Yup, I’m good at what I do

May 7, 2010 6:19 pm

I just want to make sure everyone knows that I’m good at what I do. I gave a presentation to our department about the new application our team has been working on. Before the presentation the department head presented me and my two coworkers with Silver Awards for the previous application we put together. A nice little recognition which comes with a monetary award of $350.

I then presented our new application designed for the use of many of the people in our department. An application which the software team has created 3 times previously over the last many years and which the department never really liked. This iteration was enthusiastically received by even the toughest critics in the group who, rather than detail why the application wasn’t going to work for them, said they liked it and requested some very small features which I then implemented by the end of the day. The department head later let us know that he was very pleased with the presentation and excited for us to get to the next application.

I feel pretty good. I researched and selected the Grails framework which we’re now using to make our small team of 3 (now 4 and soon to be 5) incredibly more productive. I designed and wrote the previous application and drove many of the choices which resulted in the positive reaction to the new application.

I’m really enjoying my job. My work is almost entirely autonomous. So I get to decide how I’m going to do things, solve interesting problems, recommend changes to critical design issues and create good, solid code. My boss is great and my coworkers are excellent as well.

Because of the nature of the job, I didn’t have a whole lot of information when I decided to accept the offer back in April 2009. I’m really glad I took the job at LLNL over the other offer I had. I don’t think I’d be nearly this autonomous or happy at the other company.

The only frustrating part that I deal with regularly (aside from personal email not being available at work, though they are running a pilot program to remove that block) is that I can’t write interesting blog posts about what I’m doing. (The other offer I had would have had the same restriction.) But the work is interesting and the impact is larger than I usually get to know. It’s not unusual to have my boss say something like “Someone was using that new application and they really liked it, but we can’t talk about what they were doing in this building.” And since I pretty much never go to the buildings where we could talk about it I end up not knowing. But applications that I wrote are being used on an international scale to help keep people safe. And that’s pretty cool.

A Book About Rabbits

April 30, 2010 7:06 pm

Jess and I both happen to have copies of Watership Down which neither of us had read yet. So we decided to read it at the same time. Turns out, it’s a book about rabbits. And as the author states in the Introduction (which Jess’ book has and mine does not) “I want to emphasize that Watership Down was never intended to be some sort of allegory or parable. It is simply the story about rabbits made up and told in the car.”

Regardless, I enjoyed it. I think it’s a fun story. It also leads to some interesting thoughts on the practice of trading freedom for security (in the case of the Efrafans) and trading one type of security for another (in the case of Cowslip’s warren).

Anyway, I’d recommend it. It was a quick read. My only complaint is when the author writes speech in a manner to convey the speaker’s accent. It mainly becomes hard to read and understand. If that’s the point, great, but if I’m supposed to be able to figure out what the character’s are saying, please just write it in normal English and say the character has an accent.

:)

April 18, 2010 7:57 pm

It’s absolutely gorgeous outside today, and some families from the ward got together at a park after church for the afternoon. It was nice to sit around and talk in the nice weather. Kyle tried to fly our kite, but it just wasn’t windy enough. We proclaimed it a lazy turtle. Nothing really exciting happened, but it was a very pleasant way to spend a Sunday afternoon/early evening.

Something to look forward to in July!

April 17, 2010 7:05 pm

I know…we’re lame and haven’t blogged in a while. This is all I’ve got for you:

It has recently been brought to my attention (no thanks to CNN’s news feed!) that I’m going to have to get a new birth certificate. Apparently, if you need to commit identity fraud, you just buy a Puerto Rican birth certificate floating around the black market, for there are tons. To solve this problem, all the current ones are being nullified as of July 1. New ones (supposedly with anti-fraud measures built in) can be requested starting then.

How lame is that? I’m sure it’ll be a breeze. I’m sure the Puerto Rican bureaucracy is totally capable of re-issuing birth certificates for everybody in a timely and non-irritating fashion. Thanks again, Parents, for having me in that wonderful territory. (Why did you go there, anyway? Probably just for stuff like this. You got to have all the fun of living in sunny paradise (which I don’t even remember), and I get the paperwork mess. Rude.) This will make the second time my birth certificate has caused me grief. SO FAR.

I only heard about this because Kyle’s mom read about it in her newspaper. Neither Kyle nor I saw it in our feeds of national news. So I could easily not have found out that my birth certificate was invalid until I applied for a passport or something. Which would have been even more awesome. They probably would have looked at me and said it was for sure one of the fakes still hanging around.