Archive for the tag 'Yahoo'

That “last day of work” feeling, and a great “family day”

Wow, I haven’t felt that “last day of work” feeling over 3-1/2 years. Weird.

Thursday was officially my last day at Yahoo!. There’s a really strange feeling of no longer being part of something that been such a huge part of my life. I vaguely remember feeling this way when leaving other jobs, too. You pack up your stuff from the office, and within hours, things that were constant companions on your desk, now seem like relics from some distant age gone by. People start emailing you with contact details, etc., you say goodbyes, you promise to go out to lunch soon, completely in good faith, but hours later, it rings hollow. I don’t know if this is universal, or just me, but my mind likes “clean breaks” at some deep level. Intellectually and logically, I want to stay in touch and hang out with so many of the great people I worked with… people I geniunely consider friends, and not just “co-workers”. Past experience says it’ll be difficult, and there’s that emotional breeze that says ‘prepare for the new’–clean slate time. As with everything in life, the truth and the path I’ll follow is very likely somewhere in between, but it is a strong, strange emotion leaving someplace you’ve been for so long, and as someone who feels “not very in touch with” their emotions, this is unusual. Slightly unsettling, but simultaneously interesting; something to examine and try to taste, almost to savor intellectually.

Friday, the feeling was gone. I was focused on family, anyhow. We woke up early, and took Alex to ‘Day Out with Thomas’, which is a pretty neat touring event which stops at Roaring Camp and Big Trees Railroad in Felton, about 45 minutes away. A locomotive decorated like Thomas pushes then pulls you in a line of cars through the redwood forest, and then there’s activities, such as face painting (check!), temporary tattoos (check!), bounce houses (nope–too scary), coloring/painting (check!), pictures with Sir Topham Hatt the benevolent railroad magnate (check!), and of course, retail Thomas products (check! he finally got that Murdoch train he’s been going on about.) We wanted to hit this on Friday, instead of the weekend when I was usually, well, off of work, as last year it was fun, but swamped on a Saturday. We got tickets on the first train of the morning, made an early day of it, and it was great. We managed to keep him in a great mood all the way until we drove back, and then he went down for a nap with no complaints.

In the afternoon, we planned for the upcoming household move 20 miles north, to Millbrae, and realized we were in dire need of packing boxes. I called a couple places and then Val said she thought Ikea had moving boxes. That seemed weird, but sure enough, I found them on their site, and the East Palo Alto store had them in stock. When Alex woke up, we took a trip to the post office (mail security deposit on new place) and then to Ikea. Now, I knew there was a reason to try and leave him at home for this errand–but it didn’t become crystal clear until we had actually brought 40 unfolded boxes to the car. Hmm. About 15-20 went into the trunk, but the rest were going to have to go in the back seat–in front of his carseat. And Alex is really growing out, lengthwise, of that carseat. So… let’s just say, it was cramped. I heard a lot of “DADDY! I CAN’T SEE ANYTHING!” on the (thankfully short) ride back home!

At home, we decided to go swimming, as it was pretty hot out. There were some teenagers we managed to scare out of the pool pretty quickly (I think they were worried our middle-age uncool-ness might rub off our something), and it’s always great for Val to get in the water and take some weight off her joints, back, etc. with the Giant Belly O Pregnancy. That was fun, and Alex didn’t freak out too much when I dunked him, which I feel obligated to do at least once each time we go. We spent well over an hour floating around, diving for weights, splashing, and relaxing. By the time we geared up to go, Alex was getting pretty cranky, so we hightailed it home and made some tasty, last-minute dinner: risotto with asparagus (from a frozen package), spice-rubbed organic chicken breast on the grill, and sauteed fava beans. It was so great to NOT think about work, and I wasn’t even stressed about the move, even though it’s got a lot of stressful aspects. I wasn’t worried about the upcoming trip with Alex, even though that’s not fully taken care of, either. It was just nice to relax. With that meal, and less stress, I almost felt like we were back in Barcelona. It was a fantastic full day, and I couldn’t have asked for anything more satisfying for the day after leaving my job!

Launched another branded site… Star Wars: The Force Unleashed


So there’s this new Star Wars videogame coming out in uhm, next Spring, but our biz-dev guys managed to cut some deal with LucasArts earlier this week, so of course, we had to get a branded site out ASAP. Here it is, just launched: Star Wars: The Force Unleashed, with an exclusive trailer and awesome concept artwork gallery to boot! The team did an awesome job turning this around from concept to deployment in less than 4 days, of course, leveraging tons of the stuff from the other sites for GTA, Harry Potter, and Pirates of the Caribbean. star_wars_the_force_unleashed.jpgAn awesome effort and it looks great. I especially recommend the two videos about the “Euphoria” and “Digital Molecular Matter” physics engine stuff… looks really awesome. Even if the game turns out to be too hard to play, I wouldn’t mind just whipping stormtroopers who are trying to cling on for dear life, at a bunch of wooden structures I’ve built :) (go watch the videos!)

Anyhow, my appreciation and congratulations to the team, great job!

Nifty photos badge for Yahoo! Harry Potter brandsite

For the 2nd brandsite, Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, (you will recall that Pirates of Caribbean was the first), we had a nifty little badge made up with photos in a slideshow… see whatcha think!

We launched pirates.yahoo.com!




launch screengrab

Originally uploaded by Ben Margolin.

Oh, it’s been a bit of a death march, having taken over the Brand Universe project from a different team 6 weeks ago, throwing out all of their code, starting over with a brand new team, and creating this site from scratch, while trying to keep in mind this has to be modular enough to launch 99 more in 2007, and eventually with no engineering assistance for a new instance. Oh, and of course the new requirements from the SVP 10 days before launch! But, we launched it last night, the team kicked ass, and it looks pretty nice. There’s a few bugs, and we’re doing another push shortly, but it’s great stuff. Check out the Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End site on Yahoo!

Morning fog at Yahoo parking lot

This was pretty eerie–don’t see this much. Also typically get in later :)

Pimp out your Yahoo Avatar with Oscars stuff

pimped_out_avatar.png
There’s lots of new goodies you can add to your ‘tar, including a bunch of Oscars outfits and backgrounds… here I’m sporting the tux pants and “red carpet” paparazzi background. Nice, eh?

The agony of Firefox beta upgrades

Pretty much no extensions have been updatedPretty much no extensions have been updated for the Firefox 1.5 beta 1 release yet. That sux. I feel naked without my favorite extensions! Oh web developer toolbar, where art thou?! Greasmonkey! Sniff, sniff!

I am impressed that the Yahoo toolbar has been updated though! Way to go, guys!

Y! Engineering is good, but…

Tony Tam posted about Loving Y!. Tony works on the News team, and has been impressed with Yahoo since 1997. I was even more impressed with Y! after interviewing here, because I realized just how few engineers were behind some of the properties, like News. I was amazed. Now that I’ve been at Y for just over a year, I still think it’s a great place to work, but I definitely realize it’s not all type-A strivers cranking useful apps day in, day out.

I’m not a complete subscriber to the “controlled chaos” of Yahoo lore, but I wouldn’t mind if everyone did worry a little more about their reputation as an engineer (notice I didn’t say “coder” or “hacker”), as Tony mentions happened in the old days. There’s the whole gamut from pretty poor, to amazing here, which is doubtless going to be the case when there’s just SO MANY technical folks. I just find myself wishing everyone felt the pain of struggling a little more. I have a young kid, and so true, I don’t want to work 80 hours/week, but I want to work a smart, effective week. I want to really feel I’m producing at least 2X my salary in incremental revenue to Yahoo from when I started. I want to know everyone else shares that desire, too. Funnily enough, it might be just a per-individual trait. Some folks who have been here a long time and certainly don’t need the money, still burn with a passion to make things great, and achieve beyond what is expected. Others think it’s just a job and act accordingly.

I’m going to make it part of my personal challenge to inspire my (new) team to raise the bar… my biggest concern right now though is that there isn’t enough of my team to do anything but deal with the fires burning…

Double-fisted blogging

I’m trying to figure out where to post entries when I do happen to do so, which is a pretty rare event anyhow. Here, or at 360°? WordPress pretty much kicks 360’s ass at the moment when it comes to editing tools, so I suppose I’ll keep posting the majority here. But, 360 is all Yahoorific, and more at my fingertips while working. I guess I shouldn’t blog from work much anyhow :-)

Well, in the meantime, just a few interesting links… Mac serial number decoder–find out when your Mac was made.
As a guy at work would say, this is totally ringing the bell on the nerdometer. Some guy made Mac OS X Engineer Trading Cards. Yeah… but I have to admit his Ajax-style commenting system rocks. Pretty sweet effect, if a tad useless. Well, I like the submit-without-refresh bit, but the live preview bit is not too useful IMO.
One more: dissecting WordPress themes, seems handy.