Monthly Archives: August 2007

Time to Find a New Vet

Ever since we moved into our new house back in March, we’ve needed to find a new vet for the cats. Today we tried All Cats Hospital. It’s not close, but it’s not exactly far, either. Unfortunately, our little Toby gets car sick and inevitably throws up in his cage on the trip to the vet.

So we arrive at the vet’s office only to find out that it’s no longer the vet’s office. They have moved, and left a sign on the door with the new location. Of course, the address on the front page of the web site has not been updated.

All Cats Hospital
7040 Avenida Encinas Ste 109
Calsbad [sic], CA 92011

We called the (new) office to let them know we would be late and why. We were told we would have to reschedule.

Sure, I’ll reschedule. For an appointment with a different vet. I refuse to do business or trust someone who can’t even keep something as simple as a web site up to date. Not to mention spell the name of their city correctly.

I Hate E-mail

I like e-mail, in general. It’s a convenient, asynchronous, mostly-reliable method of communication. I can receive a message, mull over it for a while, formulate a semi-intelligent response, and it hasn’t really pulled me away from what I was doing like a phone call would.

Many would consider me a Luddite, preferring Mutt as my MUA. of choice. I can imagine the cries of people who use so-called modern mail readers: fancy text formatting! embedded images! annoying layouts! hidden viruses! phishing scams!

What happened to the power and effectiveness of the written word? I suppose many aren’t capable of scribing a well-formed sentence, so they compensate with fonts, colors, and cryptic abbreviations. Still others are attracted to the shininess of the formatting. They can send mail that looks like a web page! Even when all they wanted to do was ask a short question!

This is progress?

Normally, I’m content with killfiling any mail that arrives with a content type of text/html. Unfortunately, there are some people I simply must communicate with for whatever reason (usually it involves money in one way or another). One of the fastest ways to get on my bad side is to send me mail that requires extra effort for me to read. This rant is a result of one of these messages.

I drafted a message of moderate length to discuss some points I thought important. Normally, I would expect any responses inline or, at worst, top posted. No, the response I received was even worse than what I see from users of Eudora’s unintelligible reply style. The responses were added directly to the paragraphs I had written, but styled bold and red for “readability.”

Hello, this is my opinion on the matter. I see, but have you considered this other thing?

As can be expected, this style doesn’t lend itself well to reading in plain text. Of course, I don’t think this style lends itself to any kind of comprehension.

I responded to this message, demonstrating how difficult it was for me to read without jumping through hoops, and expressing my annoyance at being forced to jump through said hoops. I tried to be kind, blaming the bad-habit-inducing tools (Outlook) rather than the writer. So this fellow tries again.

With an attached PDF file.

Seriously? Was he so enthralled by the font styling that he felt compelled to force upon me an attached document in order to render correctly? Maybe e-mail really is dead. Apparently a well-written, plain text message is too much to ask for.

[tags]annoyances, e-mail, people[/tags]

Finally Working on SanDiego.pm.org

After inheriting the San Diego Perl Mongers web site, I’m finally starting to work on it. My first task was to remove the frames. While I was at it, I re-organized the information a bit to (hopefully) make it very easy for visitors to find what they’re looking for.

I have a few ideas for the future of the web site. Some of these include a wiki, a blog, a book review section, anything really. Not everything will be worth pursuing. We can have a wiki on a main Perl site; we can set up individual blogs on use Perl (or Blogger or LiveJournal or whatever). However, I think it would be nice to have a web site we can call our own.

I’m open to ideas, and I try to be receptive to comments and suggestions, either on our mailing list or sent directly to me.

[tags]perl mongers, sandiego.pm[/tags]

A Successful New Venue for SanDiego.pm

Tonight I hosted the San Diego Perl Mongers meeting at the auditorium in the building where I work. It was an experiment, and a successful one at that. We had an attendance of 16 people, which is quite good for our group. I suspect some of that was due to the free pizza provided by my director (thanks Keith!).

Since we had the auditorium available to us, one of our members was nice enough to say a few words about his business and how Perl has helped him to succeed. Much of the evening was devoted to chatting about whatever Perl-related thoughts came to mind. I floated the idea of hosting a booth at FOSSCON, but that’s still too far out to really talk seriously about it.

I’m extremely pleased with how well the venue worked out. We may not have the meeting there every month, but it’s nice to have it available so we can start adding technical meetings to our calendar.

[tags]perl, perl mongers, san diego, sandiego.pm[/tags]

YAPC::NA in Los Angeles, Anyone?

After attending OSCON last month, and having the usual fun with my geek friends from around the globe, I decided that I should start attending YAPC. As it so happens, the Los Angeles Perl Mongers are kicking around the idea of hosting YAPC::NA in their city. Since LA is nearby for me, I’d like to see that happen.

Looks like Chicago.pm has thrown their hat into the ring as well.

Update: I guess the LA.pm bid never gained any traction.

[tags]oscon, oscon07, yapc, perl mongers, los angeles[/tags]