November 20, 2005

Fussing

As someone who obsesses over minutiae, I found this affirming:

“Don’t bother, it’s just a little thing!” … “It’s not worth the time, no one bothers with that.” In that case, you must spend the time! … if no one else bothers with it, you probably just found your competitive edge! —Don Schenck, Signal vs. Noise

October 6, 2005

Welcome!

This website is viewable only by registered users. Fortunately, my membership roster is not exclusive. Having met me is a good part of the admission requirement. :) This way I’m able to quell my ambivalence about my natterings begin open to the entire world and still natter on with abandon. Welcome, friends!

Update: Okay, make that *some* of the content will only be viewed by registered viewers. My better half (who is simultaneously more anonymous and more public with his site) has convinced me that a non-public web log is a downer and counter to the spirit of the web. I guess I’ll take his word for it. Now I have to make the decision about what will be public and what will be private — eh — something I was hoping to get around. It’s not that I have anything to hide mind you. :)

August 31, 2005

Pure Nerd

Pure Nerd
You scored higher than 99% on Nerdiness.
95 % Nerd, 21% Geek, 17% Dork

The times, they are a-changing. It used to be that being exceptionally
smart led to being unpopular, which would ultimately lead to picking up
all of the traits and tendences associated with the “dork.” No-longer.
Being smart isn’t as socially crippling as it once was, and even more
so as you get older: eventually being a Pure Nerd will likely be
replaced with the following label: Purely Successful.

Congratulations!

Thanks Again!

THE NERD? GEEK? OR DORK? TEST

August 26, 2005

Strangely Enough

So, this has been my summer of post-graduate soul searching… What do I really want to do? While in school I was adamant about not wanting to get stuck doing web stuff after graduation. I wanted to design tangible, holdable things. However, it became clear at school that I had an advantage over most design folks when it came to easily comprehending software and technical issues. And what do I now find myself doing? So far this summer, I have installed Wordpress four times (for myself and others — for fun, heh!) and installed MYSQL on my home machine in order be able to serve and test WordPress locally. I am now researching sendmail on OS X so I can test cgi scripts locally (I want to be able to send formatted email via a web form, for example). I spent 3 solid weeks immersed in PHP, a language I had no familiarity with, and CSS positioning (for which I had only a passing famliarity) creating my identity-based WordPress template for www.abbylarsen.com. Yesterday I spent waaaaay to much time in PHP scripting land… Uh. For those of you who don’t know what I’m talking about I’ll translate: Geek, Geek, Geek.

Sigh.

In my defense, I have involved myself in a number of artsy, craftsy, hands-on things, too — I’ve taken a marbling class, completed a couple of beading projects, sewn a skirt, and made an illustrative logo of which I am quite proud. I just wish I could figure out which skills would fulfill me most when employed to make a living. Economically, it’s a no brainer. The technical bits of me will always be in higher demand and, correct me if I’m wrong, technical skills are more lucrative (because they are more tangible?) than artistic ones. So, I suppose it is no mystery why I ended up in web design before — it seems the best way to marry the two. But I should also thank Mr. Guy for the sexy new computer. None of this time spent bathing in phosphors would have been as engaging if my computer didn’t KICK ASS. :)

Anyhoo, back to my OS X web/mail server setup…

August 22, 2005

Hulloa.

Stay tuned for house happenings, gardening gab, cat capers, craft chat, general jibber jabber … in short, nothing that most folks will care a lick about. If you are one of the few who do, you are in luck!