go me!

I know, I don’t usually talk about work, but I’m so happy about this little success that I just have to share. 🙂

we have this events calendar, which I wrote, so I can say that it’s a jumbled mess. if I knew then what I know now, etc., etc., etc.

at one point I was thinking of upgrading it, but that seemed daunting to the point of insanity. so instead I’ve been looking around at various PHP-based calendars, trying to find the right blend of functions, look & feel, and so on.

finally I settled on VTCalendar, which has the extra appeal of being from another college, and thus designed with the strange needs of higher ed in mind. the other possibility about it that appealed to me was the idea of LDAP authentication, which I’ve never tried in a PHP app.

and _that_ has been a strange adventure…but today I got it to work, which just makes me inordinately happy.

being assertive

at yesterday’s FreeGeek Olympia meeting, I was looking at the agenda on the wiki, and then went to the stub for the minutes, and noticed a note that said “hi, elaine!”

yeah.

so before the meeting got started, I asked to have a discussion of the secretary role (and JC included the facilitator role as well), and said I was willing to take minutes this time but didn’t want it to just be assumed that I would.

“hi, my name is Elaine and I type really fast”

it turned out well, I think…I’m now in a rotating group of people willing to be facilitators and secretaries. as I’ve said, both here & in person, it’s not that I *mind* taking notes, but I don’t like it as an unspoken assumption, and it does interfere with being a full participant in the meeting. so now I’ll get to take some weeks off.

as for FreeGeek itself…sigh. there’s so much to be done to turn that group into a functioning organization. the space is appalling (hot attic up a flight of rickety stairs), there’s no formal structure, no plan for distribution. but there is a lot of goodwill and positive thoughts, which I suppose is something. it gets me into sleeve-rolling-up mode, at least; I’m going to give it another month and see what kind of forward motion we get, and then? I don’t know. it’s not as though I have infinite energy…and I don’t want to waste my new-found whatever-this-is (getting my me back and all that) on something that isn’t going anywhere.

riding through town

Tonight we went cycling together. Down the hill to downtown, where we looked at some experimental music festival & decided it wasn’t worth paying the money. Then up the other side to visit a friend (to drop off a video); I have to admit that I was not gracious in climbing up that hill. There was cursing and obscene gesturing involved, although finally I just had to admit that I get self-consious about my lack of cycling prowess, and he that he gets frustrated that I won’t listen to his advice. And with wheezing and straining, I made it up onto the crest and we cruised around up on the westside, dropped off the vid and hung out for a bit.

Then back down (wheeeeeeee!), through downtown again, weaving in the traffic on 4th, and over to another friend’s house.

I spent a couple of hours hanging out with her 4-year-old, playing with dolls, being shown the garden, explaining how flowers turn into blackberries, reading Space Witch…while C looked at her pictures from studying abroad. Good times for all, although I think next time I want to have the grownup fun. 😉

The ride home wasn’t as bad as I thought it would be; I got sweaty and breathed hard, but I didn’t freak out, didn’t even have to stop to walk. (Honestly? I used the tricks that C was trying to explain to me earlier.)

And now I’m all showered and relaxed and happy. Might watch a little vid (season 2 of Chapelle’s Show!) and then go to sleep.

I’m very happy we went for a ride instead of spending all evening with the TV or the computers.

okay, _this_ is cool

I’m working from Puyallup today; the last time I spent a day out here, I had to work in the little “district office” they have set up, which means using an underpowered computer in a windowless room, in between meetings.

Now there’s a new building (I should really link to the press release from here!), and it has this coffeeshop-type zone with comfy chairs & wifi. No actual coffee during the summer, but the space is still open, and comfortable, and I can use my laptop, where I know everything on it and about it.

Which means inbetween my meetings I can get some actual work done. What I’m really curious about, though, given the nice weather it looks like we’re getting, is how far *outside* the access goes: could I sit out in the “plaza” and still get online?!

I’m kinda psyched…might have to spend more days out this way. 🙂

gender ambivalence

So I’ve gotten involved with this new (not-yet-)nonprofit, “Free Geek”:http://fgoly.org — and it’s cool. I’ve been interested in the Free Geek since WebVision ’03, and it was a nice bit of luck to run into this one starting up.

Here’s the thing, though: I’ve mostly just been going to the organizational meetings, since most of the recycling work happens during the week. And I’ve been bringing the laptop, and I type absurdly fast…so I end up taking notes.

Which when I’m either the only woman, or one of two women, in the room, makes me a little uncomfortable. Not that I mind taking notes: I’m proud of my ability to take notes, at least when I’m typing. (Don’t ask me to take notes longhand.) But I feel like I’m falling into some sort of gender role that I don’t necessarily want to reinforce.

So I’m trying to make up for it in 2 ways:

# still being active in the meeting. this can be tricky, as it’s hard to talk and type about what you’re saying simultaneously. so far, though, I think I’m doing all right.
# soon, getting into the more meaty technical stuff. not software, and *not* web design, but stuff like hardware testing.

Maybe I’m making too much of it, or overcompensating. ::shrug:: It gives me something to chew on, mentally, I suppose.

that was sudden

Tonight I rolled by the local video store to grab something “actiony” — and it was closed.

Not like “we’re closed for tonight” but closed closed. For forever.

The sign said they just couldn’t stay in business anymore, mentioned “new venues” (netflix et al), so after 17 years they’re shutting it down.

🙁

(Y’know, when we signed up for Netflix, our visits to Video I actually stayed about the same. What we really dropped was the icky Blockbuster down in Lacey.)

I wish they’d said *something* though.

On teaching CSS

I just had a strange thought: what if we taught CSS positioning/layout techniques *before* colors, fonts, etc.?

Bear with me for a sec.

I’m providing some technical assistance to a student designer, and as part of that I went ahead and did one of those CSS makeovers that were all the rage a while ago. (I love the design, but the implementation was strictly slice/table/spacer old skool stuff.)

What I noticed, because I was documenting the process to be able to work through it with the student, is that I went to the layout first and that it was the most critical element.

I understand that you want to help people get a good grasp of the concept before exposing them to the really hard stuff. But what would happen if you could get to layout techniques more quickly?

Layout issues expose some of the most meaningful CSS concerns: well-formedness, cascading, use of container divs, semantic issues in id/class names. And personally, it helps me to see the shape of the design before I start “coloring it in” — I suppose it’s a wireframe sort of thing. (hey, maybe a web course could teach it *with* wireframe techniques!)

Anyway, I’d be curious to see what others think…and I should be finding out whether it makes sense to go this way when I work with the student!

brain dump

these are notes that I took during the City of Olympia’s public meeting on new wireless planning, policy, etc. I might do a summary of my perceptions of the meeting, or not. I will note that half or more of the dozen attendees were industry representatives.

Susan from CityScape, introduced by Pete Swensson.

Ah, the usual problems with presentation materials! (there’s wifi in the room, but secured, alas.)

master plan vs. policy, or before policy

combine rf engineering, telcom law, planning in one company. Founded right after 1996 act (in 1997)…interesting.

Fluffy timeline of telcom history…and then generations of cell phones (1G ? 4G). those old bulky phone were 800mhz, 2G is 1900mhz. 3G doesn’t seem to be on a different frequency, but (theoretically) uses more bandwidth, so capacity is more important than coverage. What is 4G? GPS, tv, radio, video camera. But that doesn’t sound like a different kind of network, I don’t get the whole ?4G? designation.

Some discussion of how network can be redesigned to accommodate more use.

Q: why does service area shrink when there are more users? She starts off with an electrical metaphor. Built to accommodate a certain number of subscribers with a certain amount of use. Rapid busy signal, call comes in w/out phone ringing, difference in bars depending on time of day. (we’ve experienced all of those, I think)

photos of ground equipment: 800mhz is bulkier (12’x20′), needs space to dissipate heat. 1900Mhz is smaller (3’x6′). Nextel is in 800mhz, but with a different technology. (2 carriers in 800mhz, 3 (or 4?) in 1900mhz)

current space can be reused for other providers, as long as there’s enough physical space, both on tower and on ground.

Q: difference in weight of antennas? Both very light; coax going up to each antenna is the source of most weight.

What’s going to happen next? Acquisition people don’t usually know, they just want sites. CityScape’s role is to help the city come up with its own vision of needs.

Have to look just outside the city, as well. Mapping of how many might be needed in the next 10 years…first: if it were flat to get baseline information. Then put in the terrain: marginal or signal-less areas appear. (800mhz goes 5 mi on flat, 1900mhz 3 mi)

Add the demographic variable (rich neighborhoods vs poor?!), subscriber rate, etc.

1996 act requires complete coverage?

Explication of telcom act of 96: basically, can’t ban the services, favor one provider or another, must act on requests in timely manner, can only deny applications for ?good? reasons. Lighting and rf emissions are exclusively regulated by the feds: can’t deny because you are worried about rf frequency or other health concerns.

Q: how up-to-date are the feds’ surveys? Studies are based on 800/1900, not ionizing so doesn’t affect cell the way microwave would, but TV/radio actually has a higher radiation (or something). What about other effects? Don’t know.

[is that just phones? What about wifi? What are the mhz for wifi?!]

goals: follow the law, provide service, make deployment attractive (height, proliferation, disguise, colocation), insure public health/safety.

Comment: concerns about grandfathering in re: colocation…will all the new equipment end up on the crappy towers we hate now? (that woman from the neighborhood association, which one is that?) master plan is to be an educational tool: what’s there now, to see coverage gaps to know where there will need to facilities in the future. To design them better.

Q: once we have our preferred sites, what happens when a provider comes in and wants to use another site? Then the burden is on them to prove that the other spot is necessary. And apparently providers like it because it makes the process easier and faster.

Q: how does this address the capacity question? (11×17) sheet will have map showing current, future needs, etc. Is data factored into equation? Yes, based on estimates (guess-timates!) from industry. [oh, the industry involvement!] Engineer isn’t here.

Q: …I think it was something about why maximizing public land? More control over placement, concealment techniques.

Q: and revenue streams? Yes, that’s a consideration. Community in Florida, ? of our size generating 2 mil over 10 years. 4 sq miles, $80k year in leases. Can be strong motivation. Typical lease rates will be included with report.

Q: do they get revenue from those leases? No, not in this situation…just paid for the plan.
Pete: being paid a flat rate for helping with plan/ordinance. Neighborhood groups have called for 3rd party review of applications, to evaluate presentations from providers. CityScape is one of those 3rd parties, but there are others, each application would have its own review, from short list of purveyors.

Public lands aren’t the only place this stuff can go.

Comment: policy should minimize conflict of interest.

Q: company qualified to talk about eminent domain to acquire sites? Qualified to do master plan. Acquire property for public purpose, condemnation. They wouldn’t be involved, just helping with plan so citizens/city can make the decisions.

Q: would we be able to eliminate that as an option through the policy? Cell providers are private companies, govts don’t have authority to make gift of public funds or to [missed something], except to help poor/infirm. Probably couldn’t do that then, because it would be considered a private purpose, but could for a public purpose: parks, schools (?), water towers, fire stations, etc. [what about for public wll?] don’t see that as something that would go into this, but would be zoning discussion, ongoing policy.

Q; resolving conflicts re: ideal sites? Will advocate hierarchy: first choice, 2nd choice, etc.

Pete pushed her back into the presentation.

[aside from C re: lattice towers could be made out of bamboo! My response: or grow clematis up them!]

concealed monopole towers are SO dorky looking.

5 in 1900mhz.

Tall tower means more colocation, short towers mean more towers (can be clusters). A values choice. Industry says lower towers will mean slower deployment.

Ah, design choices. Matching the tower to the character of the neighborhood.

Low-profile antennas are less visually obtrusive, but don’t always meet provider network goals, tilt, etc.

section 704 of telcom act (relevant section)

is it favoring to require vaulting of ground equipment?

State has standards re : use of right-of-way. WA has most effective use of ROW of anyplace she’s seen. Sometimes ground equipment can be mounted aboveground if there isn’t enough space.

Annarondale (sp?) case re: issues with frequency interference. (hm.)

All of these hiding techniques are kinda cheesy, although I’m fond of the super-tall clock towers.

Crux of ordinance is hierarchy of types of facilities plus the zoning chart. Hierarchy usually takes the most time. [kinda like getting the levels set in webadmin]

quickest review to installations that meet preferred guidelines.

Q: thought that big towers wouldn’t be an issue anymore because equipment would be small enough to be mounted on phone poles, etc. elevation is too important, poles aren’t high enough.

Q (me): does this include wifi/wimax? generally they only include things covered by 704, which doesn’t include wifi/wimax, have only included that when asked, only one so far is SeaTac.

Q: is there a cumulative effect of wattage with more channels? Yes, most effect is with rooftop installations; reduces with towers, because you get farther away from the actually anntennae. OSHA has standards re:RF for sites. Wattage is usually in dozens, not thousands, usually below 5k/10k threshold.

(almost out of battery!)

next step.

People from industry (entire row behind us): want stuff from them: attenna locations.

[need to get more citizens here!!!!]

draft plan in July, presentation in August showing locations, policy options. Will be getting preferences.

so that’s a little crazy

I opened up Firefox this evening to a severe weather alert from ForecastFox…which surprised me, given that it’s lovely weather: a bit of clouds, maybe some rain later, but nothing I’d call *severe*! So of course I clicked on it, to get a _tsunami_ warning.

A 7.4 earthquake near Eureka, so tsunami warnings all up the coast, although it seems remote that they’d get down to this end of the water. I took a look at Google News: nothing; CNN: nothing.

Then off to the USGS…where I saw more about “the California quake”:http://earthquake.usgs.gov/eqinthenews/2005/usziae/ (7.0 according to them), plus “an Alaskan quake of a similar size”:http://earthquake.usgs.gov/eqinthenews/2005/uszhcb/ just a few hours earlier. On top of the Chilean quake yesterday…I’m not usually prone towards apocalyptic thinking, but that is a little distressing.

I’m just going to hold a little tighter to my chair the next day or two….