Tuesday, February 28, 2006

Interview at Epic

I spent the day interviewing at Epic Systems. Beautiful campus and very interesting to learn more about Epic's environment. Would be exceptionally different from the OO Java object-junkie world I'm used to.

Sweet Chili Chicken at Noodles for both lunch and dinner. The irony of a noodle-free meal at Noodles is almost as delicious as the dish itself.

Thursday, February 16, 2006

Sunday, February 12, 2006

Unproductive weekend

I end the weekend feeling a bit guilty on lack of productivity.
I finished my first SEN book review submission and have started in on the next book. Took a long walk today and picked up some books at the library. Vegged watching some Law & Order flavors with my dad this evening. The Skinny Cow pops were fun. There was a sale at Walgreens today on petroleum jelly, got the biggest container with the plan of refilling my small containers, which only sort of works because the jelly tends to air bubble.
Created my first page using Hypercontent today: a Java CAS client doco page. The Java CAS client has never looked so good.
Gave the Matrix some thought.
Got some good sleep. Maybe that's enough purpose for the weekend, charging up on some sleep for the week.

Friday, February 10, 2006

Being legally employed isn't a credit to your university?

Apparently being legally employed isn't a credit to your university and is in fact grounds for dismissal from a cheerleading squad.

Prance around in a cheerleading outfit, okay. Work as a waitress in a similar outfit, not okay?

Is this the kind of needless and harmful government moralizing that George Will was talking about?

Zero tolerance is intolerable

The Mayor of New York fired a low-level office worker for playing Solitaire at work.

I find this worrisome for several reasons.


  1. Retaining an employee is not a yes-no decision. It's a matter of "Do I need this job done?" and "Do I really believe I can get someone else to do this job better?" And "Will they do it enough better, and stay long enough, to make it worth the overhead of the staff churn?"

  2. This is exceptionally egregious micromanagement. What happened to the model wherein the mayor makes demands of, say, high-level city managers, and manages them. And these mangers manage some middle managers, all the way down to whoever supervised this random office worker. And the question that matters is not, what kind of office environment do they have, do they play solitaire for a few minutes each day, do they have a Playstation in the break room, etc. The question that matters is, is this office performing? And if it's not, yell at the supervisor. And let him figure out that he needs to get this worker to quit screwing around and get some work done.

    Maybe this fellow was low level enough that a supervisor should be
    micromanaging his time. But the mayor?

  3. It's not clear to me that playing solitaire violated any policy here. Is taking a break using a program installed on the computer really inappropriate? Certainly seems open to interpretation. If the purpose of the computer is getting work done, and throwing a couple solitaire cards around encourages coming up with euphemisms for the latest crime spree or whatever this fellow's job was, then it was appropriate. Would he have been fired if he'd had a GMail window open and was firing off a quick email his wife to say he'd forgotten to buy diapers for his kid on the way to work?

    Why was Solitaire installed on the computer if it was by definition against policy to play the game?

    Would he have been fired if he'd just been eyes-glazed-over staring at a spreadsheet?

  4. Two words: progressive discipline. Have enough respect for an
    employee and for your hiring process to implement a means of
    encouraging, warning, disciplining, and eventually firing an employee
    if necessary.

  5. This appears to be exceptionally myopic. A US-Robotics-style "no employee ever makes a mistake twice; he is fired the first time" approach. No consideration of the larger context.

    Is someone going to discipline the mayor for inappropriate use of his time?



On the other end of the spectrum, a Milwaukee police officer idly watched some other Milwaukee police officers beat some guy (who was not under arrest). The police chief fired him on the grounds that this was gross dereliction of duty. He was re-instated by the police and fire commission on the grounds that he didn't do anything. He did receive a 60 day suspension.



Play solitaire when your job is office work, get fired. Fail to intervene or report a violent crime when your job is law enforcement, keep your job.

What of the officers who did something?


"Three fired officers ... have all been charged with felonies in connection with the beating. ...

The officers were fired May 24 but have continued to receive full pay and benefits under a 26-year-old state law that applies only to Milwaukee police officers. They are paid until their appeals are exhausted with the commission."

Tuesday, February 07, 2006

A blog about drinking

So, a friend of mine started a blog about drinking and it's clearly a project he's excited about and all sorts of posts are popping up there. The only problem from my perspective is that, well, I'm just not that interested in drinking.

Saturday, February 04, 2006

Owning Michigan

I now own
one square inch of land in the state of Michigan
.

Berkas family ping pong tournament

I'm still in after the first round, narrowly defeating my uncle Paul in a close and exciting match.

Thursday, February 02, 2006

Time Management

I could learn to be better at managing my time.