Modest Musings 


Archive for October, 2007

This Little Piggy Was Posted to Flickr.

Tuesday, October 23rd, 2007
Lilu and Nila
Nila (left) and Lilu (right) gettin’ cuddly.

Knowing that I am a bit of a softy, my wife, my sister-in-law, and their mother managed to gang up on me and convince me that we needed two cuddly baby guinea pigs in our home. I have to admit they grow on you quickly. Anyway, we have had them two weeks and were using an old cage that was a bit on the small side. So, tonight Aisha took it upon herself to build a monster of a cage for our new babies.

For anyone interested in seeing the outcome, or just viewing some shots of their colossal cuteness, check out my recent uploads to Flickr.

Kudos to you Mr. Craigslist Poster Person

Thursday, October 18th, 2007

It is an odd phenomenon. More or less every business needs the services we provide, to some degree. I think that is why I became interested in web development. We almost take the web for granted. Until you really sit down and think about it, you miss how many areas of our lives it reaches.

Never-the-less, looking for a new job can be exceptionally frustrating, as I assume everyone is aware. It seems especially hard to find the “right fit” in a field as saturated as web and graphic design. Rene found the following on Craigslist recently and it so eloquently resembles all of my job hunting frustrations:

Wanted: Expert Designer to work for Peanuts

Date: 2007-09-22, 1:53PM EDT

You should have expert working knowledge of all design software, like to work long hours, work well under pressure… be an animator, web designer, project manager, technical illustrator, flash guru, cartoonist, police sketch artist, marketing genius … and have a master’s degree from a top design school.

Pay is $6.25 an hour. This is just a contract job with the possibility of full time employment if you do good work. But really we just want to use you to get some design done cheap, until we hire the next sucker.

No Phone Calls!!! Spend an hour drafting a professional cover letter and email it, so we can delete it from our inbox without the courtesy of a response.

Serious inquiries only.

  • Location: Craigslist
  • Compensation: 6.25/hr. plus a ham sandwich for free lunch Wednesdays!
  • Principals only. Recruiters, please don’t contact this job poster.
  • Please, no phone calls about this job!
  • Please do not contact job poster about other services, products or commercial interests.

Rene and I had a good laugh when we read this posting. It said exactly what we have both been feeling in our recent job search. To be honest, it felt good to know we were not alone in this. I like to believe that I am a well rounded and capable web and graphic designer, but I am also well aware that I am not Superman. I know my strengths as well as my opportunities and this helps me improve in what I do.

Unfortunately, the bar seems to be set quite high and companies are expecting to fill every position with a Superman. Now, maybe it’s just me but in general this is not realistic. Most people are either right brained (i.e. strong with math and programming) or left brained (i.e. strong with artistic visual design). Many are quite capable with both but, in my experience, very few are experts when it comes to both sides because the human brain rarely works that way.

“Kudos to you Mr. Craigslist Poster Person.” Thanks for the laugh and here’s to squeezing my big feet into Superman’s boots. Wish me luck!

Web Couture

Thursday, October 4th, 2007

Sometimes the web development industry feels very much as I expect the fashion industry feels. Of course that would be assuming I ever paid any attention to fashion. Really, you should see how I dress. Think Magnum PI sans mustache and slightly less thigh. Regardless of my personal tastes in fashion I am aware that, for the general public, every season brings with it a new fad of some kind.

Web design sees the same trends, whether we are talking about the “it� color scheme you see so much you think we went from 216 web safe colors to 2. Perhaps you see it in the hot new programming language that gives us so many new abilities that everyone is using them. Whether or not they should is debatable. Maybe, we see it in the way so many layouts start to look like they were sliced from a cookie cutter.

The web not only mimics fashion in its fads, but also in the way we are able to watch styles evolve. We see the fashion world evolve its styles so drastically, that eventually everything comes full circle to where it began. If memory serves me, bell bottom jeans made a brief come back in the ‘90’s.

Example: I recall making my initial leap from what I like to call “high school� web activities (you know, scouring the ol’ triple w for low res pictures of Elle MacPherson for my desktop wallpaper) to a genuine attempt to bring reall content, design, and user appeal to the online world. Back then, the average screen resolution we were designing for was 640 x 480. Gradually, we evolved to 800 x 600 and finally to 1024 x 768, which seems to be fairly standard these days. Now, with the ever expanding world of hand held devices becoming increasingly web capable, we once more must consider such miniscule dimensions in our design processes.

Don’t get me wrong. I love all of these gadgets. I was playing around on an ipod touch the other day to view the Fisticuff Design site, (it looked gorgeous, by the way), and I can admit that I cannot wait to have one. I suppose I just find these things amusing in that I just begin to get the hang of something and someone has to go and put everything in an uproar. I guess it helps to keep you on your toes.