Trapped in Canada, Mozilla Summit 08 
Friday, August 1, 2008, 02:25 PM - Technology, QA, Web, Open Source, JavaScript, Travel, News, Work, Events
At the moment, I am sitting in the lobby of the Westin Hotel & Spa in Whistler BC. I first must preface this entry by saying that I have had an amazing week, and a great time here. I thank Mozilla for putting on a really cool experience, and I do not regret coming up here one bit. Also in between each of the following paragraphs I was attending some really cool sessions, eating great food and hot tubbing.

Monday we took a flight from Seattle to Vancouver, minus the screaming kids it was relatively painless flight. Meg was planning to meet me up here, and crash in my room... somehow she left SF that morning and still beat me here. I have no idea how that happened. Anyways she was here waiting when I arrived, and I quickly had to check in and get to dinner. Huge buffet with all kinds of delish foods, a pretty impressive spread with a solid bar.

Tuesday was a good day.

Wednesday morning I wake up and turn on the news and find out that the only reasonable road between Vancouver and Whistler (highway 99) has been closed due to a rock slide. Not only was it a rock slide, IT WAS A FREAKING HUGE ROCK SLIDE: http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/s ... VNewsAt11. Apparently it wrecked the entire road, and the train tracks and to remove it they will have to BLAST the van size boulders with dynamite. I didn't panic until they told us that it would take a bare minimum of 5 days to start getting the road back open. As you can imagine, poor Mozilla crew organizing all this must be pretty stressed. Two funny things happened as a result of this incident, during the "Travel Update", Mike Schroepfer yell out "Have we determined if Microsoft is responsible for the rock slide?" which under the circumstances broke the intensity in the air. The second was that a bug was logged in the Mozilla Bugzilla which marked the messed up road with severity:blocker, and that we may want to look into convincing Google to "Come pick us up".

Thursday, we woke up to silence, no lights, TV's, dead laptops and the quick realization that the power was out for the whole hotel. As you can imagine, this is a slight problem for a "Tech Conference". I actually slept in a bit later in the nice quiet darkness and caught up in probably a month of lost sleep. In the lobby they had posted that the hotel transformer had been "hit by a laundry truck"... UHM, are you kidding me? The giant green metal box sitting in the woods next to the hotel was "hit by a laundry truck". This HAS to be Micorosoft's doing, I can't image any other way something insane like this could possibly happen. We got to spend half the day without computers or A/V doing presentations off of notepads and then discussing in the dark. This did make for an interesting dynamic, and in a lot of ways was still pretty productive albeit very strange. Fortunately right before our 5:45 presentation of GristMill, our firefox automation framework "Talk" the power came back on so that I could give my sweet demo. I really like doing talks at conferences because people immediately have ideas, and uses for whatever it is you are doing. It's very gratifying to know that people are going to go home and start playing with your stuff.

Thursday night dinner we jumped on the gondola and headed up to the top of the mountain for a pretty rockin shin dig. A beattles/elton john/other cover band was playing, it was snowing outside, and they put on a huge spread. John Lilly talked, Mitchell Baker talked and after many toasts and rounds of applause Shrep went up and clearly fighting his emotions, thanked everyone for the last few years.

A wise sage told me, that when you go to a conference/event it's always a good idea to make a list of the people you want to worm your way into a conversation with. So this time around, I made my list. During the day people have been crazy running around all over, but last night people were a bit more relaxed and in a social mood so I had the chance to introduce myself to some folks and have a couple conversations I had been waiting to have all week.

Today is friday, its 11:58 AM, my float plane was supposed to take off at 11:45 AM... clearly this is a problem. The word I was given was that the planes couldn't fly because of the high tide and that the planes weren't able to land safely at the moment. Well, the way I feel about this is that we basically have tides mapped out like clock work... someone booked a flight to leave at a time when they would be landing during an unsafe high tide? I don't think so. There is a massive cloud cover, but mostly I think it just makes sense that the trend of insanity would continue.

I am feeling a little bit burned out, pretty tired, sick of eating, drinking, and talking frankly. Please someone send your private jet and get me the hell out of this beautiful, tree covered resort town before I do something insane like deciding to go backcountry snowboarding on the glacier in the middle of the summer!

Please leave your base.
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Leaving Rearden Commerce, Announcing new BLOG 
Friday, June 27, 2008, 09:26 PM - General, Technology, Web, Open Source
Today was an interesting day, I resigned from Rearden Commerce.. and now I am announcing a new blog.

For the last few years t0asted has been my only blog, so anything I wanted to write about -- be it professional, silly, etc. all came here. However I have seen a growing need recently to separate the two different kinds of content.

T0asted.com is now going to return to being my personal blog, for fun blog and all around whatever comes to mind place to rant. If you want to read my career/professional ideas about business, technology and all things 'more' serious, feel free to go check out my new website at Adam Christian on Life, Business and Technology.

The full story on my career changes and new projects can be found in the latest post: http://adamchristian.com/archives/20.

I thank you all for keeping up on me, I hope this makes it easier to find what you think is interesting.
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UpNorth Web Design Inc. 
Saturday, June 21, 2008, 07:47 PM - Business Ideas


This is more of a side note, but since I did find our logo while I was looking through my backups today I figured I might as well do a short post.

UpNorth Web Design took many of the ideas from my previous small ventures about doing contract web design/development and made them a little bit more realistic. At this point I was working with a guy who was pretty decent with graphic design, and another guy who was a really solid perl/cgi programmer.

We did a hand full of contracts for sites in the Bellingham area, and contracted to a few companies that did web development and had more work than they could handle. This small business also faded over time, as the three of us went off in different directions, however again I learned a few things.

1. Resume's are really important to get any big contracts (people want to see examples, and recognize names).
2. Working from home with a small team is a very realistic way to do this kind of work. The lower the overhead the better.
3. Be persistent, build a portfolio.. and keep your domain alive and up to date - you never know when you are going to want to jump back into picking up more web design work to generate some spending money for your upcoming trip to Europe. :)

I have actually come up with another Business idea I worked on while I was still in high school, but it has a bit of a twist -- so stay tuned.
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I forgot how much fun Photoshop can be 
Saturday, June 21, 2008, 07:45 PM - General
Two years ago new years we attended a great party in Bellingham, WA. I had a great time -- can you tell?



Liquify is the coolest photoshop filter ever made.
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BoxBay Computers Inc. 
Friday, June 20, 2008, 02:48 AM - Business Ideas
As promised, my first entry in a line of startups that never happened is about 'BoxBay Computers Inc.'.

Conception
The original idea came from a trip to CompuCare to buy a bunch of computer parts for a machine I was building. I drug along a friend of mine and my parents probably have a better idea of when exactly this was -- but I am going to guess the summer of 1997 or 1998. The idea was that if a place like CompuCare can build relationships with vendors and get all these great deals on computer why can't we do that too?

Execution
I knew enough to know that there would be money involved, and the friend of mine happened to be pretty good with numbers, so we decided that he would handle all the money and I would handle all the computer stuff. Before I really knew what was going on, he had headed down to the city to apply for a business license. Another good friend of mine was knee deep in design as he cranked out an actually very attractive web site and the next thing we knew we had boxbay.com online and sorta ready for some attention. BoxBay of course coming from the fact that we lived right on Bellingham Bay, and that we would be selling computer 'boxes', sounds like reasonable logic to me! The garage at my house had tools, gardening equipment and a couple boats in it, but it was the summer so what would be a better time than to move everything out to make way for our new computer business. At this point we have a business license, a metal box with about 40 dollars in it, a nice to look at but otherwise useless web site, and absolutely nothing to sell. The next step was to mail off all kinds of things to hardware vendors so that we could get really kickin' deals and sweep all of our competition off their feet. After signing up for all the whole sale programs the mail started arriving.

After the initial excitement of the free posters and stickers we got, we quickly realized that the only way we would get any deals on hardware was if we ordered it in bulk. The more we ordered the cheaper things would get by the unit. This is very simple stuff that you would think a couple smart high school freshman would have known at this point, but nothing drives the point home like a real world example.

Collapse
We collected hardware orders from everyone we knew, including going far over our budget for our personal 'upgrades' to our machines and were still somewhere around 195 orders short to get the very lowest discount a business could get. Somewhere around this point we sort of became bored of the whole thing, and had 'hung out' for too many long summer days in a row and it was now time to head off to something new and interesting. I have no idea what that was, but I do remember running around the neighborhood playing tag with roman candles (So that puts us in the ball park of the 4th of July for this whole endeavor).

Conclusion
Never go sign up for a business license until you really plan to do something with it. The thing costs money, they continually contact you and if you don't take care of it you can wind up paying a bunch of fees. This will not be the last time in my career to make this exact mistake. We received mail for this dead computer company for many years after this, and as you can imagine my folks were not super happy to be the mailing address for anything 'BoxBay Computers' related that showed up at the house.

Additionally, a very important lesson I didn't forget from this whole experience was that businesses cost money, doing business costs money, and making money costs money. This point came up daily, in almost every class I took while I was on the road to my BA in Business -- but by that point I was fully prepped for that multiple choice question in Economics, Finance, Accounting, Entrepreneurship etc. wow, that makes me think school should actually make people try to start a business instead of... well that's a story for another day.

Note

Coronix.net (I was really into Unix, and thought I liked Cervesa..) was even shorter lived than BoxBay, however in reality did have a much higher chance of survival -- and it did for a few weeks :)

Coronix was going to be a Web Design company, that did custom web sites for every business in town. You are probably thinking 'Oh man that market is flooded', and it is, but it wasn't in 1999. The web site was covered with images I had designed in Bryce 2, there was text jammed in between the massive images of completely out of context items including trees, rocks, probably a modeled waterfall I found in a tutorial and many kitchen appliances I found in free Bryce object files. There was a contact form that called a CGI and sent my hotmail account a completely unformatted string of inputs from the user.

I was the 'web developer' in that I knew how to use Dreamweaver, had learned HTML in 7th and 8th grade and considered myself a master. I also knew how to do roll over buttons with JavaScript, but really had no idea how it was possible to do what I was doing. Eventually this web site evolved into me downloading the entire source for the Microsoft.com web site at the time (which was baby blue, with JavaScript drop down menus to all their products) and CSS to make the hyperlinks change color. The bar across the top also rounded in the right corner -- which I had to have.

Coronix died a peaceful death, as the domain expired the content stayed alive on a friends 9.99 a year hosting account until he forget to pay the bill. However during this period of time I did wind up doing about 5 web sites for people I knew in the area, and sparked my interest in CGI... which slowly evolved into PERL, then PHP and finally Python (also a story for another day). I would forever enjoy making money off of web sites, and making web sites for absolutely no money, reason or purpose other than my creative zing.

We will jump a few years into the future next time, and check out how facebook really did steal my idea.. no seriously they really did -- I have a newspaper article written by the WSU news paper about this web site about 2 months before wsufacebook.com showed up! Okay okay, all that goes in the next entry, stay tuned.



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