technology / web


I’m very good at procrastination. In fact it was almost my major in college. So when I look around and things aren’t getting done, I figure the cause is procrastination and speak sharply to myself about that. But sometimes there is an actual reason – not an excuse, mind you, but a reason.

This week I have several things hanging over my head that really should have been completed by now. I got off track last week what with the issues with my right hand taking an unjustified vacation during a holiday week. Still, I thought the decks were relatively clear and those undone projects from last week could easily be slotted into this week – ready to go after a holiday and fireworks and all that. Wonder where I got that delusion exactly. (more…)

Did you forget to register for WebVisions and it starts tomorrow? Not to worry, you can still go. Online registration is closed but just come to the Oregon Convention Center and purchase conference and workshop passes at the registration area in the B section. Look for signs or just lots of cool people. Registration will be open from 7:45am to 4:15pm Wednesday, May 20 to Friday, May 22.

Portland favorites are speaking on everything from Companies and Communities (Dawn Foster) to Future of Mobile (Jason Grigsby) to Cyborg Anthropology (Amber Case) to Twitter Marketing (Carri Bugbee). And that’s only a sample of the topics. Check out the conference site for the full list.
http://www.webvisionsevent.com/

Still haven’t signed up for WebVisions?  Even after I told you about it here.

 Thought you missed the discounted early registration? You still have time — they extended it till April 6.  See http://www.webvisionsevent.com/ for full details.

Don’t miss this year’s event — 3 days in Portland, Oregon,  May 20-22, at the Oregon Convention Center.  Come hear speakers on web design, user experience, and business strategy — plus have a lot of fun.  If everybody you knew went last year and told you how great it was but you forgot to get on the notice list, this is your official reminder to sign up.

Jared Spool will be here again — as keynote speaker and doing a workshop on Designing for Content-Rich Sites. Portland favorites are speaking on everything from Companies and Communities (Dawn Foster) to Future of Mobile (Jason Grigsby) to Cyborg Anthropology (Amber Case) to Twitter Marketing (Carri Bugbee).  And that’s only a sample of the topics. Check out the conference site for the full list.

Register today (or by the end of the day on Tuesday, March 31) for the general sessions and get a discounted rate. Workshop registration is separately priced and is also significantly discounted if you sign up by March 31 –   see http://www.webvisionsevent.com/ for full details.

Or maybe this is really a nightmare.  Hard to tell because I rarely remember dreams and this one has stuck with me for two days.  In the interest of background, I once had a job managing a series of databases and trying to trick them into giving me the data I wanted (very proprietary schemes that didn’t provide a lot of happy systems interaction).  So I have some experience in getting that 3AM notification that there is some “database error.”  My particular server always preferred to let me know these things on its own schedule.

Anyway, these databases were not modern enough to include things like pictures, but they did contain a substantial amount of other information on our customers.  So it’s not too much of a leap to my dream scenario.  In the plot my co-workers and I were organizing a data migration as part of a general system upgrade.  Things were going along fine and the test cases we ran didn’t send up any red flags or cause any big anxiety.  A few things went wrong as they always do, but we fixed those and moved on.

One of the spiffier features of this dream database was a full figure photo of each customer — not just a normal drivers license style head shot.  I don’t know why we were collecting those, or how we intended to use them, but they were one of the “features” that persuaded management to buy into the system.  Not a big deal really — just a jpg image. 

So the tests looked good and we signed off on beginning the conversion.  After an hour or so of watching data churn I decided it would be more useful to go watch the local pizza maker instead and headed out for food.  A couple of hours later I returned to find things humming along and the process further along than I had expected.  In fact it was approaching finished.  No alarms or much in the way of exceptions except for a couple of obscure looking notes — which seemed to refer to the pictures.  In my opinion, the pictures were the most easily replaced part of the whole thing, so as long as we could add them back, I wouldn’t lose any sleep over some of them having gone missing.

As it turned out, however, they weren’t missing.  What they were was altered.  Not altered as in defaced exactly, but altered in that the clothes people were wearing had changed.  Changed — just as if someone had snipped a section of one image and Photoshopped it onto a different picture.  At first I thought my staff was just playing a practical joke, trying to convince me that something they’d concocted was really a system error.  But there were too many of them.  Pictures of guys who probably had been wearing flannel shirts now sporting frilly silk blouses — and teens with serious looking suit jackets worn above knee length shorts.  The more we looked, the more we found that almost every picture was changed — and there appeared to be a pattern.  They were switched with someone who had a customer ID that was one digit higher, so there was a kind of rolling replacement.  If for some reason there was a gap in the ID numbers, no change had been made. 

This would have been kind of cool if I’d been trying to do it, but I’m sure my programming skills don’t run that deep.  We had enough trouble just getting the data fields to convert over.  This didn’t seem to be a good piece of news to spring on my senior manager in the middle of the night, so I waited — hoping for a miracle.

I got my miracle — I woke up and realized that this problem was not “my” problem if it even was technically possible.  But if anybody offers me a gig doing data migration that includes pictures, I think I’ll opt out.

It’s not too late to submit your site as an entry for  WebVisionary Awards 2008.  Applications accepted through May 9th at http://www.webvisionaryawards.com/application.html    This competition is open to “all organizations and individuals involved in designing, building, managing, maintaining, marketing or promoting Websites, Interactive Advertising, Online Film & Video, and Mobile content for business, consumer or general audiences.”

That covers a lot of territory — and you could be a winner!

WebVisions is back again in 2008 in Portland, Oregon, on May 22-23 at the Oregon Convention Center.  Come hear speakers on web design, user experience, and business strategy — plus have a lot of fun.  Lynne Johnson of Fastcompany.com will be one of the key speakers as will Jeffrey Veen from Google.  Check out the full list of speakers and workshops at http://www.webvisionsevent.com/schedule/

Register today (or by the end of the day on Monday, March 31) for the general sessions and get a discounted rate of only $180 (goes to $250 on April 1).   Workshop registration is separately priced and is also significantly discounted if you sign up before April 1 — see http://www.webvisionsevent.com/register/ for full details.