Who You Calling A Jesse?

Trying to sort the brilliant ideas from the lesser ones.

A community apart?

Posted by Jesse Rodgers on January 26, 2008 at 12:00 PM

The recent buzz online between WaSP members over IE 8 is approaching lunacy. With the respected Zeldman suggesting WaSP co-lead Drew was not doing his co-lead job of signing an NDA with Microsoft. Lets step back and think about the lay of the land for the moment.

WaSP has a Microsoft Task Force and an Adobe focused Task Force both with NDA requirements, both companies are now seriously competing for the web developer market. The lead of WaSP shouldn’t be NDA’d by either but they should be informed when an announcement is coming and that is the Task Force leads job.

WaSP needs to refocus and those in all the task forces need to shake their heads at recent events and figure out their next steps. Rachel asks what happens now? Well I am inclined to say re-state the goals of the organization, re-evaluate what each task force is doing and how that fits in the goals, and ensure process are developed to maintain a professional presence.

I also commented on Rachel’s blog that I believe SXSW is partly to blame for some of the recent mess. Why? People feel cut out of contributing if they don’t go to Austin. I know I do and what is worse I know that isn’t totally true. WaSP needs to distance itself from all events unless it runs them, at least for now. Let the participation focus around online venues and crank up the advocacy once things are figured out.

The next big challenge is in front of us. IT departments now have massive, poorly developed, monsters of web applications to maintain… or Sharepoint. They don’t want the browser to change, not now, not ever. WaSP, there is your new enemy.

For the record I don’t much care for the meta targeting but I won’t hate it… just think it is a quick fix, not well thought out, but isn’t that what ‘beta’ is for?

Memoires of a lapdog

Posted by Jesse Rodgers on January 21, 2008 at 09:57 PM

In my relative short career I have not had the pleasure of surviving a unionised environment except as a summer student doing landscaping work for the City of Sault Ste Marie. IT related work environments just don’t seem all that interested in a union, I would argue most knowledge workers have little interest in such a club. However here we are in 2008 at the University of Waterloo facing a vote in an attempt to certify OSSTF as a bargaining unit on campus. The vote is today however the outcome won’t be decide for approximately a month due to some dissagreement in who is in the bargaining unit.

The one thing that does get me about this entire process is how the law in this province favours unions over the individual. Maybe in industrial work environments the method used to unionize makes sense as workers generally may be easily replaced and can be easily bullied. However in a professional work environment, where it can take a few months to a few years before a worker performs at top form with higher education credentials, it feels like the whole process tramples on your rights no matter which side of the fence you sit. The behaviour out of the union itself just feels like they are after members, they don’t actually care about the workers otherwise they wouldn’t pursue unionization where the support is 50-50 at best (here it is 60% against, but they need to vote).

This whole experience has taught me a lot and I’d like to think I managed to get through it, up to this point, as President of the Staff Association (the opposing force) with only being called a few names: Meat puppet, lap dog, etc. Oh and apparently I have been paying people to vote… that would mean I had personal wealth large enough to do that. Cool, someone tell my bank manager ;)

8 things you didn't know about me... maybe

Posted by Jesse Rodgers on January 15, 2008 at 05:44 PM

Gary Barber, a friend I have only met through Twitter and another friend down in Australia, has passed along a nice “8 things you didn’t know about me” meme. Figure I should oblige…

The rules:
  1. Link to your tagger and post these rules.
  2. List EIGHT random facts about yourself.
  3. Tag EIGHT people at the end of your post and list their names.
  4. Let them know they’ve been tagged.
What you may not know about me?
  1. I have been a member (on and off) of the Canadian Ski Patrol since 1992 and was one of the first snowboarders to snowboard will on patrol. At the time no one knew what to do with snowboarders, my patrol leader didn’t mind.
  2. On my 19th birthday I sat in a canoe on the snow with a draft ball (a northern Ontario thing – its a ball filled with beer).
  3. I have a sister that is 13 years younger than me (same parents), mental age is a bit closer.
  4. I lived in Dundas, Thunder Bay, and Sault Ste Marie (the Soo) growing up only to settle in Waterloo (all in Ontario). All in the same Province but 1491km to go to Thunder Bay from here, one way. The ‘Soo’ is what I call home.
  5. My first job was driving a Dickie Dee ice cream bike, I was 14
  6. To this day my favourite food is the original JuJubes from Dare.
  7. I always wanted to be a marine biologist, studied Geography, coded until recently, and now work on user experience stuff. Still not sure what I want to be when I grow up.
  8. My dream is to spend my life fishing and hunting away from cities, electricity, and bad drivers.

So who am I going to tag? Not sure I know 8 eight people that might respond but ah well. I will try and pick on folks in the Waterloo area ;)

  1. Simon Woodside – Simon and I instigate the BarCamp’s around here
  2. Gary Will – I have only met him relatively recently, seems like a good guy ;)
  3. Larry Borsato – a general pain, Larry has coded more things in more places than I care to know but I am sure he has an interesting story.
  4. Ali Asaria – The guy behind Well.ca
  5. Norman Young – it has been a while since he has posted anything… maybe now he will.
  6. Brydon Gilliss – A DemoCamp organizer from Guelph
  7. Mic Berman – maybe she will have time between Mozilla and local startups
  8. Jim Murphy – the ex-pat that has returned to the area, what is his story anyway?

Wow… 8 local bloggers. That’s it, so says the rules.

Comments: 1 (view/add your own) Tags: meme

U of Waterloo announces VeloCity

Posted by Jesse Rodgers on January 02, 2008 at 11:17 AM

Over the past year or so the MMNP effort has been working on ways to utilize mobile and media based technology on campus. A year ago a pilot project looked at the possibility of students replacing their land lines in residence is relatively smart phones. Lots was learned (primarily that students are shell shocked by the telco cost and don’t really use them even when a large chunk of costs are covered) and the project moved on to different ideas. One of those ideas was a living environment that doubles as an incubator for entrepreneurial students.

Enter 2008 and the announcement of VeloCity. The Daily Bulletin article covers all the details. From the VeloCity site:

“It’s a place where some of UW’s most talented, entrepreneurial, creative and technologically savvy students will be united under one roof to work on the future of mobile communications, web and new media.”

I was involved with the project early on and it is great to see that Sean has taken his idea and made it a reality. I expect to see some exciting things come from this housing experiment. What a great opportunity for some students!

What a wild year its been

Posted by Jesse Rodgers on January 01, 2008 at 11:01 AM

January first is upon us and after what was a hectic Christmas break I can sit down and reflect on the year that was 2007 and what might come technology wise for 2008. All this happened in my life:

  • I became a Dad on January 19th
  • finished my course load on my Msc
  • changed jobs
  • cities I visited outside of Ontario: Las Vegas, London, Cambridge, Oxford, Leeds, Harrogate, York, Liverpool, Wigan, Deddington, Buffalo, Quebec City, Montreal
  • Drove 30 000 km (or so) and I live 2 km from work
  • instigated 4 BarCampWaterloo’s and one StartupCampWaterloo meeting a load of really interesting people at all of them

…and that is what I remember. Last year I set some goals for myself and had a few comments on technology. If I wouldn’t have changed jobs all those could have been met (I think) but I didn’t foresee that I have an opportunity to work with an extremely talented team on an impossible project with technology I hadn’t ever worked with. That fuels my excitement for 2008.

For this year my goals are just as simple as last year:

  • Finish my msc (I have to by April)
  • Focus on user experience and UI development
  • Spend every moment possible with my son

As far as web technology goes. I thought last year that Spry sucked and AJAX might be more accessible by year end. I think as the year went on Spry got better and folks like Derek figured out some best practices for more accessible AJAX experiences.

This year I think the big technology fight will be between Flash and Silverlight. Microsoft has to figure out how to convince Flash developers why they should forget all they have learned and change technology while Adobe needs to figure out how not to step in it and be seen as an arrogant company that doesn’t deserve the loyalty Macromedia had built. The buzz and reaction over the whole user tracking thing or updates is going to piss people off. How dare customers get upset? Indeed.

Microsoft’s UI with Silverlight trump card might be Sharepoint. This beast of a CMS is (I think) the most extensive and customizable business class CMS out there. It is the best of a really bad bunch and Silverlight could make it suck less from a UI perspective. We shall see.

Should be an interesting year ;)