sxsw day 1

Today was the airplane day. Only napped last night, got up before 4 am to get to the airport…which probably wasn’t entirely necessary. I got through the damn line pretty quickly and ended up at the gate like an hour early. ::sigh:: Napped, read a book; switched planes in Phoenix. (Where the wifi is free, BTW.) More of the same on flight #2.

And, wow, it’s cold in Austin today. Raining when I got here, windy too. I found myself wishing for both my gloves AND my earmuffs. Yipes. I have a bike reserved, but I talked to the rental guys and decided to pick it up tomorrow, since it doesn’t have fenders.

On the other hand, I got quite a bit of walking in. Not just to the bike shop, but also up across the river seeking a bite to eat. (Something Dylan said on Twitter sent me looking for Las Manitas, but it closed at 4.) I ended up at the same cafe where I spent a few evenings last time around. They’ve redone their counter, I think, but the couches all look the same. Tasty sandwich, ginormous salad of baby greens. Really, the only real food I’ve eaten all day.

I gather that some people are doing stuff tonight, but I don’t think I’m up for it. I’m watching Daily Show (yay!) and will probably hit the hay after Colbert. Either that, or go find the whirlpool spa in my hotel. Definitely want to get to get extra sleep so I can be fresh tomorrow.

Tomorrow’s fun includes picking up the bike and picking up my badge, plus the first couple of panels. But the panels don’t start until mid-afternoon, so I have time to get out & about.

Oh, one last thing: all of the trees are packed with birds, all singing. It’s the strangest thing. The noise of them fills the downtown, almost more than the sound of traffic.

emerging

It’s been a while since I’ve written anything more than that silly questionnaire of last week…. So here’s the brain-dump of what I’ve been up to.

I started bike commuting again on Feb. 19: 3 days that week, 3 days the next week, and then today. With the weather looking as it is, I’ll probably ride again tomorrow too. It’s been lovely. A little chilly in the morning, but warm enough that I’ve put my fleece vest at the back of my closet instead of wearing it under my jacket. And the “all trail” option is frickin’ amazing. The new trail is creamy-smooth pavement, and the whole ride is beautiful, calming. In the afternoon, there’s lots of people out — walking, mostly — but even early in the morning there’s a few other walkers and some other bike commuters, too.

I bought a new bike weekend before last; something a little more “performance oriented.” A Kona Smoke 29-er, which is taking some getting used to after 3 years on the very quirky Townie, but I’m definitely more nimble on it. And no, the Townie isn’t going away; C & I are going to work on overhauling, upgrading, etc. so it can be the around-the-town cruiser it ought to be, instead of my main mode of transportation. (From April 2007 until March 2008 I put over 1000 miles on it.)

I’ve been maintaining my weight for about 2 months now since hitting my goal; I’ve actually lost another 5 pounds or so since then. It’s a little bumpier up & down than before, but all within a good zone. I’m trying to add more fruits & veggies to my diet, too!

I started a yoga class, which is more strenuous than I’m used to, but in a good way. Yesterday I went sore from overdoing gardening on Sunday, and came out with both my hand/wrist and my legs in much happier shape.

Sunday I rode my bike downtown & back in the morning, then spent the whole afternoon gardening. (In a tank top! Yay for southern exposure!) I got some serious work done, even if I paid for it later.

The neighborhood association board re-elected me as president last week, which is a bit of a mixed blessing. 🙂 I like doing it, but I always feel like I’m running behind on something or another. The general meeting two weeks ago was HAWESOME, tho. We did C’s open mic suggestion again, and this time lots of people came up and said their piece (peace?), got some conversations started, etc. Plus we got 3 new board members.

This year, as a whole, we’re going to try to get some forward movement on a Madison Scenic Park community garden, work on improvements at Lions Park (oh hell, I need to make a phone call!), and start a basketball tournament. Plus probably some other stuff. (I so very want to redesign the website.)

Thursday I leave for SXSWi, alas w/out C, who I was hoping to bring this year. Maybe another time. I’m excited anyway. I’ll be renting a bike again! This time I’m going for work, so I’m going to sessions that (hopefully) have some practical applications for my job. Or at least that’s the theory. There will be liveblogging in any case.

Speaking of work, yes, I am still enjoying my job, although the last couple of weeks have been entirely crazy. Now I’m trying to get everything cleaned up to be gone for a week…and I wouldn’t be surprised if I caught a cold when I got back, either; I’ve been dodging that bullet too long this winter. I might write up one of my recent projects, as I learned some new things setting up a Drupal site. I’m discovering that I like Drupal…even if I curse its name periodically.

I have not been writing. ::sigh:: But I did have a weird revelation about an old project, something I want to follow up on eventually. House projects have been start & stop, although with more start than usual. The weather has been uncannily pleasant. I may manage to get in a veggie garden this year.

And that’s pretty much that. What’s up with you?

x-ua-bs

That’s what I’m calling my del.icio.us tag for the Microsoft meta-tag proposal. (Have no idea what the hell I’m talking about? Well, you probably just want to move right along to some poetry or something, but the links should be informative if you are curious.)

I’ve considered commenting on a number of posts on the topic, including some that aren’t linked from my del.icio.us. (You can generally find those posts by reading the things I did link.) Most notably, I thought about being one of the 9,872 (not really) comments on the Z’s posts.

But I can’t get my thoughts into anything that resembles a coherent statement. There’s WAY  too much emotion going on here.

Here meaning both out in the discussions, and here in my head. I had an hour-long IM with Dylan not too long ago, because I was freaking out with unnerving intensity. As in, comments on the Z’s posts bringing me almost to tears. And I could not explain why. (Other than lack of sleep because of a furnace going out a couple of nights earlier in freezing weather. That always makes my emotions extra-emotional.)

* * *

I’ve come back to try to start this paragraph between other things for a few hours now, and I can’t. So, garbled thoughts in no particular order:

  • Is IE8 really going to be SO very different from IE7? It seems like IE6 -> IE7 was the really painful break.
  • Why should I be forced to do EVEN MORE work because of IE?
  • “To hell with bad browsers” seriously, honestly, changed my life. I don’t care about the rationales, this feels like a step back, and in some cases, a betrayal.
  • Too many of the articles deal with CSS issues. Let’s not forget JavaScript & the DOM.
  • Intranets are teh scuk.

I am just going to keep doing my thing, making sites that are as standards-compliant as I can manage, isolating CSS hacks into conditional comments, feature-detecting in JavaScript. I’m going to try to back off on the intensity of my emotions about the whole thing, and just do what I love, and what I’m good at.

That’s all I have to say about that, at least right now, or on this blog.

nwsource & drupal, summary

This is a (hopefully more useful) summary/takeaway of my notes from last night.

The folks at NWSource evaluated more than 50 CMSs before narrowing their list down to 2: Drupal & Joomla. Some of their basic factors are familiar to me: cost, use existing programming expertise, “source-available”, customizable in both look and function.  Drupal won, although part of that seems to have been a historical fluke.

This was a very complicated project, which they did (are continuing to do) in pieces. It was the only way they could handle it, but they don’t recommend that approach others. Drupal use will be expanded from nwsource.com to all the other “NW” sites, migrating from several different CMSs/publishing methods.

They used professional services from Lullabot and Fuse IQ, which helped both with technical aspects and with internal acceptance of using open source. There’s a couple of programmers, and a few designers, including one “superstar”, working on the site. The programmers participate as part of the Drupal community, which is different from previous company culture, but they sounded pretty upbeat about the experience.

My biggest disappointment? That the superstar designer who did all the template work wasn’t there. I was really, really, really curious about how they set theirs up.

I think I might take another peek at Joomla for the particular project for which I’ve been considering Drupal, but I also think that Drupal remains a strong contender. (Plus I wouldn’t mind being able to be a helpful volunteer for OlyBlog.) However, unless I can accomplish super-human feats, I probably won’t be able to do a CMS conversion in the time scale I was originally considering. We’ll see.

A few particulars: 

Strengths so far: workflow, custom URLs, taxonomy, photo handling, overall extensibility.

Weaknesses: content input, templates, working with other web software, moving from development to production (particularly with the volume of user-generated content)

Some of the modules mentioned/recommended:  workflow, pathauto, image field, image cache, printer-friendly, RSS (?), services (audience suggestion). They are using upwards of 30 modules, but figure that’s pretty normal.

CCK is apparently incredibly valuable for specialized types of content, and they were very enthusiastic about it.

Questions about performance and security led to a long discussion of tuning measures, including some particular ways to tweak Apache. This was probably the most valuable thing I got out of the evening.

URL rewriting can be very difficult, but they managed to keep all their old URLs even after the Drupal migration!

Best quotes (may not be exact):

  • if you can’t get around in the system, any CMS will last you about 2 years.
  • everything that we’re relying on is a module
  • [follow the community to] mak[e] sure you’re not digging yourself into a hole that no one will be around to get you out of.
  •  drupal likes to own everything.
  • so happy to have made their [authors & editors] lives better
  • if anybody wants to rewrite a module in the drupal way, please do this one. [printer-friendly]
  • it’s not drupal, it’s us [their optimization methodology]

drupal users group @ seattle times

they are part of the joint agreement between times & PI. (weird stuff)

“shameless promotion section” – they have an opening for a drupal person. (putting this in for any seattle-area readers.)

first guy (gary?) is product manager. they were thinking about what nwsource IS – used to be a portal! partnered with (?). reformed into a city guide. grew organically – a bunch of things strung together, including in several different languages & database flavors. (pretty much my experiences, too.) it couldn’t be woven together properly with so many different things (articles across 3 different CMSs)

asked everybody (developers) what they’d used, opinions: no particular enthusiasm, so more research. cmswatch report. investigated 50-70; some are easy to disqualify (too expensive, didn’t want pure MS or Java approach) – then experience at various newspapers. “at the van down by the river” experience in boulder, if you needed changes, have to bring the guy a 6-pack. then 2 more (this in Boulder) – last experience was with vignette in a corp-wide initiative, spent millions, 2 years to implement, 2 years running, didn’t have enough money to hire somebody to go any further.

(“if you can’t get around in the system, any CMS will last you about 2 years.” yes!)

not necessarily open-source, but source-available. narrowed down to two: drupal & joomla. joomla “kicked itself out ofthe running early.” a big code change that nullified previous experience. plan b would’ve been using a (php?) framework.

they tested. workflow; core installation wasn’t going to do it. “everything that we’re relying on is a module” “sounded kinda sketchy, but drupal is just a really small core” “workflow module is better than any workflow [?] I’ve seen.”

content input. “someplace where drupal could use some improvement” using TinyMCE; so many instances can be a drag, their needs are fairly complex, lack of safari support. but it’s enough.

cck. “it’s hard to do much of anything without it.” model the content. “great but weak in how to move content types from one to another” (???)

something he skipped past really fast.

photo handling (image field, image cache, custom slideshow) they’re happy.

taxonomy. when you have so many different kinds of content it’s hard to categorize; move it all together after having different meanings in different CMSs.

external content input. they built their own for (???)

templates. “place where drupal could use the most work” – can do anything, but can’t be done by just any designer, they have somebody really advanced.

multiple sites: all the sites that start with “nw” – not doing it now but in the future.

URL control. “hackable, stable, all those good things” – “surprisingly difficult for cms’s to understand” even in the most expensive/sophisticated. not built into core, using “pathauto” (?)

file type output. simple. multiple databases. not as simple, but migrating has gone with relative ease. (from MT, among other things.) content auditing. good.

overall extensibility. this was the best thing about drupal. “what if we want to do this in the future?” and for anything was someone in the community who was at least thinking about the idea. (I really do wonder if the thing I need, whether anybody’s thought about it.)

benchmark. missed exactly what he said, but saw the “so-so” gesture.

brought in lullabot to answer early questions, to deal with corporate-style unease. “matt’s here to train us, matt wrote the book” also local company fu(z/s?)IQ.

first switched articles. create connections between things. (hm, tags.) everything has a page. (neighborhood, column, author, etc., etc.) (hm, able to cross-reference some of those things that go across categorical boundaries.)

change to different guy. (name?) “not a theming guy” & designer won’t be here. (dang.)

thing loved in drupal over joomla. joomla would’ve got them up earlier, and easier for designers at outset. but at the time the infrastructure was not as strong. drupal required more up front, but with more payoff in the end. (that’s been my impression too.)

used to a really sharp division between admin & content, and the drupal way makes him a little nervous. you can’t just take a default install and throw it out there; can’t close off from the community and updates. (esp. re security)

example of deciding on what templating engine to use. their internal discussion vs. trends in the drupal community. “making sure you’re not digging yourself into a hole that no one will be around to get you out of.”

import content. 4 or 5 taxonomies. lots of use of cck. confusion between what’s a taxonomy and what they’re using cck field for. (hm. seems like a possible pitfall.) still need to do on-the-fly imports from the actual newspaper sites, taking XML. decided it would be easier to export drupal to verity (? search engine) rather than other way around.

deployment process. becomes very difficult with so much in the database; can’t just copy over because of so much user-generated content.

had to do drupal in parallel with some coldfusion stuff. “drupal likes to own everything.” (no kidding.)

first guy talking about “the handbook” (lullabot book?) with some confidence.

integrating login functionality with other sites/services without multiple logins. (SSO, basically)

discovered because of drupal a bunch of crazy server configuration issues. (want to talk to EW about getting a long-term testing server.)

sketch on the board about development server process. Dev -> QA (stable server) -> load-balance production servers. same deal with databases. in the development environment, each developer has their own local install, incl. db. but can also share where that’s appropriate. OTOH, all the “editorial” (content) is done on the live server. which causes its own problems. they don’t have a magic bullet. has heard of something called “autopilot” which isn’t quite there yet. the problem space is really really really complicated. (weird stuff with cck.) working on a project where themer and developer are writing down all the changes as they go to the QA server, and then use the same list when going to production. something about cck UML. (!) (their current process reminds me of when I did a server migration last month. I still missed a bunch of little things, particularly edge cases.) “content copy” module; somebody in the audience got it to work. audience: “custom module as function” (? no idea what she’s talking about.) something with subversion? “views” has an export function. (okay, now I’m lost)

guy from tacoma said that lullabot workshop said they recommend something like that. (way confused, but then again, I’m not sure how much this applies. well, maybe with olyblog. but I don’t think they’d have anything like a development server!) has noticed a lot more chatter about this as drupal gets more “enterprise” attention.

question: xml import stuff? surprisingly simple. (fun with tiny print!) arrays of arrays of arrays, importing into cck(?). (looks tres familiar, maybe from my crazy experience with the college catalog.) use curl to grab some of the content. (I have something I’m doing that with, but not actually dealing with xml as xml, just regexp.)

(missed a bit) something about path redirect, and making all the old URLs permanent. a real pain to do, but worthwhile. (I converted a bunch of pages from underscore to hyphen and/or folders, and yeah, it’s a pain, but I would’ve felt awful if I hadn’t done the .htaccess work.)

can add an include of drupal’s bootstrap file in other php stuff. great for importing.

they have a “nwsource” module that includes all their custom stuff, that includes the xml import; imports to node, etc. “one-click way” “so happy to have made their lives better” (dude, I totally know that feeling.)

missed a bunch of stuff while looking at OlyBlog.

question: anything you needed to strip (esp. from core) for performance? something about sql calls to (? lower?). huge discussion in drupal community. weird thing: can have case-sensitive display username, but actual ids are case-insensitive. easy in MySQL, hard in Postgres. huge, huge problem. lower searches to user table were causing the most problems. (oh, hey, maybe that’s something that would speed up OlyBlog!) when Nanowrimo launched, could only have 200 people logged, w/out those calls could have 1200+ logged in. it’s a very difficult problem to solve. (ah, in further discussion, unless OlyBlog isn’t using MySQL, this doesn’t matter.)

good & bad: not a lot of pragmatism in drupal developer base; leads to holy wars, contentious issues never getting solved, OTOH part of what makes it so flexible.

they’ve submitted a fairly substantial patch to image(?) to include caption & credit.

other guy: big change via module they wrote called “comment tweaks”

they keep all their patches in a separate directory with notes about what issues the patches fix.

questioning: security hardening? a lot at the apache level, deny all to lost of stuff. blocked cron to everything but internal ip. didn’t block admin that way; very difficult to just block admin stuff. even using an admin theme, weird floating back and forth. “the usual” some joking about default ids. keeping up with updates from the site. a pain, but really important.

question from staff: show everybody what’s powered by what module. have abt 30 installed, but that’s not an unusual number. “yeah, blocking our own ads” with flashblocker, inspires a chuckle. cck content type called column, with all the usual types. “author”, “publish date” mean something different to them than to drupal. author of article doesn’t have a drupal identity, is just a content field.

missed a bunch of stuff. “jquery is easier”

neighborhoods, tags, custom tags are all taxonomy. (I think that’s what he said.) cap path? and pathauto, using ideas from SEO consultant. RSS sort-of for free, some weird stuff here. article info feed also includes feeds for author & column. (changes to page related to a specific topic?!)

related articles comes from a node reference.

“printer-friendly” module. “if anybody wants to rewrite a module in the drupal way, please do this one.”

forward module. digg link, but isn’t getting any use. mention from audience of “services” module.

drupal’s comment preview works weird in their experience, changing display name, etc. not sure it was necessary, but get comments “doesn’t look like a drupal site” (which I think is generally a compliment)

crazy stuff with the homepage, which isn’t drupal, except that it kinda is. also crazy stuff with old pages and symlinks and redirect rules. “one of the most painful and interesting parts of the whole process” also “voodoo”

(brain is seriously burning out.)

recommend you don’t launch redone site in pieces!

full multi-site setup, with shared users, taxonomy and roles, but only running one site now. can have a user with different roles on different sites, for example. single database for multisites, with prefixing stuff.

can’t have ampersands in urls in drupal, but they had some crazy stuff with old files. (ah, ampersands. my old nemesis. 😉 )

goofy story with old code and id issues (tid & id; you know, that sounds like some code I’ve found floating around).

web servers are abt 3 yrs old, “dual core something”, bumped up the memory, like mentioned before, had to standardize configuration, particularly to save memory. (hm.) dropped max_requests_per_child a lot. (interesting discussion of threads that’s just a hair over my head.) only turned caching on, not “agressive caching”.

apparently in drupal 6 there’s going to be a config setting to only load modules if the page needs them.

(more talk just over my head about dev vs. production servers)

more simple tuning: move drupal’s htaccess into apache conf so apache doesn’t have to look for htaccess ever. (actually, that’s a pretty good idea.)

“the application of death” (?!) to check whether coldfusion was still running, but in doing that would eat up a bunch of memory, and machines would shut down a couple times a day (? or every couple of days?) without anybody knowing. (!!!!!!) plus extra craziness with a cron rebooting coldfusion. (bad code always makes people so animated!) “omg that code is so evil you have to kill it”

(neat things to think about re what we would need to tune apache for.)

idea that they didn’t do – 2nd server to handle only static files, with something like lighthttpd instead of apache. they didn’t have time, and then didn’t have to, but think it’s a good idea. (plus he mentions the thing from shelley’s graphic books about browsers only handling 4 simultaneous requests. I have to admit again, that C was right in our old argument about that.)

because drupal handles 404s, and that took more work, they had to look at the most common to save processing.

took an approach of “it’s not drupal, it’s us” to start with when troubleshooting & memory use. no global answers to optimization.

missed some more stuff. sounds like maybe as much of a year evaluating & preparing.

question: issues with company and open-source? wasn’t as difficult as he imagined. “if they can see a peer doing it, then that helps” in their case, including the Onion. 🙂 issues with wanting to use a module that’s not done yet, and how to be able to help that happen. “working with” vs. “working for” still a challenge. “I don’t have time to write something as robust as the community can write.”

ack. 8:05, and still going. should I pack it up or stay?!

being a responsible member of the community: writing to drupal standard, returning code to the community, not over-hacking the core, etc. talking to somebody earlier today who didn’t understand why they’d be doing this (the meeting, sharing with people outside the co.)

diligence instilling trust. testing many systems, user stories, bringing in a professional company, etc.

okay, I gotta take off.

survey sez….

Am working my way through the A List Apart survey from last spring. Don’t have detailed thoughts, but one definite quibble with a conclusion that was drawn:

Overall, these findings seem to imply that titles representing a more current (or emerging) understanding of the field are more prevalent at for-profits and start-ups than at non-profits, government agencies, and schools. Put simply, based on this data, for-profit and start-up companies appear to be ahead of the curve in their understanding of the field.

I don’t think so. Non-profits, government agencies, and schools can often only afford one web person, or maybe 2, or maybe 1/2 a person. So that person DOES a lot of those other titles, but can only print one on their business card.

Quite possibly more on this later.

Update: skimming again in the morning, I noticed that government, non-profits, and edu have the highest percentage of “Other”, and in fact, for non-profits and schools, Other is actually the largest category.  Based on my personal experience, I’m going to guess that a lot of those non-profit Others do web work as part of their job, and their job title is something in IT or Marketing; a lot of the school Others are quite likely titled “Web Manager,” which seems to be a fairly popular title in higher ed at least, but wasn’t in the survey.

so your volunteer webmaster skipped town

I want to use this as a title for a section of a presentation I’m giving next month.  I also want to write it as an article, maybe for some sort of nonprofit orgs publication.

(I have filled in for — and been — that person.)

video camera?

I’m researching video cameras for work to be used for (a) usability testing and (b) internal marketing videos that will mostly be seen on desktop computers, but also occasionally projected onto a larger screen.

I’m entirely clueless about video cameras. Can you help? (All eight of you.)

Any recommendations or warnings are welcome!

(I’m also on a bit of a short turn-around; we’ve got usability testing scheduled starting after my vacation next month.)