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Camping

05 Monday Sep 2011

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Storytelling

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Camping, Handcart, hiking, Labor Day, Mt. Bierstadt, Northwest Hills, posole, Whale Peak

Few would ever confuse Karen for a camper.  As they say in Austin, you can take the girl out of Northwest Hills, but you can’t take the NW Hills out of the girl.  Still, she was quite a sport this Labor Day weekend as we camped out with a pack of neighbors at the Handcart camping site 5 miles west of Hwy 285 on CR 60 in Hall Valley and a short hike from Whale Peak.  Karen even cooked everyone some tasty breakfast tacos Sunday morning.

It’s been an awesome weekend.  We were a bit late to arrive Friday night.  Couldn’t cut out from work any earlier and hit heavy holiday traffic on I70 and Hwy 285.  But we got there with plenty of daylight to pitch the tent.  We didn’t have to worry about cooking as Dave had posole ready for the first course and grilled us up some fantastic fajitas.  A cool front rolled in offering us the first taste of fall with a low of 45° overnight and 60s during the day.

Several of us hiked up Mt. Bierstadt Saturday.  This picture captures Susan, Scott and Julie about half way up the trail.  We alternated donning our wind jackets as the clouds danced back and forth across the sun.  Kieth cooked a shrimp boil Saturday night that could have made a Cajun cry for having missed out.  I drank some beers after the 2.5 hour hike, followed by some wine, topped off by a handful of TnTs in honor of Keith’s British background.  The clouds threatened us with a few rain drops but held it in check as we enjoyed a magical night around a perfect campfire.  Ellie sang us some tunes and before I knew it I was sound asleep.  We finished the camp out the next morning with Karen’s breakfast tacos.  Back home on the eastern slope of the Front Range now enjoying the start of autumn.

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The Mountains Win Again

11 Monday Jul 2011

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Storytelling

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Breckenridge, Colorado Trail, Durango, vacation

Vacations are brilliant.  And I definitely need them.  I don’t know why I build up so much stress but I do.  And stress is extremely counterproductive.  It kills the creative process and leads to lower productivity.  It takes the fun out of the day.  I like to have fun at work but that’s more difficult working alone from home.  I find myself simply focusing on problems.  All work and no play.   A two hour drive up into the mountains is the answer.

This is my third day in Breckenridge and I feel better about everything.  Work-related email or the customer presentation I have to give from the hotel room tomorrow is no biggie.  I feel good.  I even had some innovative business thoughts on my trail run this morning.  And my task list at home is nearly as intense as work, but I feel better about that too now.  I’ll get to work on fixing the tub and shower, stain the steps and tend to the yard without thinking of it as work.  Breckenridge has hit my reset button and I feel refreshed.

The mountains are perfect right now.  The temps aren’t hot but call for shorts.  There’s still snow on the peaks, even a little on the slopes.  I’ll be up here the next three weekends straight hiking the Colorado Trail.  My schedule calls for completing 200 more miles by the first week of August.  I started in Denver in early April and am currently at Leadville.  If I can really pull off those 200 miles I’ll be in good shape to finish in Durango by early fall.  I swear, the mountains are making me a better person this summer.

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Moving

09 Saturday Jul 2011

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Storytelling

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Carslbad, frozen rita, Spokane, Tex-Mex

No, not us.  But my sister-in-law’s family is moving from Spokane to Carlsbad for Chad’s job.    They stopped over with us for the night on their way.  We were able to put Chad and Yaya up in the carriage house since we don’t have tenants right now.  The kids bunked with Ellie.  I’m going to miss having them live in Spokane.  I really enjoyed visiting for Thanksgiving.  I run the most awesome route around Liberty Lake outside their door.  But it’s not about me.  Chad got a nice opportunity to run a hospital in New Mexico.  So they packed the kids up in the car for a massive drive south to the Chihuahuan Desert.  It was nice to see them.

Actually, now that they’ll be living half way between us and Austin, we expect to start driving through on our annual trips to Texas.  It’ll be a different route than our typical overnight through Amarillo, and a nice change of scenery at that.  I haven’t been to Carlsbad, but I’m familiar with the state and I like New Mexican food.  It’s way hotter than Tex-Mex, but quite a bit more favorable too.  They seem to have advanced the Tex-Mex gastronomy beyond cheese, while keeping all the best parts of a frozen rita.

I moved a great deal as a child.  I was born in Davenport, Iowa and lived my first 6 years there.  But my father died young when I was five from a brain tumor and my mom had seven kids to care for.  So I found myself moving every year or two up until high school.  That was the big move to Texas.  I still remember my friends from 8th grade asking me if I’d be riding a horse to school, and I didn’t know.  Even more memorable is the first girl I met in Round Rock asked me if I wanted some of her dip as she took a pinch.  Nice.  Yaya’s kids seemed in good spirits last night – totally up for the expedition.  I hope they have some great experiences in New Mexico.

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The Fourth

29 Wednesday Jun 2011

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Storytelling

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10th Mountain Division, Colorado Trail, Copper Mountain, Kokomo Pass, Leadville, Searl Pass, Wheeler Flats

Are you as excited as I am for the upcoming 3 day weekend?  If not, you need to make some plans.  My ‘hood has two parties planned, one on the 3rd and another more elaborate bash on the 4th – complete with BBQ and live music.  But the biggie for me is two days of hiking on the Colorado Trail – segments 8 and 9 on Saturday and Sunday.

I’ll meet up with Tumbleweed at the Tennessee Pass on Hwy 24 near Leadville Friday night to drop off one of our cars at the trail head.  Google shows an extensive list of eateries in Leadville, but I’ve only eaten at the Pizza Hut in that town, so please send me recommendations for something with a little more Leadville flair.  Any reviews on the Golden Burro, the Quincy Steak & Spirits, the Grill Bar & Cafe or the Tennessee Pass Cafe?

We’ll camp out near Copper Mountain, likely in some back country spot off the Wheeler Flats Trail Head.  Saturday’s 25 mile hike starts out at 9800 feet and climbs  through the ski resort up to Searl Pass just short of 10 miles at over 12,000 feet.  The trail stays above treeline for about 3 miles along Elk Ridge until it reaches Kokomo Pass, also over 12,000 feet, then we’ll descend down to Tennessee Pass which sits around 10,000 feet.  Near there we will pass the 10th Mountain Division huts where soldiers trained for WWII.  Should be gorgeous views the entire route.  Wish I had a better camera than my 2.5 mega pixel iPhone, but the pics will be good enough for publishing to the web.

The next day we’ll hike 14 miles on segment 9 from Tennessee Pass to Timberline Lake.  This is where the trail turns south for good.  The cool thing is recent trail reports from the Colorado Trail Foundation Facebook page state the snow has melted from this segment.  Plus, while entirely above 10,000 feet, the trail is relatively flat.  Should be a good run.  Segment 8 will be mostly snow shoeing, possibly even using the ice axe, so Sunday will be nice.  Can’t wait!

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CT Gear

15 Wednesday Jun 2011

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Running, Storytelling

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Big Agnes, Colorado Trail, CT, one-man tent, post-holing, REI, trekking poles

As excited as I am to complete the second half of segment 6 of the Colorado Trail this coming weekend, I’m even more stoked about my new gear.  Never slept in a one-man tent before.  Look at this puppy.  I just practiced assembling it and can’t believe how cool it is.  The Big Agnes Seedhouse SL1 weighs under 3 pounds, has an aluminum pole system with all three branches attached which snap together with a flick of the wrist, and takes about 5 minutes to setup – including the waterproof fly.  It’s wide enough at my elbows and shoulders to roll around, but tapers toward the feet.  More importantly there’s enough room to situp.  I’ll christen it at the Gold Hill Trail Head Saturday.

Next new piece of gear is a set of REI trekking poles.  Not sure if I adequately expressed the danger I was in snowshoeing over the Georgia Pass in my last CT blog, but the use of Tumbleweed’s trekking pole provided me with a well-learned lesson.  The most critical use was as a tool to dig my snowshoe out from treacherous post-holes.  But I also can’t underestimate the strength it provided to my posture.  With only the single pole, my balance was an order of magnitude stronger.  This saved my core – both stomach as well as back muscles – from constantly twisting from unsure footing.  Now I’ll have two poles – a complete set – and won’t have to bum gear from Tumbleweed.  Hoping the snow has sufficiently melted so I don’t have to use my other awesome gear – my snowshoes.  Looking forward to being able to run at least half of this trail segment.  Tune in for the next edition of CT Cronica for the story, and feedback on the new gear.

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Made Me Cry

06 Monday Jun 2011

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Storytelling

≈ 2 Comments

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Borders, Brian Piccolo, funeral, memories, Old Yeller, sentimental, Sex Pistols

Not sure why I’m so sentimental all of a sudden, or what even made me think of this.  I was at Borders with Ellie, picking out her summer reading list, and this thought just lodged in my head.  I know how this goes and that it won’t leave my head until I write it out.  Which is fine.  I pretty much resolved to change up my content from my running exploits.  Not that I’ll quit running, but I’ve become bored writing about running.  The thought is the times I can remember crying.

Without intending to sound sexist, I think it’s fair to say guys don’t cry as often or as easily as women.  I can specifically recall being told by my older sister Debbie during my grade school years that boys aren’t supposed to cry.  I’m certain she told me this at some point when I was crying simply to shut me up.  I always looked up to Deb for some reason and paid heed.  I say “for some reason” because I don’t have the strongest history of respecting authority.  I disliked more teachers than liked, and never met a school principal I ever cared for.  But back to crying.

This narrative has some guidelines.  Of course I cried like a baby when I was a baby.  And that must have continued well into my toddler years.  No doubt there are many spanking-induced episodes that led to streaming tears.  But those are to be expected and I don’t necessarily remember them.  This enumeration counts from the point when Deb told me boys don’t cry.  Rule two is I have to remember crying.  I’m not so obtuse to believe I’ve only cried a handful of times since then.  But if I can’t remember then I can’t really write about it can I?  Third rule is it has to have been a real cry.  Not some glassy-eyed, enlarged Adam’s apple misty feeling after a particularly sad movie.  Although movies do count if I went to bed still in tears.  So here are the times I remember crying.

I’m starting with a non-crying event first.  I should have cried at my father’s funeral, but I don’t think I did.  I was likely too young to understand.  I was five and he had an open casket viewing.  He had so many friends the grown-ups virtually crowded out all the light in the room from the perspective of a little boy.  I remember going home afterward to a dark house.  No one bothered to turn on the lights.  For some reason I walked up to the living room wall and stood there for what seemed like an hour.  It was probably much less, but I just stood there staring at the wall, wondering who would take care of me.  This is one of those early memories that remain lucid in my mind, but I don’t recall crying.

First time that counts was in 3rd grade when we had to move from Marion, Iowa to Wyoming, Iowa, because my Mom married some Chiropractor.  But that’s not what made me cry.  It was being told that my best friend Scott cried after he learned I was moving away.  That brought me to tears.  I was given my first aspirin to calm me down.

Next, I remember getting a little choked up, enough to recount as crying, after a grade school recess fist fight with my older sister Diane.  No, I didn’t punch her back.  Diane would have a new boyfriend almost weekly and every week I seemed to get into a fist fight with them.  Don’t recall why exactly.  I do recall they were all a year older than me and I took my share of punches to the face.  One week Diane had enough of this, maybe it was a guy she actually liked, and she started punching me.  I let her of course and by the time she stopped smacking me I couldn’t stop the tears.  Not sure if it was pain-induced or ridicule.  Just remember I cried after she stopped.  It’s like you don’t breathe underwater.  You wait until you come up for air.  I waited to cry once my face had some breathing room.  I was in a lot of fights in grade school, lost as many as I won; but I don’t ever recall crying except for that one.

I can’t remember the absolute chronology of the next two times; they were essentially the same time or at least year as the fight with Diane.  One was after reading the ending to Old Yeller.  I’m sure I’m not alone on that score, or for the other time which was during The Brian Piccolo Story.  I’ll admit to getting a lump in my throat and misting up after many other reads or movies, but this was real crying.  And I know now.  At Borders tonight picking out books with Ellie, I saw Old Yeller on the Young Readers shelf.  That’s what is driving these memories.

Round Rock Cross Country

I’m fairly confident I made it through middle school without ever crying.  And only remember crying once – well twice but for the same event – in all of high school.  I was in a car wreck the summer after my sophomore year and a good friend died in my arms.  The paramedics brought him back several times but that night I sensed he had died.  I made my Mom tell me the truth and after she confirmed he died for the final time in the ambulance, I cried hard the rest of the night.  I even remember ripping the Sex Pistols poster from my wall and shredding it.  And I cried hard again at the services, to the point people sitting next to me were embarrassed.  Couldn’t help it.  The tears flowed like Niagara.  That’s Doug on the left in this picture.

I would have made it through college but my high school sweetheart broke up with me my freshman year.  I actually don’t remember any specific instances of crying, but I’m going to admit to it because I know I was devastated and might have cried a couple of times.  If not, I was certainly pitiful for awhile.

I go a decent stretch but two or so years after graduating college, my Grandmother died.  I came down with the flu on the flight to Iowa and attended her services and funeral with 103° temperature.  Like my Father, her showing was open casket.  She looked beautiful.  At some point after seeing her, I recall standing in the middle of the room and sensing I was going to lose it.  Not just cry, but lose it.  I bolted out the door into the parking lot.  Not sure why I ran and immediately wished I’d brought along my coat.  It was early January and had to be about 0° because I remember my nostrils freezing shut.  I cried as hard as I did when my friend Doug died.  My sickness likely contributed to my emotional state.  I didn’t stop weeping until I vomited.  Feeling better, I returned inside to thaw.

You might not believe this but I’m fairly certain I went a good 10 or 11 years before I cried again.  It was on the drive home after putting down my dog Teddy at the Boulder Humane Society.  He wasn’t the best behaved dog, but I went on an awful lot of runs with him at my side off-leash.  His sister Tara was always off chasing something but not Teddy – he let her play and ran with me.

I’m not trying to carefully map out the exact years here, but it was close to another 10 years before I cried again.  Diane died young from cancer in Galveston, Texas.  I didn’t cry at her funeral, but a couple of months later when the waiter asked me for my order at Tortugas, I broke up.  He had to go away and return for my order a bit later when I regained my composure.  That was embarrassing, but the emotion didn’t end there.  Diane had asked me from her hospital bed to try talking to my oldest sister Kathy.  She didn’t put any conditions on it other than I should reach out.  Kathy hadn’t spoken to me since my wedding that she never attended – nearly 20 years prior at this point in time.  24 years now.  Her actual battle was/is with my Mom whom she also doesn’t speak to – I’m just collateral damage for siding with my Mom.  So I wrote Kathy an email after returning home from the restaurant.  To say the email was mean-spirited probably doesn’t do it justice.  I let her know what a loser I thought she was/is.  Admittedly, I’d had some wine.  Normally I don’t get online intoxicated.  IBM is an online culture and I’ve developed discipline in that regard since before the Internet.  This wasn’t one of those times.  I don’t feel any differently today and would write that email again, although perhaps not in such a crass style.  Needless to say it didn’t win me any broader family support, but I wouldn’t say she talks to me any less now than before.

And that’s it.  Naturally there have been some close moments.  Most recently with my year old nephew Liam.  The news of his need for a heart transplant, and of course the day of the transplant, left Karen in tears for entire days.  I was close.  Some of the Facebook updates, shoot even some of the Twitter updates, would make my throat hard and tear up my eyes a bit.  The thought of a baby going through something so traumatic is enough to make complete strangers cry.  Michelle, my haircut lady, asked me what was going on and I related the story of little L having a successful heart transplant the day before and she started balling.  She didn’t stop crying throughout the entire haircut.  And she doesn’t even have kids.

No doubt I’ve shed a few more tears that I just don’t remember.  Life gives us all a good cry from time to time.  It would seem a strong emotional surrender serves to cement memorable bonds with the past.

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Genealogy

20 Friday May 2011

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Storytelling

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Ancestry.com, census, German, Irish, NINA

I alluded in a recent post that I had become interested in researching my family tree.  I didn’t know then that I would become obsessed with Ancestry.com like some Facebook Farmville addict.  I’m too embarrassed to admit how many hours I’ve spent querying census records and immigration manifests each night over the last 2 weeks.  But I like it.  BTW, the picture in the upper left is of my family when I was maybe 3 years old.  You should be able to recognize me from my older brother given I sport the same haircut today.  And before you make any comments about so many kids, yes my father was Irish Catholic.

I feel compelled to share some of my experiences and the cool things about this exercise on Ancestry.com.  From my first 12 hours in 3 evenings on the site, I identified over 300 family members in my tree, dating back to the 1500s and about 10 countries.  Although I found it even more interesting to discover the family strains that lived within the U.S. before the American Revolution.  Discovering trends in names is another, perhaps esoteric, thrill that only I find interesting.  As I drilled into the 1800s and 1700s, names with obscure biblical references became common.  I have an ancestor named Ransom Byrn, as in “Jesus was ransom for our sins.”  The Byrns it turns out are traced back to Wicklow, Ireland and changed their name upon landing in America from O’Byrne.  Charles O’Byrne settled in North Carolina, leaving a sizeable will; and his offspring went on to found Byrnville, Indiana.  Pervasive biblical names perhaps aren’t too surprising and indeed are not as strange as some real-life American names I recently heard.  ABCDE pronounced Obesity.  And Ladasha spelled La-a.  Not making that up.

Fun with names continues as I struggle to interpret the handwriting of some 19th century temp worker who completed the census record.  That said, there’s a wealth of information in those records.  There’s a strong trend, probably still pervasive today, for teenage girls to switch the order of their first and middle names.  There’s a correlation to this for girls named after their mothers or grandmothers.  Both my Grandmother and Great Grandmother did this.  This 1900 census record upper left captures my Great Grandmother Carrie Edith’s name as a 7 year old.  The 1910 census record of her at 17 shows the same name.  Then the 1920 census record of her at 27, to the  right and still living with her mother whose middle name is Edith, shows that she switched the order of her names.  Gets better though.  Not sure if your computer screen has the resolution, but note in the 1920 record where the census taker, enumerator, temp worker, records that these kids are illegitimate.  Click on the image to see it close up.  That should be shocking and bad enough.  But it gets better. So better that I won’t even share it with you.  This is some cool shit.  Start mapping out your own family tree.

What could be better?  My maternal Grandmother didn’t attend my parent’s wedding because my mom married an Irishman.  NINA!  Remember that?  No Irish need apply.  My staunch German Grandma had issues with Irish, although she later learned to adore my Irish father.  My research reveals that although her last name is German (Shaffer) and she marries a German recently off the boat (Freitag); she is in fact at least half Irish.  A little Scottish in fact.  But it gets better.  Research your own family if you want to know what I’m talking about.

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Trail Runner

21 Thursday Apr 2011

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Running, Storytelling

≈ 2 Comments

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A Lo Hawk, Colorado Trail, Mr. Roboto, Sled Dog, Tumbleweed

The picture to the left is of a good friend, Rob Graham, and me heading out in the morning to complete our two day hike to the summit of Pikes Peak.  This was in 2009 and is the year Rob got me into hiking and ultimately trail running.  Partly because Rob got me back into shape with healthy recreation, and partly because he really is a master hiker in terms of experience, but mostly because Rob goes by various trail names and promotes his personal creed of health and fitness which lends him a spiritual quality – I oftentimes refer to him as my Guide (uppercase “G”).  It’s pretty cool to have a Guide and it costs me nothing.

Two years later, we’re running the Colorado Trail.  There’s of course some walking, but it’s mostly running.  And I can’t think of any hobby I enjoy more.  I fell in love with trail running on the Barton Creek Greenbelt in Austin over 20 years ago.  There are so many qualities that make trails stand out as exceptional environments for a run or workout.  For me, it’s the surface itself.  I love the focused footfalls that the trail, rocks, hills, cliffs, snow, and creeks require.  It’s almost impossible to day dream about work or fantasize about anything at all.  Maybe some people find this sort of escape doing puzzles or collecting stamps.  For me, the trail – especially when running versus walking – takes complete focus.  And such focus is the quintessential escape.

We’ll be running the 16.6 miles of segment 4 of the Colorado Trail this Saturday.  Snow and or rain is expected.  That’ll add a little something to the experience.  I feel extremely fortunate to be able to run these trails on weekends.  Grateful for my health and lucky to have Karen’s support to take off for the day.  This is shaping up to be an epic summer.

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A Lo Hawk Launches Off on the Colorado Trail

02 Saturday Apr 2011

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Running, Storytelling

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

A Lo Hawk, Appalacian Trail, AT, Colorado Trail, Pacific Crest Trail, PCT

Meet A Lo Hawk.  A trail moniker birthed in a Maui volcano and carried forth on the PCT and AT.  Having fully tested the patience of loved ones on those summer-long hikes, his plan for hiking the Colorado Trail is to complete segments on weekends.  I believe A Lo Hawk told me there are 28 segments.  That sounds like half a year to me.  But A Lo Hawk suspects he can hike some of the segments in tandem, and he started early.  A Lo Hawk started today with me.

Me was very impressed with myself for being able to hang with A Lo Hawk on today’s 16 mile excursion over the rolling hills of the first segment of the Colorado Trail.  A Lo Hawk finished stronger than me but I held my own for most of the ride.  And man, what a ride.  Physically, it was much more challenging than the recent half marathons I’ve run.  And yet it was totally more fun.  Trail running presents the runner with an epic adventure, and today was no exception.

I won’t provide all the details here because I’ve decided to return to my metaphorical writing style and will publish several narratives as part of a single story on today’s experience.  I setup a new page which should appear as a tab like the About tab on this blog page.  I’m still working to understand the mechanics of publishing this on a separate page within this same blog, so please remain patient with me as I figure this out.

Needless to say, today’s adventure contains enough themes to write several stories.  If A Lo Hawk is successful in his prodding, I’ll complete additional segments of the Colorado Trail with him, and the new story will continue throughout the summer.  I’ve named the story, CT Cronica.  You should be able to view the tab near the top of this blog menu.  As of now, I haven’t added any stories, but I will.

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Spring Break

31 Thursday Mar 2011

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Storytelling

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Breckenridge, Karen Collier Mahoney, snowshoe, spring break

We went snowshoeing a second day for Ellie’s spring break.  It appears we’ve acquired a new pastime.  Have you ever gone for a weekend ski trip where you or someone else didn’t fully get the skiing thing?  Maybe you liked it when you were younger.  Now your eyesight is such that you can’t see the dips.  Or your legs don’t have the stamina to complete the run without countless stops.  But you like exercise and you enjoy the outdoors.  So for you, the combination of both woods and a mountain are exquisite.  And snow is like the cherry on top.  Snowshoeing is hiking on steroids.  The three of us, two 48 years olds and an 8 year old, kept pace together for treks of 100 minutes on day one and 75 minutes on day two.  And we all seriously enjoyed it.

To be totally honest, Ellie would have preferred something else, but she took the lead for the entire second half of our hike.  I don’t care if her reason for that was impatience with my pace, the girl took charge and enjoyed it.  We had fresh powder from nonstop dumps of snow, and we were the first ones out on the trail this morning.  Ellie had to navigate by reading the signs; the ground hints were completely invisible half the time.  I can’t get inside her head but she’s leaving here with something memorable.

And actually Karen led the first half, not me.  Both those girls were clearly enthralled by the specter of fresh powder covering the trail, and the challenge of navigating by sighting trail signs.  Ellie’s seemingly random barks of caution for potential danger of holes and soft snow left me in wonder at how leadership forms in a young girl’s life experience.  And if leadership is genetic, I’ll admit here and now that neither Karen or Ellie allowed me a chance to lead today.  To the back pops.

As I planned yesterday, and related in my last blog post, we took today’s hike to the Shock Hill gondola stop and rode up to Peak 8.  We ate a nice lunch at the T-Bar – the food had a southwestern flair.  And on full stomachs, we rode back down the gondola, strapped on our snowshoes, and hiked the remaining half mile or so to the Nordic Center to complete this morning’s outing.  We proceeded directly to the ice skating rink where we all remembered we suck at ice skating.  But with full tummies we continued our day of working out.  I suffered the additional embarrassment of some authoritative 17 year old girl instructing me to sit down to tie my shoes properly before I broke an ankle.  Tired from taking the backseat to women all day, I all-to-weakly complained about the shoe strings being too long; but soon found myself benched retying my laces.  And she was right; I skated much better afterward.

Once back at the hotel, surprisingly Ellie was too tired to immediately swim.  I took that as my chance to avoid the cold pool and spend some quality time in the hot tub.  And it was perfect – a steaming outdoor hot tub in snowfall.  After about 20 minutes, 5 minutes past my second punch of the 15 minute timer, I was in some sub-level conscious state when several pounds of ice rolled off the lodge roof and slammed into the concrete near my head like a Japanese earthquake.  My 20 minutes of mental calmness was forever disrupted, but my physical stress was already fully restored.  This vacation has been a – well a vacation.  A successful one.  Karen is just so excellent at setting these things up for us.  To be fair, I couldn’t fully escape work.  And who can in the age of 110% American productivity?  But even though I had to remain engaged, my peers and even management were pulling their weight and making things happen for me to enjoy the week.  We head home tomorrow morning, but with no regrets.  This was an awesome spring break.

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Pasta Jay’s Bites

15 Tuesday Mar 2011

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Running, Storytelling

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Pasta Jays

Have I not mentioned Pasta Jay’s several times in my recent blog posts?  So you all know I was planning on having dinner at their Moab site this Friday with a dozen of my fit friends before running the Moab Half Marathon.  Barb went out of her way to call them several times to set reservations.  Each time adding a couple more people.  So just now they call her back to not only state they don’t accept reservations, but to be so rude about it as to make her feel she should have known better than to trust one of their staff who happened to answer the phone on each of her calls.

I know many restaurants don’t accept reservations anymore.  It  runs counter to their business model of quickly turning over tables.  But the more business savvy of these places still make exceptions for large tables of 10 or more persons.  Few of them are ever rude about it.  I used to like Pasta Jays.  I think mostly because it was cheap.  But you get what you pay for and I can’t recommend this place to anyone.  At least not the Moab site.

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Jayashree – Epilogue

07 Sunday Mar 2010

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Other Stories, Storytelling

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

google, xml

Jayashree was seated across the table from the customer representatives.  Raj was standing, delivering a PowerPoint on the scalability of Alibi Software’s backend content management infrastructure.  The customer referenced the competing system sold by Balamohan’s partners, stating how their portal seemed to provide more features.  Raj was now five minutes deep into a tangential discussion on data-centric vs application-centric content management programming.

“I’ve looked closely at their portal and agree it is very slick.  You can drag and drop just about everything.  And I think that tuning translates into the sense of being able to generate content, but think about it really.  It’s about the same level of control MySpace gives you in dressing up your web page.  It feels like there are so many knobs to adjust and it can be fun for awhile.  But how much data can you really retrieve?  And their output formats are limited to popular applications like PDF and CSV.  We give you web services APIs.  The APIs might be a bit complex for a novice user but with a limited understanding of URIs you can query terabytes of data and feed the results into your company’s own knowledge systems.  Admittedly we require about 30 days to develop new feeds for you.  But those feeds are rock solid stored procedures with sub-second response times.  The other guys give you maybe two pages of XML.  That doesn’t meet enterprise needs.  That’s little more than a toy for consumers.”  Raj paused to let that sink in.

Jayashree noted the reactions from the audience.  They laughed at Raj’s remarks and seemed to understand the difference between enterprise and consumer oriented products.  This was going to be another win.  The last year had been a whirlwind of success.  The investors were in negotiations to sell Alibi to Google and she was poised to retire if that materialized since her C-level position paid out 5 multiples of her salary in the event the company was sold.  That was Shankar’s idea.  Not that she would retire.  Jayashree was 27 years old and totally into programming.  She knew she was clever and driven but considered herself to have fairly junior skills.  She was a geek girl and planned to go back to school to get her PhD in software engineering after the Google deal closed.

The End

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Jayashree – Inglorious Basterds

06 Saturday Mar 2010

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Other Stories, Storytelling

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Tags

job, recruiter

Jayashree walked into the Internet Café to find Raj and Shankar both waiting for her.  It gave her a sense of how important this issue was to them that they would arrive early.  She knew Raj wasn’t upset with her but hadn’t yet spoken directly to Shankar.  “Good morning guys.  I guess this is our first official day full-time on the new job?”

Raj replied, “Happy new job day Jayashree.  And this must be our new office?”  Raj seemed jovial.  That helped the mood.

“Well let me just start,” Jayashree began the meeting as she took her seat and gestured for the waiter to bring her usual morning tea.  “I met with Balamohan for dinner last night and he told me everything.  I was going to be coy but as soon as I said I missed him at the office Monday, he cut me off and came clean.  Not that he expressed any remorse.  He might have even been bragging.”

“Told you he was a jerk,” Raj again.  Shankar remained silent.  “So did he really start up a competing firm based on our idea?”

“Not exactly.  He fed our ideas to his partners, but they have one company and he has a separate business.”  Her tea arrived and she paused to thank the waiter.  “Balamohan is making money by recruiting the Ruby developers.  That’s what he mostly wanted from me – my social network of techies.  His partners might have formed their initial concept on their own, but they fleshed it out based on my blabbering.”

“So Balamohan made recruiting fees?”  Raj again the curious one.

“Not exactly.  He made his recruits purchase a bond to recompense their employers for their training and other expenses to cover their first two years of employment.  He charged a service fee for brokering the bond with a bank and received another fee from the bank for originating the loan.  Apparently he’s been doing this for several years and our venture helped him to go fulltime at it.”  Jayashree projected an incredulous facial expression.

“I’m not sure how I feel about that.  I don’t think it’s illegal because I’ve heard of the practice, but it sounds slimy to me.”  Again Raj with the response.  “He recruit anyone you know?”

“He wouldn’t say but I called 3 friends and they all confirmed he cold called and recruited them.  We can infer from this that their developers are local so we might have an edge on them with our Viet Namese labor costs.”  Jayashree was hoping to get Shankar into the dialog but he didn’t bite.  “My friends told me more.  He hired one DBA but no data mappers or architects.  They’ll manipulate most of the data at the application layer.”

“Hah, we got ‘em!”  Raj was suddenly very positive.  “Classic mistake, unfortunately made by just about everyone nowadays.”  Raj took on an authoritative tone as he explained.  “This is a huge data integration, or I should say content management, effort.  We built a data warehouse and focused on our data feed framework for the ETL processes.  We’re using Ruby for the front end, but we have stored procedures behind that written in Python.  Not to downplay the importance of the application layer  for aesthetics and usability, specifically the web services for ease of content accessibility; but we’re providing sub-second response time on our queries.  And we’ll scale at that speed for terabytes of data.  They’ll have to compromise on much smaller data sets – probably XML – can you say slow?  Their solution will be completely unscalable.”  Raj laughed and was enjoying himself immensely as he imagined the pending doom of this little competition.

Shankar finally interjected, “Well I should let you all know, our partners are suing us for malfeasance.  They brought forward the suit today demanding we forfeit all our shares to them.  Apparently this little company outbid our investors on a big contract.  And Balamohan has been talking enough to where our investors know more about our culpability for leaking intellectual capital than we do ourselves.  So we’ve got that going for us.”

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Jayashree – Two Weeks Notice

05 Friday Mar 2010

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Other Stories, Storytelling

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Tags

ruby

Jayashree asked to speak privately with her manager Monday morning and told him of her plans to leave the call center in two weeks.  “I wish you success in your endeavors Jayashree,” her manager was sincere but he also wanted to talk.  “Can you tell me if you plan to work with Balamohan?”

Jayashree didn’t see that coming.  “What?  What do you mean?”

“Well, I know you two have been dating and well, he gave notice on Friday to start up some venture based on Ruby developers.”

“No.  No I don’t have plans to work with Balamohan.”  Jayashree was no longer listening to her manager.  He began discussing why it was necessary to walk her out today and then explained documents that she needed to sign.  She signed them without reading the details.  She left the tech center campus in a daze wondering what Balamohan was up to.  She would need to discuss this with her partners and arranged to meet them at the Internet Café below her apartment when they got off work.  Turned out Raj got walked out immediately after giving notice too, so they were able meet before lunchtime.

“No Raj, Balamohan and I weren’t that close.  We only had dinner together.  And only 5 times.”  Jayashree wasn’t defensive because she expected these questions.  “But I have to tell you, I told him everything.  I mean, certainly quite a bit about our plans.  I told him about our funding.  And about our target markets.  I should have known better when a guy would be so interested in listening to my geek girl babble.  I gave him everything but our source code.  I’m an idiot.  I’m so sorry Raj.”

“No Jayashree, you’re not an idiot.  You’re a beautiful woman and you deserve better than that foot wipe.  And this isn’t over.  Now we need to glean information from him.  You need to act like you don’t know and have another dinner date with him.  You need to learn what his plans are.”

“I can do that.  That boy is going to buying some dinners at some nice restaurants.  He’d better be well funded.”

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Jayashree – Dinner Date

05 Friday Mar 2010

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Other Stories, Storytelling

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bharti

Jayashree was out to dinner with a guy she’d been casually dating for the last few months.  Being somewhat of a rebel herself, she liked the fact he’d go to work unshaven.  Balamohan worked at the call center with her and in addition to being fairly attractive, he seemed to enjoy spending his extra income on taking her to fine restaurants.  And he especially liked listening to her talk tech.

“When are you going to show me the data rack in your kitchen Jayashree?”  Balamohan said this quite nonchalantly as he spread butter on his naan.

“When you have a need to see it Balamohan.  It’s all very sensitive given the work I am doing now on the Alibi software.  I’m thinking of installing a biometric control to my apartment door.”  Jayashree enjoyed the coy dialog.  She’d have lost interest long ago in Balamohan if he didn’t express some forwardness.

“Well then, tell me my little princess programmer, when are you going to quit the call center and start fulltime on Alibi?”

Jayashree took a moment to finish chewing her bite of lamb vindaloo.  “Funny you should ask.  I plan to give notice on Monday.  You think I should give two weeks?  I’m not sure I want to.”

“You should offer two weeks.  It’s expected.  But it won’t matter.  They’ll walk you out the door immediately.  Ever since we signed that telecom client, they take zero risks.”

“Good to know, thank you.  You seem so plugged into everything at the office.”  It was a compliment as Jayashree was duly impressed by his political acumen.  “Would you excuse me please?  I need to freshen up.”

Jayashree left her mobile phone on the table as she rose and walked to the restroom.  Once she was out of sight, Balamohan picked up her phone and reviewed her recent call list.  He wrote down the numbers he didn’t already have or recognize.

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Jayashree – Punch Drunk

05 Friday Mar 2010

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Other Stories, Storytelling

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Tags

bidi, dashboard, widget

The 3 entrepreneurs walked out into the street.  The Ruby application designer, the Python content delivery specialist, and the guy with the smarts.  Jayashree began the dialogue.  “Shankar, you’re a good talker!”

“Thank you, Jayashree, but I didn’t really talk much.”  Shankar lit up a bidi.  He was the youngest of the three.

“Then you’re a good listener Shankar.  You’re good at something.  Good job in there!”

There was consensus among them that they did well and were positioned for success.  They could totally fail and they would still be making double what they could anywhere else.  Good times.

“So what did we agree to in there, Shankar?”  That came from a sobering Raj.

Shankar was on his game now.  He passed the bidi to Raj.  “We set the terms for our managerial discretion in a budget construct of 10%.  That’s juxtaposed to our ownership of 50/50, but it’s their money.  And it should be fairly easy for us to measure.  They funded us for what we both expect to last one year.  So they debit our commercial account once per month to establish the budget under our control.  We access that electronically so I’m thinking you could maybe give us some widget.  You know, like a mobile carrier gives you illustrating minutes used and remaining?  Can you do that?”

“Easily, although Jayashree would build the presentation layer.  And we’ll need people to claim their hours.”  Raj was quick to respond, thrilled at the spontaneous architectural discussion.  “I could download the balance twice a day.  We would compare that to our monthly plan budget.  Ideally it would always match but we will want to know when we’re over and under target plan.  It would be good to review that at least weekly so we would have room to stop development on either new feeds or support code based on maintaining the 90/10 split.  Yeah, this is really just more operational data.”

Shankar was just as excited.  He kept asking for more.  “Nice.  And make some headlights green, yellow and red when those programmers record their hours on time or are late.  We want to track that.  Can you provide access to this financial dashboard to our investors too?  That might demonstrate value?”

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Jayashree – Conference

04 Thursday Mar 2010

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Other Stories, Storytelling

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

SaaS

Jayashree wore a black skirt above her knees, and a white button-down shirt.  The shirt was new, the skirt still fit her from prep school.  Raj and Shankar were similarly dressed in suits as they strode into the investors’ conference room together.  On Shankar’s advice, they took seats almost before looking at their hosts.  He thought sitting down would be better than standing.  Jayashree smiled broadly and spoke to the 3 investors, “It’s been six months since we all first met; how are all of you doing?”

“Oh we’re very well, thank you.”   The lawyer continued, “We only have a couple of discussion items.  And I understand you have an agenda to bring forward.  Do you want to start first, or…”

“Why don’t you go first, I suspect our issues might run parallel to yours’,” Shankar fended the first question for the team.

“OK then, I will.  We understand that as the operational management team, you’ve provided work direction to the development team counter to our initial direction,” the lawyer paused for comment.  No comment ensued.  “We’re actually fine with that.  We’re comfortable that you did this in a smart manner.  To disguise the support work as value-features we think is brilliant.  The reuse of operational information as dashboards for the consumer is a sustainable offering.  Well done.”  The lawyer again paused to allow a response.  This time one came from Shankar.

“Thank you for supporting us on that one.  Our issue is related to the development team itself.  We weren’t considering global resourced labor.  To adjust for the initial communication latency, we believe it prudent to recognize now that our target launch date should move to the right 20%.”

The lawyer interjected, “Are there any other concerns on working with the Viet Namese?”

Shankar was on point, “Not at all.  But our experience suggests timelines will slip a bit, at least the first year.  Might as well plan for it now.”

Another investor responded, “Shankar, we really are very impressed with your team’s managerial decision making.  We want you to know that you have earned our trust.  We want you to move forward on your projects that involve anything at all, and fit within 10% of our plan budget.  You don’t need to consult with us.  But we also want you to make resources sufficient to developing based on our market research and partnerships for the other 90% of the budget.  Does that sound like a viable plan?”

“The three looked at each other approvingly and Shankar responded for them, “It seems very doable.”

“Good,” continued the owner, “then let’s discuss our next opportunity.  Garmin is concerned about losing market share on their GPS navigational products to Google Maps mashups on the iPhone and other smart phones.  The want to feed us their street data.  It’s superior to Google Maps and they feel it will generate sales to their mobile navigators.  Down the road, they plan to provide us with streaming audio as well so that anyone can use their smart phone as a fully functional Garmin product.  In other words, their partnership with us is to move off their appliance model to a SaaS business model.  We haven’t worked out the licensing yet, but we’ll pay them a percentage of our SW sales for their content.  We told them we could deliver this in our first release.  What do you all think?”

Raj responded enthusiastically, “That’s brilliant.  I just need to add a few tables and this is very doable.”

The two teams discussed other business topics and finished their meeting on very positive terms.  It was now time to focus hard core on Ruby and Python development.

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Jayashree – Plan Phase

02 Tuesday Mar 2010

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Other Stories, Storytelling

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

data, Python

Jayashree gathered pillows for her partners to sit on the floor.  They decided it best to continue their meeting at her apartment after the café proprietor chastised Jayashree for her profanity.  Raj restarted the discussion with a positive focus.

“Let me ask you this Shankar, is it too late to request some Python skills?”

“No, it might cause some delay but it’s not too late.  I’ll do that immediately.”

Raj continued, “Good.  I also imagine we would be managing these staff correct?”

“Yes, it’s expected, but the investors will set their initial expectations as part of the hiring process.”

“Of course.”  Raj was smiling and appeared quite comfortable now with their situation.  “We can easily direct these staff to work on what we determine.  They won’t be surprised that our tasks differ from what some suits told them.  We’ll still have to develop new data feeds but we should be able to focus enough efforts on audit logs and error checking to keep us on track.  We’ll be fine.  By the way, what are some of the new data feeds they want us to focus on?”

“Oh, I forgot to bring that up.  They already have agreements from a consortium of auto insurance companies to provide us with data they have on driver’s mileage and related information.  They want us to correlate it with other data and feed it back to them.  Apparently, there’s a lot of money in the insurance business.”

Jayashree heard this discussion from the kitchen where she was making tea.  She served the drinks now to her partners.  In truth, she’d become a bit distracted thinking about having doubled her income.  She was over her anger from earlier and was now feeling pretty good about things.  She picked up her guitar and played songs for her partners into the evening.

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Jayashree – Selling Out

28 Sunday Feb 2010

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Other Stories, Storytelling

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Tags

ETL, Python

Jayashree watched Shankar’s face as he stared into his tea cup.  “I really thought Raj would be here by now.  Just tell me the deal Shankar.  Raj probably had something come up at work.”

Shankar looked at her directly for the first time since he met her at the Internet Café.  “Well, that’s a nice segue into our investors’ feedback.  They expect you to both give notice right away.  You said you were cool with that, right?

“Depends.  How am I going to pay the rent?”

“As soon as you quit, you go on salary.  They’ll match your current rate with a 20% raise.  They would like to see your last 2 pay checks as artifacts.”

“No problem, Shankar.  What about our programmers?”  Jayashree was in an intense mood although the thought of a raise nearly distracted her.

Shankar looked out the window as he said, “You sure you don’t want to wait for Raj?”

“I’m sure.”

Shankar faced Jayashree again and looked at her for a few moments before finally saying, “Like I expected, they want to hire the programmers themselves.”  Shankar knew she expected this too but waited for a response.  Anything to delay the coming storm.  No response from Jayashree, just big round, unblinking, dark brown eyes.  “The programmers will all be skilled in Ruby.”  Did she blink?  She might have.  “They are being hired to expand our data feeds.  These guys said support features can wait until we need support.  They want to go to market with as wide a scope as possible.”  Shankar lost his train of thought as he saw Raj walking up through the window enabling Jayashree to respond.

“Holy cow Shankar!  You total foot wipe!”  Jayashree stopped as she saw Raj walk in and simultaneously realized the entire café heard her outburst.

Upon entering Raj noticed everyone in the café looking at Jayashree and Shankar, and was unsure whether to talk to them or the crowd.  He nodded toward his partners in a hushed voice, “Hey guys.”  They just stared at him quietly as he took his seat.

Jayashree maintained the hushed voice and pointed to Shankar with her left hand as she exclaimed to Raj, “Our partner just hired ruby programmers to develop ETL for new data feeds.”  She paused to let that sink in for Raj.

Raj stared at Shankar for half a minute before asking him, “Clearly, you lost the argument for developing a robust product, but did you not know that our ETL is in Python?  It’s just the web services and Jayashree’s stuff that’s written in Ruby.  This is a train wreck.  What else should we know Shankar?”

“Our ownership will now be diluted to half with these guys.  So Jayashree, you go from 35% to 25% and we each go from 17.5% to 12.5%.”

Jayashree broke the hush and shattered all sense of decorum as she shrieked, “WTF!  No deal Shankar!  No deal!  Are you hearing me?”

Shankar remained his composure and his hushed voice as he responded, “They said if you had issues with that, they could double your rate.”

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Jayashree – Investors

27 Saturday Feb 2010

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Other Stories, Storytelling

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

AP, ruby, rupee

Shankar sat in the waiting area for 90 minutes past his appointment time.  He watched 3 groups of people come in after him and meet with his investors before he was finally called into their office.  As he walked through the door, he discovered the office was really a conference room.  His 3 investors were seated seemingly random around the table.  Papers and left-over food were everywhere on top of the table and he wasn’t sure where to sit.  And no one offered him a seat before beginning with questions.

“Are we ready to staff up Shankar?”  This came from the tall, thin businessman to his left.  Shankar understood him to be the lawyer of the team.

“Yes, I think so,” Shankar responded – striving for confidence but it came out sheepish.  “We have identified the skills we need to make us ready for prod…production.”  Shankar noticed the businessmen already each had a copy of his five bullets; apparently forwarded to them by the receptionist while he’d been kept waiting.

“That’s excellent Shankar, but you know of course we’ve already identified the skills.  We have acquiesced on meeting your demand for Ruby on Rails.  But understand the development focus will be on creating new data feeds.  Raj will need to start full-time to lead this team with data modeling and data mapping.”  This came from the stout, well-dressed man to his right whom Shankar understood to be the brother with the third man in the room who had yet to speak.

“We think we should focus on making the code more robust, more supportable…” Shankar wasn’t allowed to finish his argument.

“The focus needs to be on enabling more data feeds.”  This from the other brother who was speaking for the first time.  “More market opportunities.  We’re not going to be successful simply starting with the American criminal justice system.  What is it you guys are always saying?  Data is reusable?  Well, we need to reuse it.  We need to start off with as many markets as possible.  Once we have some rupees flowing in, we can turn our attention to perfecting the product.  Steve Jobs didn’t include copy/paste or a decent camera in his first rev iPhone.  If Alibi 1.0 is successful, then we can be confident of funding Alibi 2.0.”

Shankar knew better than to challenge these men, but as there was a pause he interjected.  “American crime is not a small market.  Texas alone could be lucrative.”

“You don’t understand Shankar.”  Again the tall lawyer.  “No market based in America is smart right now.  The rupee is steadily gaining value over the dollar and this will continue.  We need a stable currency or we’ll be chasing our tails for profit.  We have to go after AP.  And AP is seriously security conscientious.  That’s our target market Shankar.  Now, let’s talk share dilution.”

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Jayashree – Balls Out

26 Friday Feb 2010

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Other Stories, Storytelling

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ETL

Jayashree and Raj sipped tea in the Internet Café waiting for Shankar to meet them.  “I see him.”  Raj had been scanning the sidewalk.  “Remember Jayashree, we need to be clear with Shankar on our priorities.  He can talk tech, but he doesn’t have the experience to understand what’s important.”

“Gotcha Raj.”  Jayashree shifted the chairs to better seat the 3 of them.

Shankar saw them through the window and nodded his head.  Upon walking inside he greeted them individually.  “Jayashree, good morning.”  He shook her hand as they weren’t very close yet.  He sat down before acknowledging Raj as they were childhood friends.  “Raj, you look tired man.  Been moonlighting?”

“Yeah, on this little project.  Here, we printed out our funding priorities for you.  It’s paramount that you communicate this clearly to our investors.  Feel free to show it to them.”  Raj handed Shankar a sheet of paper with 5 bullets on it.

Shankar was about to ask for soft copy when Jayashree took over the conversation.  “Let me summarize for you what we need with this next round of funding Shankar.  We can’t go prod with the present state of our code.  I know it passed all our test cases, but you have to trust me when I tell you that in prod, stuff breaks.  We need audit logs.  Especially on the ETL processes.  Then we need error checking on all our web services queries.  If a query fails, we need to control what the user sees.  We have to start on these things now because we won’t have the cycles to respond to all the potential issues after we go live.  But this isn’t complex stuff either, we can recruit junior programmers.  You think your investors are going to be good with us hiring?”  Jayashree stopped talking and took another sip of tea waiting for Shankar to respond.

“Absolutely.  They understood this second round of funding would be to staff up.  A couple of things you should expect though.  They are probably going to want to recruit these programmers themselves.  They have other businesses they want to support; so I’ll be surprised if they let us hire anyone directly.  Next, I expect they will want to begin funding you both fulltime.  You need to consider dropping your safety nets and committing balls-out to this.  Are you ready for that?”

Jayashree and Raj responded in unison.  “We’ve been ready.  Don’t mess this up.”

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Jayashree – Alibi

26 Friday Feb 2010

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Other Stories, Storytelling

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Tags

gps, spi

Jayashree was back at the Internet Café conducting end user testing.  She was the end user.  She logged into the web server racked up in her kitchen.  A Google Maps mashup of the city filled her browser.  She’d coded the mashup.  Her app paired Google Maps with either GPS coordinates or GPS-like coordinates generated from cell tower triangulation of people’s mobile devices.  In other words, her app was Loopt.  Jayashree didn’t claim to be an original thinker, she was into value-add.  Her market wasn’t consumer, it was the enterprise.  And she took the functionality into the security domain.

Raj worked at a company that made monitoring systems for criminals.  Ankle bracelets.  He administered the database for their customers’ sensitive personal information.  They used some off-the-shelf criminal justice software and it wasn’t very sophisticated.  But by having access and knowing what data fields were important, Raj was able to model a data schema that would map data feeds from the entire criminal justice industry – if one could call it that.  Considering there are roughly 2 million Americans incarcerated, it’s a healthy market.  But that’s just one market for this information.  As Raj liked to say, “data is the ultimate reusable resource.”  Using the same system, interested employers will be able to track their employees everywhere and maintain logs of their whereabouts.  Likewise, employees will be able to demonstrate compliance to industry regulations based on such logs.  Raj and Jayashree called their app, Alibi.

This software could be applied to almost anything involving people and geography.  Back in the Internet Café, Jayashree tracked Raj and Shankar on their GPS-enabled smart phones.  She then correlated their locations to a mashup of the neighborhood crime index and their eBay reputation scores.  The test results were looking good.

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Jayashree – Home Data Center

25 Thursday Feb 2010

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Other Stories, Storytelling

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dasd

Jayashree looked up at the hazy Indian sky as she strolled through the marketplace.  The aroma of spices and vendors’ cooking made her think of her kitchen – when she used to cook at home.  She dropped off 200 audio CDs among the various vendors.  The payment arrangement was consignment, so she’d go back in a week and collect based on how many each vendor sold.  She expected this to provide a decent income source for the next couple of months.  Her job in the call center covered most expenses, but she chose to live in a nice neighborhood with steep rents.  And she had expensive toys.

In the space designed for the fridge in her kitchen, she had a floor-to-ceiling data rack.  Mounted in the rack were two 865 Watt APC Smart UPS servers.  Those powered a general web and application server, 2 database servers, backup DASD, and networking equipment.  A mini fridge anchored the data rack – and added some color.  The most expensive part of all was the monthly utility bill to keep these systems powered and cooled.  She originally hosted peoples’ websites to support her home data center; but now for security it was dedicated to her partner’s application development effort.  Raj knew databases and Shankar ran the business end.  She was the programmer.  Their project was her idea and so she owned 50% of the partnership.  Well, that 50% was now really only 35%.  Investors had diluted the shares somewhat with needed funding.

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Jayashree – Ruby Hacker

25 Thursday Feb 2010

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Other Stories, Storytelling

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india, itunes, playlist, ruby

Jayashree checked her savings balance online while her program compiled.  Just enough rupees to cover rent, but what would she do for food?  She started up another little program of hers that queried all the shared iTunes playlists visible in the Internet Café where she was working.  The program then copied the top 20 songs based on quantitative parameters she defined – essentially popularity.  CDs from that were easy to sell in the market around the corner.

Technically as an interpreted language, her Ruby on Rails program didn’t need to compile – but she used that term out of habit.  Both programs completed at nearly the same time.  She began ripping CDs off the purloined iTunes playlists.  That would cover her food for the month.  The other program would make her rich.

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The Painter

26 Tuesday Jan 2010

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Storytelling

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Austin, Brittiboo, Cat Mountain, high school, Lake Austin, NYU, paint, Vic's Too

Beautiful Young Woman PaintingMy 18 year old daughter is in NY this week with her mother, auditioning first at NYU and then Syracuse.  I wanted to wish her to break a leg as I dropped them off at DIA at 7:15 am Monday.  It should have been at 6:45 am.  That would have been better for my schedule of a 7am staff call, feeding the 7 year old breakfast, and making all my much more important obligations.  But Brittiboo pulled an all-nighter doing God-knows-what in her room and was late.  And then forgot her driver’s license so we had to turn around.  Plus she kept me up all night knowing she wasn’t asleep.  I really can’t put into words just how pissed I was at her other than to say I dropped Brit off at DIA for what is probably a hugely exciting event for her without saying anything nice.  Did 16 years of IBM make me such a dick, or have I always been this way?

My life was different at her age.  I didn’t work Sunday’s in a trendy coffee shop.  During the 100 degree summers in Texas, I painted houses.  Mostly new construction.  I expected to attend college and never pictured myself doing manual labor when I grew up.  But I never thought myself above my peers and worked hard.  That paint crew taught me to appreciate the quality of our work when we were finished.  We did mostly high-end homes on Cat Mountain and Lake Austin.  The thing about painting, or construction work in general, is afterwards you can see your end product – and feel proud.  But it was 10 hours each day of intense labor.

Something I learned from it, or developed, was work ethic.  I mean, you would think that’s what I learned.  But it’s more complicated than that.  I also learned something that took me years afterward to appreciate.  I had my first experience with the anti work ethic.  I say that because it’s not non-work, it’s a different credo.  I’m not sure how to describe this but I’m referring to how intelligence equates to laziness, or the inverse.  My 1st summer, I worked alongside a HS buddy.  I’d always be hustling, working my tail off.  I’d sweat off 10 lbs. from morning to end of day.  Rob generally worked as hard as me but this one time he questioned me.  We were carrying unpainted doors to another part of the house and I’d clearly outpaced him 2 to 1.  “Ed, what the hell are you doing?  We make $5.25 an hour, and when the day is done, we’ll still be making only $5.25 an hour!”  I’d been racing like some mad dog chasing a ball.  Rob was pacing himself because he’d considered the end game.  We had different value systems.  Or Rob had one and I was still developing mine.  That was over 30 years ago.  He’s a personal fitness instructor and volunteer search and rescue dude now.  He was in the search party for that guy who died from exposure in Oregon a few Thanksgivings ago.  He moved to Grand Junction recently to run some college athletic program and he’s got me into mountain hiking.  He got me to hike my first fourteener – Pike’s Peak.

So I worked hard through high school.  I worked every semester of college – usually delivering pizzas until 3am whilst running varsity Cross Country in the fall and Track in the spring.  I got through a Masters program and to where I am now – which is comfortable.  Brittany left a dirty room for me to clean – knowing the plan was to get the carpets steam cleaned while she was out of town.  But I don’t know.  Is my teenage daughter as lazy as I think?  Or even if she is, does it matter?  Can what’s important today be what was important for me at her age?  Rob taught me I didn’t exactly have a plan when I raced to the end of the day.  Brittiboo wants to be a performer.  On Broadway.  She practices her lines, her songs and her monologues.  She got the lead in her high school play.  She seems to know how to get what she wants.  And she has a plan.  I never did at that age.  Don’t get me wrong.  I’m not going to ease up on her lazy ass.  I’m a dick remember?  But I will try to appreciate that she knows what she’s doing and will very likely be a star at whatever she does.

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Ed Mahoney is a runner, author, and cybersecurity product director who writes about endurance, travel, and life’s small ironies. His blog A Runner’s Story captures the rhythm between motion, meaning, and memory.

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