed you. I like my computers, but fearing burnout suspected my independent development would be kept at arm’s length.

It has kept coming back though. I’d see a website, a business practice, a job requirement, and just go noodle around with it for a while.

This brings me back to how I got into computers in the first place. In 1990 or so, I was given a modem and a computer to stay involved in science. A few years later the group moved us to a Unix-based system, and I met Mike Eckhoff, and my programming instruction began. He fired off commands at me, and soon enough, I was making spy dogs in text-based virtual reality chat rooms. A few years later, I had the first internet prom date search.

In looking for a job this time, I would really like to find something fun and something people I knew would use. Unfortunately, we’re living in a recession with a full clampdown on credit. I’m hoping this opens up some corporate cultures to more telecommuting, but until then, I guess I’ll just be noodling around with some more code while trying out a new soup recipe.

first day of school and delicious pie

Tuesday, August 26th, 2008

Today is Tyrone’s first day of school. When I was young, my mother made us pose for first day of school pictures. Sometimes she’d have the teacher pose in the picture with us. Now I get electronic pictures from relatives on their first day of school.

This tradition has carried over to my family. For the past 3 years that I have known Tyrone, I take a picture of him on his first day of teaching. After working the same job without breaks for years and years, I am somewhat jealous of the clear boundaries of the academic year.



school starts 021

I’ve been trying to piece this website back together and get it all updated. While waiting for some databases to update, I made a pie.


school starts 025


school starts 026

This is a peach and nectarine pie, based on the recipe from the Better Homes and Gardens Cookbook. Tyrone’s mother swears by the oil-based crust, but I couldn’t get it to roll out properly without crumbling or sticking. The bottom crust is just pushed into place, and the top crust was formed into small circles that I could cover the pie with. The recipe also calls for the pie to be topped with brown sugar, butter, and pecans, but I’ve got more work to get done now.

Fashion Plates

Sunday, March 11th, 2007

How do you like the new blog look? It took hours of dragon slaying, and I still don’t think it looks completely right.

Guess who else has a new look? My husband Tyrone Jaeger! I’ve relinquished control, and showed him how to add and update content.

I’ve got the gallery showing random images on other pages, and I’m going to start using that for thumbnails on the blog. Let’s start with a finished picture of the Bag’o'Bags from _Craftivity_, pattern by Diane Bromberg.


crochetbag

Later tonight, taxes, editing the photo shoot, and Battlestar Galactica.

Flying squirrels, french cinema, and Oracular Divination

Tuesday, February 27th, 2007

Worked on the husband’s webpage for the past two days.  I’m not linking to it because the changes have not gone live yet.  Created my first template, and used Neil Gaimain’s Oracular Diviniation Machine to guide me on my design.  (I onced used Brian Eno’s Oblique Strategies, but they apply less to non-musical inspiration every year.) Tyrone has a wonderful picture of an industrial deteriorating skyline (street signs, broken-down roller coasters), and in the hazy backround are the Colorado Rocky Mountains.  I’ve done some wacky websites in my past, and so the main theme of this one is to keep it simple.  Tyrone’s going to have to manage it after it goes live, so that will help him too.

I didn’t know the website would turn out to be so blue, but it definetley suits Tyrone.  Look for it going live either Friday or Saturday!  I’ll link to it then.

In knitting news, finished 20 more inches of mohair lace.  Seamed the arms so I can wear it while I’m knitting.  I’m 10 inches from being DONE!

Lock-yourself-in-the-house sort of weekend

Saturday, February 17th, 2007

I almost jumped out of bed this morning.  It just feels like I have so many things to do.  Last night I finished off my first simple pattern that I’m going to submit to an on-line knitting magazine.  That sends so many other things cascading into action.

Today was one of maybe 3 days where I have been out of bed before my husband.  I did some Rodney Yee yoga to try and focus, and then work on the main site.  In looking for pics for the site (and my husband’s site) I started uploading a backlog to flickr, realizing that I have an new gallery too.  So many things to track.

For tomorrow, I’ll probably tweak the site a bit, maybe work up another simple pattern from my backlog, work on a cool felted purse with my sewing machine, and possibly document how to make terrariums out of old clear lotion bottles for instructables.