Author: spierzchala

  • Evangelism as Blogging

    Jennifer Rice has some great comments on blogging and evangelism.

    Evangelism is key to what I want to evolve to professionally. It involves developing my skills and desire to such a point that I infect everyone I meet with the same enthusiasm I have for my area of interest.

    Catch-phrases ("Be your own brand", "Get on the cluetrain", "blog or die") are meaningless to me. They all boil down to loving what you do.

    Read Tom Peters’ blog sometime. Whenever I am flagging or in a funk, I read him. His passion for what he does invigorates me. Find those people and work with them.

    Be all that you can be. [Apologies to the Army.]

  • Now he’s going to Napa!

    Jeremy Wright, master of Ensight, is going to be in Napa this week.

    Life is tough for the A-List Bloggers top-tier, uber-connected bloggers.

    [Jeremy is vehement that he is not an A-Lister.]

  • GrabPERF: Donations Gratefully Accepted

    For those that use the GrabPERF system, or the performance libraries on the site, I have posted a PayPal Donation button.

    Costs for developing, documenting, and maintaining the site is starting to mount, and the wear and tear on my very ancient systems is starting to show. In order to bring the GrabPERF system up to snuff, I will need new database and Web server machines in the very new future, a cost that I have no hope of covering.

    Plans to expand the system beyond the single measurement location cannot go ahead without a more stable, secure and appropriate hosting environment.

    If you use the GrabPERF System and want to see it improved, please donate.

  • This happened to me…but all they got was spam

    Rick Heller on Blog Name Hijacking.

    When my Blogger space was hijacked (after I had abandoned it), someone else took it over, name and all.

    Just sad to see that this is going to become an issue.

  • SNDREC32 iz l33t!

    Go here. Put on headphones. Be in awe.

  • BloggerCon in Seattle

    I really wish I was there. But then again, I am not an A-List blogger.

    Blogging is great for me. But it is not likely that I could make it an adjunct to a successful career. I look at the A-list bloggers, and they have all had careers that I have dreamed of, but have never been able to breakthrough into.

    • No MBA
    • No Money
    • No lucky break
    • No brush with fame or infamy

    I look at the world and wonder how you get there. How do you take your passion and turn it into a career?

    I know I can…and there are a ton of you out there who know that. It’s just that most of them are in Seattle right now!

  • Much running through my head…

    I have had one of those days that leaves me thinking if what I do matters.

    I have a great message; I am enthusiastic about my message. But the more I try and push my message, the more mundane the tasks I am handed. I need a new challenge, one where I am not battling a lackadaisical sales force who just wants to get by, does not want to push the limits.

    We have great customers, who have amazing technologies and interesting business challenges. Meanwhile, I am doing basic jobs, jobs that do not challenge me to think strategically or in new ways. Why? I see the challenges everyday, but here I sit.

    The question is: what have you done to change this? What steps have you taken to resolve this?

    I have blogged my ideas. I have tried to implement them, present them to customers, co-workers. My enthusiasm for this is still there. The only place I have for my ideas is here, and here is where they will be.

    Bring on your Web performance challenges. I want them, I want to see them as bad as they get. I live for them.

  • A worthwhile tirade on UIs

    Johanna Rothman has nailed a credit card company with a stupid UI.

    I liked it, because I agree that a core component of Web performance is transparent and seamless Web design. I particularly enjoyed this TakeAway:

    Why do you care what browser your users use? The world is full of browsers.

    That’s why we have Java. Accommodate all the browsers. Sure it means that you have to write code more carefully and test on many platforms. Is it worth losing any customers because your developers were too lazy to write good code?

    I often ask myself the same question.

  • I am whacked

    I think that tomorrow will be a snow day for me — I’ll work from home. I have a presentation to put together for Wednesday, so hanging out in my frigid attic work room is where it will happen.

    We went back out around 4PM EST to do some more shovelling. We can now get out if we have to, but why?

  • Someone else is snowed in.

    Stephen O’Grady of RedMonk is snowed in in Portland, ME [here].

    Good day to do nothing but wonder how the Scobelizer feels now that he is 40…a fate I won’t have to suffer for four more years!