Categories
Business Technology

Just. Not. Getting. It.

Trevor Gilbert wrote The Midwest Mentality for Pando Daily and is, to put it bluntly, a terrible closed-minded look at Chicago specifically and “The Midwest” in general. It is probably the most disappointing piece of “journalism” I’ve read on the internet for quite some time (I don’t include most things about Apple here because it is almost systematically terrible).

Matt Moog has written a rebuttal of sorts over at Built in Chicago, so make sure you read that retort.

Here are some choice quotes:

Instead of working on a startup 24/7, employees take the weekend off and don’t work through the night. It doesn’t help in the creation of amazing technical feats, but it does allow people to have lives.

Yup, not burning your staff out is definitely something that should be avoided. Also, don’t forget that good stuff only happens to those who sacrifice themselves to a startup.

Not high school marriages, but rather the idea of getting married at age 21 is no big deal. That’s fine, but it also means that the ecosystem can’t rely on the insane work hours of the independent, no responsibilities generation. Instead, you have a number of people who would normally be able to work into the night, but instead need to go home at 7 or 8 to spend time with their kids and families.

Once again, let’s kill ourselves when we’re young so that we can get married later! Spending time with family is a bad thing because you are not worshipping at the alter of the startup and burning yourself out!

Yes, many people see this as a plus. “You work too much” is something I hear all too often from my non-startup inclined family members. That is a valid argument, but it also is the type of argument that holds an entire ecosystem back.

Riiiiiiight. Not burning yourself out is definitely going to hold the ecosystem back. Isn’t it just as likely that an ecosystem is being held back because its members work themselves to the point of being incapable of doing any good, real, meaningful work after a short time?

I can’t believe this article. Truly meaningless tripe.

Showing Navigation

Go read Andy Clarke’s post on needing a standard for showing navigation in mobile. Just go read it.

Needless to say, I agree with his final recommendation.

Categories
Business Life Technology

An Hour A Day

Michael Lopp posted over at Rands in Repose about a new goal for himself:

Starting at the beginning of February, I made a change. Each day I blocked off a precious hour to build something.

Every day. One hour. No matter what.

Every day? Yup. Including weekends.

A hour? Yup, 60 full minutes. More if I can afford it.

I like it. I like it a lot. Knowing full well that I am going to fail at this consistently (having a 7 month-old will do that for you), I’m going to try and start setting aside an hour a day to actually build something.

Not just think about it, but actually build something. I can do the “thinking” part, but I need to get better at the “building” part.

An hour a day.

Categories
Business Technology

Thoughts on Trello

I’ve been using Things for Mac to handle my “project management” for a while now, but it felt like trying to fit a round peg in a square hole … or a square peg in a round hole (whichever is harder).

So a friend of mine (hey Dan) invited me to a board over at Trello. I didn’t quite “get it” at first, but after spending the better part of an afternoon really playing around with the service and moving some stuff over there it really started to click.

So I’ve moved all of my project management “stuff” over there.

Granted, it isn’t a lot, but I have a few boards floating around in various stages of “usefulness”. I’ll just briefly outline how I manage a project currently:

  • Setup an organization for a number of projects (right now I have one for Deck78 and one for Martin Luther College)
  • Create one board per project (MLC Website, any products I’m working on, etc.)
  • Edit the labels to fit what the board needs
    • Usually I have Emergency as red, Bug as orange, and Feature as green … the others are fluid
  • Create cards as needed
  • Move cards between the To Do, Doing, and Done lists
  • Profit?

That’s about it. I I have a board for our home projects and also one for This One Podcast, I’m hoping it will help keep things in order a little bit more.

Now on Gauges

Today I eliminated Clicky from this site and have instead moved to Gauges. I’ve been testing it for a few days and find it to be good, so I’m switching to it.

I still have Google Analytics on the site as well, but that might be going away in the future as well. I’ll pot more on that if/when it happens.

If you are looking for simple analytics for any site, I recommend that you check out Gauges. They’ve got a super-simple pricing scheme and it doesn’t get bogged down into too many minute stats. Highly recommended.