Face Lift

I think I’ve tweaked WordPress to the point where I’m happy (for now).  I added the background image – it’s my backyard.  The theme I had to adjust some to get it just so, but that’s the life of a geek.

I put back the missing images from the older posts that did manage to migrate from BlogML.  I’m not going to worry about any of the older posts, they were rubbish anyway.

Now, about some content…

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Painful migration to WordPress

I decided to re-migrate to WordPress.  Or is that un-migrate from the other blog engine?

In any case it was a painful migration.  My old blog engine can only export to BlogML format, but WordPress doesn’t have a BlogML import utility.  Someone created one a while ago but it only supports up to WordPress 2.5.

At present I’m missing a large number of posts from my old blog.  Until I find the time or ambition to import them manually, they’re just gone.  No big loss I suppose.

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Truck

In November of 2006 I leased a Scion xA for 24 months to be my commuter car for work.  I live approximately 24 miles from work.  The final lease payment was November 11th, so my wife Laura and I decided to trade her 2000 Olds Alero in and buy the Scion.  We spoke to the dealership and worked it all out.  They got the paperwork all together for us to sign and we made plans to go in and take care of it the Saturday after Thanksgiving.

The Friday after Thanksgiving I was getting ready to go hunting.  I started my Jeep to let it warm up while my dad and I loaded our gear up.  We hopped in and as I was about to put it in gear it shut off.  *poof* Like I turned the key.  After checking some obvious things I got my scanner out and plugged it in – no link.  My scanner could not link to the ECU.  Nuts.  We promptly moved our gear to my dad’s truck and went hunting anyway – priorities you know.

I tried in vain to get the part but no auto parts stores in the area carry it nor can they get it.  The closest Chrysler dealership wanted $656 for the part and $400 to program assuming I save myself $100 by installing it myself.

Saturday morning we arrived at the Toyota dealership to give them the Olds and title for the Scion.

Saturday afternoon I was driving my new 2008 Toyota Tundra SR5 double cab 4×4 with TRD off-road package and 5.7L iForce V8 in Desert Sand Mica.

Obviously my Jeep wouldn’t start and we estimated $125 to tow it from our house to the dealership.  So, I swung by my mom and dad’s house on the way home and borrowed his draw bar, then stopped at the U-Haul store and rented a car dolly.  We went home, winched the Jeep onto the dolly and used my new Tundra to tow it to the dealership.  I’m sure that was a first for them.  I’m also pretty sure that our sales rep earned salesman of the year for moving a pick-up in this economy.

I did my part to stimulate the economy.

Cheers,

goody

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Over my head (Cable Car)…

Everyone knows I’m in
Over my head
Over my head
With eight seconds left in overtime

–The Fray

My wife works at a college (soon to be university I think) - Mt. Union College.  She’s worked there for about 5 years, and as one of her benefits, she, I, and our sons can take classes for “free” (not completely free – there’s a tax implication at the end of the year, but near enough).

Laura has been working on finishing her B.A., off and on when the class schedules suit her needs, which is good for her.  Unfortunately for me, I already have a B.S. and Mt. Union is a private traditional liberal arts college.  The college’s focus is on traditional students, and doesn’t offer much of anything in the way of evening classes.  That generally means that it has nothing for me in the way of academics.

This semester though, there’s a math class offered from 12:00-12:50.  Throw in a few minutes drive time to and from class, and I can fit it in by taking a 90 minute lunch.  Cool.  I decided, literally, the day classes start (today) that I’d like to take the class.  It was one of the most impulsive decisions I’ve ever made, but it seemed innocuous enough at the time.  I emailed Laura, she checked into it, and after some wrangling,  got the professor to admit me to the class as an extra (did I mention that the class was full?)100_2523

I need Calculus II, which I’ve never taken, for my M.S. in C.S. at Kent State.  I did take Calculus I at Kent State, but that was about 15 years ago, so I may be a little rusty… maybe.  I tried to take Analytic Geometry and Calculus I at Kent this past spring as a refresher, ultimately so I can take the Calc II class that I need.  I took the class on the premise that I would sign up for tuition reimbursement from NEC.  Unfortunately, due to my work-related travel I had to drop the class at the last possible opportunity, which is disappointing because I was doing really well until I missed too much time traveling to Japan and Dallas.  It was a bit frustrating as well because I didn’t get a refund for dropping the class or tuition reimbursement, so I basically paid $1200 out of my own pocket for what amounts to tutoring.  This time I saw an opportunity to take the same class at MUC for $free and avoid the downside if by chance something happens again like what happened during the spring semester.

Laura decided that she would take two classes this semester too.  One on Monday evening, and a second on Wednesday evening (interestingly, she didn’t mention that until Friday).  It really doesn’t have a big impact on me if she takes the classes other than I need to know so I can pick up the twins from pre-school after work those evenings.

That’s when it hit me.

Laura won’t be home until 9pm on Monday and Wednesday.  I’ll be taking Calc on M, T, H, and F.  The intersection of those schedules means I have to go in early on M and W – I can’t stay late.  I hit the treadmill in the mornings and the weights in the evenings.  That’s nuked.  Yeah, it’s only calc I, I won’t have to study much, especially after taking the “refresher” in the spring, but there will still be copious amounts of homework and quizzes.

Treadmill?  Weights?  Me-time?  Family-time?  Uh, Fantasy Football, hello?!

In order to take the class and pick up my boys on time on Mondays and Wednesdays, I’ll have to be at work at 7am.

I’ll have to get up an hour earlier on Mondays and Wednesdays to fit in cardio – that makes it about 5:15am wake-up (that’s the same time we got up in Army basic training, incidentally).  In order to keep my daily weight routine though, well, that’s a bit tricky.  My weight routine is Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday.  My workouts last roughly an hour to an hour and fifteen minutes.  I’m already getting up an hour earlier Mondays.  I can’t go to the gym on Monday or Wednesday evenings.   Hmm.  If I tack on the time for a morning workout, then I have to get up 2 1/2 hours earlier on Mondays and Wednesdays – that puts me back to 3:45am.  Um, the gym isn’t open then.  I’ll figure something out – worst case scenario there’s an Anytime fitness near here

Moving along.  We signed Connor and Logan up for “small stuff” football at the local YMCA this fall (self so proud). That’s on Wednesday evenings at 5:30-6:45 for six weeks from September 10 through October 15.

None of this takes into account homework, work-related schedule snafu’s, recreational activities, holiday “stuff”, etc.

In short, I’m going to be a bit busy for the next 15 weeks.  No, I didn’t really think about it at the time.  I absolutely refuse to get beat by this schedule.  That’s just how I roll.  That means that I have to work out something for my gym schedule, cut WAY back on non-important things like *cough*TV*cough, and adjust my schedule a lot by getting as much sleep as possible.  Somehow, someway, I will make this work well and fluidly for everyone involved.

I think the hardest part for me will be keeping my head clear and not getting distracted.  I have a strong tendency to ruminate on things – work, health, family, etc.  This is going to be a big challenge for me to focus on one thing at a time and see it through before moving on to the next item.

Ah, the sacrifices we choose make.  I guess champions get up.  Even when they can’t.

Wish me luck.

Cheers,

Goody

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Code reviews

Code reviews, the sanity check of software development.  They're a software engineering best practice initiative.  That's what a bullet point on my job description says, anyway.  Microsoft even calls them a best practice and has a slick how-to for C and C++:  http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb871031.aspx.

In a nutshell (a small nut) the idea is, you write some code, when you're done let me know, and then I look at it to see if it makes sense and is is free of glaring flaws.

We do code reviews all the time where I work.  I do at least one a week, and I ask other people to review my code… when I'm writing code not Word docs, all the time.  I get the occasional "why not just do this", and I occasionally I get to give it right back.  It's good.  It's a sanity check for the code.  It makes the software better; makes everyone (hopefully) better developers thanks to good feedback; and keeps maintenance costs low.

Now, here's the gaping hole: Code reviews are a sanity check on the code you wrote, not the code you didn't write.  See?  Makes perfect sense to me. 

When I look at code during a code review I'm looking at the code that you wrote.  I'm not necessarily looking for the subtle piece of logic that you left out that makes the whole feature work like the functional spec says it will.  For that matter, I may not even know what feature you're working on.  All I need to know is, what is this piece of code supposed to do, not what the entire feature consists of.  Code in and of itself does not a feature make.

Code reviews can not, nor should they, substitute for good testing, QA, and verification and validation (V&V for you software engineer types).  You still need to have some black-box testing mechanism in place to ensure that the final software does what it's supposed to do.  Code reviews can not always catch the missing logic or missing piece of code that makes sure there's money in the account before debiting it (disclaimer: that example is obviously obvious purposefully on purpose).  Having a test plan and having good QA is the only way to ensure that the software works (mostly – see "good enough").

 

Cheers,

Goody 

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