random thoughts and bleary eyes RSS 2.0
 Monday, March 24, 2008
Now that I am riding the bus for 40 minutes each way to work and back, I have some spare time to watch some movies on my Zen player. It's a tiny screen but it has really nice looking video. The problem is that I haven't been able to figure out how to transcode DVD movies for it until now. So I thought I'd write about it so I don't forget.
 
Software: MPEG4 Direct Maker Advanced DVD Converter
Settings
WMV output, WM Audio 9.2 44.1KHz, 96KBPS
500KBPS
3-second key frame interval
95% video quality
Resized 320x204, 24fps
 
This seems to work well. The only thing i'd change per movie is the vertical size. The 204 is the right aspect ration for the wide screen 2.33:1 format, and I'd use 228 for the 1.85:1 format movies. If it's a 4:3 standard movie, I'd use the full 240.
 
My converter machine is running Vista ultimate, and it runs the sofware just fine at 3/4 speed (decrypted movie on the hard disk of course). It's a three year old machine (athlon 64 2.2 GHz, 2GB) but it holds up at that rate. I transcode after hours, when there's nothing else happening on the machine.
 
that should do the trick... enjoy the movies on the go...
Monday, March 24, 2008 3:43:28 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] - Trackback

 Friday, March 14, 2008
BDD, ATDD, UTDD, DSL's ... when will it all end... The drive toward business-driven testing has never been stronger. Developers are seemingly now finding a higher and higher bar when it comes to customers' expectations of quality and features. Our tools are getting better, and we can deliver more software, faster. But, our methodologies haven't necessarily changed enough to satisfy today's customer expectations.
Friday, March 14, 2008 3:41:54 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] - Trackback
Agile | TDD
 Monday, February 11, 2008
so, anyone who knows me for a while is sure to know my favorite phrase around the office is
 
You got a test for that?
 
so... since I am The Test-Driven Developer (think super - avec cape),
 
I now have my own new website: TestDrivenDeveloper.com
 
(ahem. YES, another website.)
Monday, February 11, 2008 4:40:48 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] - Trackback

 Thursday, February 07, 2008
View John Boal's profile on LinkedIn
Thursday, February 07, 2008 4:38:18 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] - Trackback

 Wednesday, February 06, 2008
Reduction in Force
Layoffs
Firings
Unanticipated Workforce Contraction
House Cleaning
Company Response to Market Forces
Business Re-Focus or Re-prioritization
Corporate Re-alignment
Shift in Direction
Trimming the Fat
< enter euphemism of your choice here. >
 
What it boils down to is people out of work. Good people. Contributors. People with families. Folks who add real value to an organization. This is not inspired by economic downturn, nor by recession, nor by stock markets, nor by lending crisis. This is just short sighted, stupid management trying to correct their mistakes at others' expenses.
 
But I digress.
 
What am I talking about? well, at my company yesterday, and today, we had some people who had to pack their personal belongings and were shown the door. Their services apparently are no longer required. It may have been the right thing to do. Maybe not. Whatever. Anytime I see this maneuver in business, I consider it a complete failure of management at the highest level. And a certain vote of no-confidence. I am not complaining about this from a worker-bee viewpoint. I am taking more of a holistic view - we hired those people for a reason. We spent time and money finding them, interviewing them, hiring them and training them. This is a lose-lose situation of the highest order. Bad manager. No Pizza.
 
Again, I digress.
 
It also seems that it is much harder on the people left behind than the people who were escorted out the door. The impact to productivity and morale is far more of a real cost I think than it would have been to keep the people on and put them to productive work, even if it were non-billable work. More work is coming. Or maybe it really isn't? Thats the greater worry.
 
Trend of digression.
 
Anyway... we lost some people. It ain't office space. C'est la vie. Plus ca change, plus c'est la meme chose. Merde. Pardon my french.
Wednesday, February 06, 2008 4:30:42 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] - Trackback

 Thursday, January 17, 2008
2 chicken breasts, sliced into 1/2" thick slices
1 tbsp olive oil
1/4 cup water or sake (rice wine)
 
Place chicken in frying pan with olive oil, cook on highest heat until it starts crackling and popping, stirring occasionally.
Make sure the chicken is being cooked evenly, but browning at the same time. Let it stick a blt to the pan on each side.
Once it seems really hot, add 1/8 cup water and let it boil, stirring around the chicken in the dirty brown water. Stir frequently
and let the water boil off. When the water is gone, don't stir and let it stick for a minute or two and brown really well on one side.
Then add the remaining water and stir around again, making sure to cook evenly. Pay attention and don't burn it...
 
Mmmm Dirty Chicken!
 
Add several habanero peppers to taste. :-o
 
-J

Thursday, January 17, 2008 3:37:47 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] - Trackback
Food
 Monday, January 14, 2008
Have you ever wanted to test a table in the database for the correct structure? Ever had someone make a column nullable that shouldn't have been? ever have someone make a column VARCHAR instead of NVARCHAR? INT instead of BIGINT? SMALLDATETIME instead of DATETIME? This is an easy way for bugs to creep in - when the code is written for one version of the database and then someone makes a change... So if you haven't been testing your tables (SQL should be TDD'd too), perhaps you should... Here is a handy stored procedure you could use that describes a table in an easy-to-test way.
Monday, January 14, 2008 3:33:47 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0] - Trackback
Agile | TDD
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John E. Boal
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