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« March 2008 | Main | May 2008 »

6 posts from April 2008

April 29, 2008

The rumor is true..


By the way, the rumor is true -- Laurie's escaped Yahoo. She has a new gig, which I'm sure she'll blog about once things settle down. Especially now that it looks like she doesn't have a management structure that considered even personal blogging against their personal standards (her old management had a bad case of "I don't care what yahoo's policy is... this is my policy")

One amusing insight into just how bad the brain drain at Yahoo is: For various reasons Laurie left mid-week, and in her exit interview, she was thanked for not leaving on a friday, because fridays have become hell for the HR staff trying to fit in all of the exit interviews.

Yahoo's tried to recruit me three times since the microsoft offer came down, which has mostly amused me, because when I was actively trying to hire in there, they didn't seem that interested. Now -- I'm not. ohwell.

Oh, a suggestion for Jerry: it's over. has been for a while. You're not making yahoo a better place or a stronger company, and it's time to quit killing the company in the name of trying to save it (or, from my view, save your own skin, since you seem willing to kill off huge parts of the company in the name of saving it, as long as you keep yours).

Take your huge buyout from Microsoft and go start a green tech company. That seems to be where you want to be these days, anyway....

Laszlo Systems is hiring...

hey, is this you? If you're interested, drop me a line. the office is up in the San Mateo hills, very close to 280 off of 92...

Job Title: Innovative Server Engineer
Description: The next generation Web isn't just about using Ajax in the browser to achieve better interactivity. It's about a new division of labor between the client and the server, one in which the old page-generation paradigm is replaced with more fine grained, data-centric client-server interactions.

Laszlo Systems, the creator of the OpenLaszlo open source development platform, is seeking a Senior Server Engineer who will help define this next generation of server architecture -- one in which real-time communication, media streaming, and peer-to-peer interaction transform how the Web works. We are seeking a developer with real depth of experience in product development and large scale deployments.

The ideal candidate will be a hands-on engineer but also an articulate technical leader, who will work with Laszlo's applications team and platform team to define and build a suite of server-based modules and platform capabilities. The position reports to the Director of Application Development.

Skills:

* Strong Java language expertise
* Deep understanding of dynamic Web application architecture and deployment
* Experience building highly scalable server applications
* Backend integration: LDAP, MySQL, Oracle
* Web technology savvy: XML, HTML, CSS, Javascript
* Experience with open source software a plus

April 24, 2008

Cattle Egret in Redwood Shores


A cattle egret has landed in Redwood Shores, something like the third record for the species in the county in the last decade. it's very habituated -- I went looking for it this morning, found it sitting on the grass eating bugs in the intersection of a main highway in redwood shores.

Cattle Egret

Life bird 186, year bird 147, having also added forster's tern today to the year list down at radio roads...

The avocets are now in breeding color and looking for nests:

American Avocets

while I also saw a black-necked stilt on a nest on the radio road ponds. Down at the egret rookery in palo alto, we had night herons actively nest building, and snowy egrets congregating, but they don't seem to be nesting yet. Great egrets weren't seen this morning, and by now, in previous years I've seen them. I'll probably be visiting the rookery weekly until June when it calms down again, just to watch and photograph the process...

April 19, 2008

Pacific Slope Flycatcher


Pacific Slope Flycatcher
Originally uploaded by chuqui
Oh, meant to include a photo of the Flycatcher...

Pacific-slope Flycatcher and friends...

While out running errands today, I took an hour or so off and ran up into Steven's Creek park, just to get out for a bit... it's been over a week since the sapsucker's been seen, so it's pretty clear it's moved on, but I arrived just about the time today's Big Day team was leaving, and ran into Bill and Mary scouting for their big day next weekend.

There was a small clump of birders on the road up to the campground that were scouring the oak canopies (including Al Eisner, Ron W). They reported Townsend's and Black-chinned grey warbler, as well as a calling (probable but unseen) Cassin's Vireo, an enthusiastic but hiding Black-headed grosbeak, and western tanagers. About that time, of course, the leaf blowers up the hill kicked in.... Also reported was a hairy woodpecker nest, in a snag along the entrance road from steven's creek; look for the 15' tall stump just after you turn in towards the picnic area.

The others wandered off to check out the woodpecker nest and get away from the leaf blowers. I stuck around because I wanted to practice searching the canopy and trees. After a bit the blowers quit and the birds started again, but instead of a black-chinned grey warbler, I found song sparrows and spotted towhees and American Robin (which means I still have some work to do before I I challenge Al's abilities. Al, you can relax....)

The vireo kept calling and I kept at it, and about 30 minutes after Al left, a bird finally popped down onto a branch and gave me 15 seconds of good looks (and photo ops), and then popped out again. I never saw the warblers, but as I was leaving, I did get some quick but decent looks at a Western Tanager, too. I thought it was the Cassin's, but when I showed the photos to some of the senior birders, it turns out to be a Pacific-slope Flycatcher, which looks a lot like a Cassin's (smaller, different color beak). So it was hanging out as well, but not making any noise, waiting to trip me up. But we ended up getting it right...

On the way back, I stopped at the boat launch at the dam. Farirly quiet, but there were two Osprey hunting the lake, and two Caspian Terns fishing it, as well as a few D-C cormorants, one of which was wearing his breeding feathering over the eyes.

On the way out, I was going to check out the woodpecker nest, but another photographer was working on it, so I left that to later so I didn't risk disturbing it. it's easily visible from the road as you turn into parking area, so I expect we'll see some nice photos coming soon....

Pacific-slope Flycatcher is a life (184), and Caspian Tern was a first of year (142).... And thanks to Al for taking the time (again!) to do some teaching on songs and habitat and habits on the grosbeak and vireo.... I also had a female hooded oriole at the feeder here at home on Friday, and I realized I hadn't added hooded oriole to my life list. It's not new, but that makes it life bird 185 and year bird 143.

When I decided to start keeping a life list (I'm using eBird www.ebird.org), a question when to start. I finally decided to use as a cutoff my first birding trip to Morro Bay, since that was when I decided to take birding seriously (as opposed to be someone who takes photographs of birds); because of this, the lift list only goes back to May 2006, with two exceptions, both birds that I happened to have good photos of from before then.

I've currently set a couple of birding goals for the year; one is to reach 200 species (and with some luck, 200 for the year); the other, more of a longer-term goal, is to be the first to find and ID a rarity and have it confirmed, rather than follow the other birders and add known birds to the life list.

I've come close to that second goal a couple of times, but never gotten independent confirmation of the find. To me, that's a goal that indicates how my ability to find and ID birds is progressing. OTOH, there's still a huge amount of learning to do. My biggest problem to reach 200 species is going to be how much time I'll have and how wide I can travel. With the new job and Laurie leaving Yahoo for MacAfee shortly, I'm probably not leaving the Bay area all that much, other than trips to LA to visit family...


--------

Location: Stevens Creek Park, Conley Picnic Area
Observation date: 4/19/08
Number of species: 9

Pacific-slope Flycatcher 1
Steller's Jay X
American Crow X
American Robin X
Western Tanager 1
Spotted Towhee X
Song Sparrow X
Dark-eyed Junco X
Black-headed Grosbeak X

Location: Steven's Creek
Observation date: 4/19/08
Number of species: 5

Double-crested Cormorant 3
Turkey Vulture X
Osprey 2
Caspian Tern 2
Song Sparrow X

April 01, 2008

the best April Fool's joke I never did...


I used to take April Fool's pretty seriously. but to do it well, it takes time, energy and the guts to take a risk. Which is why, again this year, Anil is right.

So this year, I thought I'd talk instead about the best April Fool's joke I ever put together, one I never had the guts to pull off.

Very simple, really. Everyone in the building at Apple I worked in at the time would show up to a memo on their desk announcing Apple's new Drug Testing Policy.

With a sample cup. And instructions on where to drop it off.

This one had the potential for chaos on so many levels. The obvious: a drug testing policy is so against the culture of a company like Apple, it's an obvious riff. And frankly, a "here's our new policy" memo or email just isn't that interesting. But toss in the sample cup and submission info, and it'd suddenly feel a lot more real -- at least initially.

then think about the different layers of this: people who don't get it who get pissed (ahem) and start screaming about it until someone clues them in.

Then start thinking about the poor person at the wrong end of the submission address. And the interoffice mail folks. And... Because you know some folks WILL. And some folks will -- but using innovative substances. And...

This one goes way back, when the subject of affection was Kevin Sullivan, for whom I had no real love lost for his work at Apple.

But the reason I never did it was because the peope who'd take the brunt of the bad aspects of the joke weren't the people it was aimed at (Sullivan, Apple HR at the time, and whiny people who scream first and think maybe), but the AA's who'd actually have to deal with all of the submissions. And that just didn't seem funny to me. Now, Sullivan himself dealing with them? that'd have been worth being fired over...