My Christmas Gift of Rails

Posted by Doug Tue, 03 Jan 2006 16:56:01 GMT

I am so excited about this New Year! I was diligent about learning Ruby on Rails in 2005 and getting some practical experience. In 2006 I’m ditching my current gig as a Unix Systems programmer and taking a new job as a full-time Ruby on Rails Web developer!

As of this week I’ve gotten two production sites running with Ruby on Rails. One is a significant effort of more than 3000 lines of code. It took me most of the year working part-time hash out all the requirements and deliver the finished product. I know there’s more to come on this site, but I’m glad to finally have something in production.

The other one I cheated on. A client wanted a new feature added to an old site. I was loath to go back into that code because it was so messy. So, I re-wrote the whole site in RoR and added her new feature. Time “lost”? About 25 hours and 350 Lines of Code. That is exactly what Ruby on Rails is all about!

Now for my big news. Let’s talk about my ideal working conditions:

  • Company that uses agile methodologies.
  • Company that sanctions and uses Ruby on Rails.
  • Mostly telecommute that doesn’t require me to relocate my family.
  • I get to use a Mac with no questions asked.
  • I get to work on a project that closely aligns with my hobbies and passions.

Check, check, check, check, and check. I’m not going to divulge all the details right now. The company hiring me hasn’t really made a public announcement about their use of Ruby on Rails. What I can say is I’ve always wanted a job like this but felt like it was beyond my reach. When you’re young and just out of college it’s much easier to make sacrifices to take the “dream job”. The further out of college you get, the more responsibility you have and the harder to just Do It.

This job allows me to follow the dream without sacrificing my family. I truly feel this is a gift from God. I realize many of my readers don’t believe in God and just got a sour taste by my saying that. However, I feel strongly that I need to give Him public credit for this job.

I have tried for years to find a job like this without success. Honestly, it’s been quite discouraging. Since early Fall I have been actively pursuing some way to work with Ruby on Rails full time without success. In fact, my best prospect was a job about 30 miles away doing Perl application development. Two years ago I would have loved full-time Perl. Now I was feeling “resigned” to taking it. Then out of the blue came this position. Two weeks later and I have an offer.

I’m not going to try and explain how or why God orchestrated this. I do want to give Him thanks though. All good things come from God. I’m very excited about this job. I know I can do a good job. One of my top goals for 2006 is to “go above and beyond” to demonstrate why I’m exactly the guy they wanted.

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Montgomery Community Church Christmas Show

Posted by Doug Mon, 12 Dec 2005 19:14:01 GMT

Singing PraisesThis weekend I was the photographer for Montgomery Community Church’s Christmas Show. Make no mistake, I’m not a professional photographer. This was a hard environment to shoot. Overall I’m mostly pleased with the results. I saved about 50 images, probably 20 or so I’m actually proud of. You can browse through them in my gallery of MCC Xmas Images

Shane is a friend of mine and the worship minister at MCC. He invited my family to the show last year. My camera was about a month old at the time, and I couldn’t help but shoot the show. I got a few good images that he liked. His official church photographer moved away, so left without a better alternative, he asked me to shoot this year’s show. I think I did better than last year. I certainly kept more images. Of course, I was shooting a lot more images too. Last year, I was kinda sneaking around and taking a shot here and there. This year I was pretty much continually shooting.Dancing for Joy

In fact, I really didn’t get to enjoy the show as much. Knowing they do three or four shows, I should have attended one just to watch and enjoy. Then I’d be more in the loop to know what to shoot and be better prepared. Oh, well… maybe next year.

BTW, these were all shot with my Canon Digital Rebel and either my Canon 50mm/f1.8 or my Sigma 70mm – 200mm/f2.8. After a few sample shots, I set my ISO to 800 and left it there. I didn’t want mucking with the ISO to be something I had to worry about while shooting. The stage lighting was hard to deal with. Plus the choir was wearing white shirts with a spotlight on them. They also made heavy use of blue lighting filters that tended to blow that channel. My Rebel was having a hard time keeping up with both auto-focus and auto-exposure. No doubt a Canon 20D would have done better.

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Life's most used book

Posted by Doug Tue, 20 Sep 2005 17:16:00 GMT

I saw this billboard for SBC Yellow Pages:

Life’s most used book™

I don’t know if there’s statistical validation for this claim or not. Personally, I hope it’s not true for me. I’d hate to think the book I use most is primarily for shopping. When it’s all said and done, I hope the Bible is the book I use most.

I believe the Bible is true and an accurate representation of God and how He wants us to Live.

Read more...

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