November 3, 2009

Welcome to the WildWest: When Women Take on Tech Because They Want To

Filed under: fun, geeks, life, san francisco, side project, videos, women 2.0 — Lindsay @ 10:03 am

A day does not go by when I don’t hear about an event from the numerous “we support women in technology” groups:  Girls in Tech, Women 2.0, Bay Area Girl Geek Dinner and Shes Geeky.  All of these groups have merit, and all have a target audience, from software developers to marketing analysts.  I’ve certainly benefited from these organizations, participating in Women 2.0’s Business Plan Competition back in 2008, attending a plethora of Girls in Tech events about journalism, business development, and so forth, and going to the Shes Geeky conference at the beginning of this year down in the Peninsula.  I’ve been lucky to meet some amazing women which include intense athletes, creative and insightful product managers, and even friends that help me out with reservations to Chez Panisse!

A portion of the dialogue that is pervasive in these types of groups is dedicated to asking the question to ad nauseum “Why are there not enough women in technology?”  The women that are in tech are quick to point out that most conferences are dominated by men, mostly white, and that few of these conferences feature any women speakers at all.  Day in, and day out, the conversation and complaints flood my twitter stream and my RSS feed to so much annoyance that I’m almost tempted to start spending my free time speaking at conferences (which I’ve done), or organizing a survey to better understand why women in tech do not attend conferences or try to speak at them on their own volition.   Just to make the noise go away.  It’s not that I don’t believe there are valid concerns, it’s that I find the conversation is tired, and somewhat generational.

In the pop culture of the online world, it seems that women in technology fall into three roles which I can relate to Save by the Bell characters.  The Kelly Kapowskis use their sex appeal to attract the tech geek guy to pay attention to them without knowing a lick of what they’re talking about.  The Lisa Turtles are the peppy chicks that “overcompensate by pushing their ‘geekery’ on everyone” (quote), displaying a mastery of social media but not of the separation of the application and presentation layers (you dig?).  And, the Jesse Spanos are quite qualified women of tech, who also sound like feminists ranting everyday that women are somehow being purposefully left out of the tech equation.

I don’t buy into it.  And neither does my friend Amy Ziari.

Last August Amy approached me at a Girls in Tech event (we thank you for that GIT!), tired as well of the same old conversation, with an idea to create a video series featuring women in technology who talk about what they are interested in.  Not to prove to anyone that we’re competent, or that we’re “geeky just like you!”, but to let our audience draw their own conclusions.  We didn’t want to be Kelly, Lisa or Jesse, we wanted to be ourselves, comfortable with our role in the industry, with our peers (male, female, black, white, hispanic or asian), and what we find interesting.

In mid September we teamed up with Camille Ricketts of Venture Beat to put together the pilot episode of the WildWest show.  We hoped to put together more episodes, but time passed, and now I’m leaving soon to take off on an excellent adventure (I’ve alluded to this trip, but have yet to post details).  So enjoy this first episode, where we interview Joey Mucha from Sprout and talk about some of our biggest tech snafus!  Also, visit the website – www.wildwestshow.tv - to learn more.

Credits to Amy for doing all the video editing!

October 20, 2009

City of Dream’s SF1900: The Non-Tech Event of the Year

Filed under: fun, geeks, life, san francisco, volunteer — Lindsay @ 2:17 pm

Andrea and Christina at SF1900 2008

I imagine that most of the people that come across my blog are more likely to be part of the San Francisco tech scene than they are part of the, well, non-tech scene.  If you’re following the current debate over whether you should love San Francisco or leave San Francisco, than you may have come across Mat Honan’s blog post “Are You Going to San Francisco”.  In his article, he makes a point to tell everyone to Make Real Friends:

“This only applies to people working in the Internet and technology sectors, but you may be amazed to discover that most people in the city work in fields that have nothing to do with the Internet. It’s fantastic to have friends in the industry. You’ll have shared interests and they’ll always get your meme-of-the-day jokes. But if most of your friends work in the same field you do, that’s a little boring, right? Try to branch out. This is a city of people from all over the world, doing all sorts of interesting things. Get to know them.

So here’s your chance: City of Dream’s 5th Annual – SF1900 – A Night at the Barbary Coast.  I can expound the virtues of City of Dreams, but I have already done that previously.  It’s a great organization, and I admire everyone of the members and friends I’ve met through my roommate and the organization.  But for those of you not familiar with City of Dreams, this event is the best way to get an introduction!  Not only can you fraternize with people outside of the (tech) industry, you’re going to find better male-to-female ratios than your average tech event (quit complaining!), and you can gamble the night away for a good cause.  If you don’t believe me just yet, take a look at last year’s photo site. Now go buy your ticket!

My Roommate and I Looking Snappy

My Roommate and I Looking Snappy

Details

WHEN: Thursday, November 12th, 2009 7pm – 12:30am.
WHERE: The Bently Reserve (The old Federal building, 301 Battery St.)
WHAT: Annual Fundraising Gala for City of Dreams
THEME: Think San Francisco’s Barbary Coast, circa 1900.

Preview the event’s AH-mazing silent auction here!

September 14, 2009

Bad Usability Calendar 2009

Filed under: Design, fun, geeks — Lindsay @ 5:13 pm

I’ve had this calendar hanging in my office for the majority of this year. It has 48 “classic” design mistakes, and I find each one wildly entertaining. My favorite month is July because I like the idea of playing shoots and ladders with my days. Did you roll the die wrong today? Go back to last week!

Bad Usability Calendar 2009

Bad Usability Calendar 2009

Select the image to visit the source site.

July 21, 2009

San Francisco’s Random Taco Crawl Generator

Filed under: geeks, programming, tacos, tools, twitter — Tags: , , , , , , — Lindsay @ 10:32 pm

For those of you close to me, you have definitely heard about a small side project I started at the end of May called the Random Taco Crawl Generator.  I dreamed up this great idea of being able to query a website for a random sampling of taquerias in San Francisco while I was at the gym over memorial day weekend.  The night before I had been on a Taco Crawl for my friend Kevin’s birthday.  He had held a few before, but this was my first with him, and with almost 20 other people that joined in for the celebration!
tacotaco
While we were sitting stuffed at our 5th taqueria, one of Kevin’s friends pondered aloud “I wonder if tacocrawl.com is taken.”  Everyone in ear shot with an iPhone started scouring the internet to see if the domain had been secured, and then to see if they, themselves, could secure the domain.  As I watched them scramble, I wondered too, “Why don’t you just call GoDaddy?  They have a horrible UI, but great phone service.” (I really am a true believer).  They ignored me!  I speculated, this time silently, it was because they didn’t want to listen to a girl (because guys know so much more about tech then us females, clearly).

Finally, I decided to grab GoDaddy’s phone number (on my blackberry, mind you) and give them a call.  Sure enough the domain was available, they had my account number and credit card on file, and I had the domain signed, sealed, and delivered within 5 minutes.  Everyone was dumbfounded for two reasons:

  1. It didn’t occur to anyone (except for me) that you could secure a domain name by phone.
  2. No one thought that any two-word combination was still even available in the domain space.

So while I was at the gym the following day, I was thinking about what I could do with my new domain.  Around that same time I decided I wanted to start getting back into more interactive web-development (pages that do things, not just show information).  For the past few years, my day job has confined me to strictly requirements and design, but no development.  Even with a few of my side projects – including this website, The General History Project, and The Bead Store – I hadn’t really written an if() or while() statement, in a while.

What started as a fun challenge to see who could secure the domain www.TacoCrawl.com fastest, turned into a side project using the Yelp API.  I wrote most of the logic in PHP, but sprinkled some jQuery and XML throughout the site.  The basic idea is that I query Yelp for as many taquerias within a 2 mile radius of the neighborhood selected.  I check to see if the data set returned to me is greater or less than the number of taquerias the user requested.  Ideally, the data set is greater, so I can generate a set of random numbers, and select from the full array of taquerias randomly.  If the data set is less than the number of taquerias the user requested, than I return to the user all the taquerias Yelp returned to me.

All in all, once I got back into the swing of things, I found the Yelp API to be really easy to work with, and the google group to be very helpful. I also started using this handy tool for cross-browser design – check out Browser Shots.

In the process, I got a lot of really great feedback through uservoice and email.  Some people want to see the site extend to other food genres, other cities and mobile browsers.  Other food genres are hard because few delicacies are small and edible repeatedly in crawl fashion the way tacos can be consumed.  For other cities, I checked in my own home town, Philadelphia, and only one neighborhood Yelp lists in its API has enough taquerias to make a taco crawl possible.  Finally, there’s no excuses, mobile browsing capability would be great, and so would a google map mash-up.  The truth is, I want to eat tacos, not program tacos; I need a break!  I want to work on other things!

Andale! Go find you some tacos!

PS:  There’s an easter egg in the program.  I’d like to know who finds it!

May 30, 2009

Working the T Shirt Table at WordCamp SF 2009

Filed under: geeks, storytime, wordpress — Tags: — Lindsay @ 11:25 am

Karla and Me at Wordcamp 2009

I think it is certainly appropriate that I write a blog post documenting my time working the t-shirt table at WordCamp SF 2009, considering that my blog is on Wordpress, so is The General History Project and The Bead Store SF.  Yes I’m a big fan!  And, I don’t think I need to extol all the great features, you can find that by doing some easy searching.

I’m meeting a lot of cool people – bloggers, theme designers, and the rest.  The Mission Bay Conference Center also has a gym, so I have a lot of people stopping by to ask me what WordCamp is about.  It seems a lot of people know about Wordpress!  And others want to know about me and what I can do to help them with their website, which is also very cool.

Some of the highlights of my morning include:

  • Meeting the LaidOffCamp guy, Chris Hutchins. He let me talk my headoff about Turkey and traveling through the Middle East. I told him about Matador Travel, which is an awesome online travel community.  The people there helped me plan my trips to Costa Rica, Greece, Turkey and Israel.  I’m hoping he’ll contact me so I can put him in touch with Laura Lee; she’s a great resource for traveling in Africa.
  • Hearing one woman say, as I gave her the American Apparel shirt – “It’s probably some cheap shirt made in China”.  It’s nice to see that some people don’t pay attention to what seems obviously a pop-culture-brand success.  American Apparel’s whole pitch is that they’re the largest clothing manufacturer in the USA.
  • Meeting Om Malik and asking him if he ever filled that position posted on 37signals.  Sounds like he did! Congrats!
  • Having a run in with the guys from MediaTemple.  They’re a sponsor for WordCamp, and came to the table with a little sway and swagger.  I asked them if they were competitors for GoDaddy, and then if they could help me secure a domain name in less than 5 minutes by phone the way I did for tacocrawl.com last Saturday night.  Their response? “What kind of phone do you use?  Blackberry? It looks a whole lot cooler on the iPhone!”  Me? “Looks like those bloody mary’s this morning were a good idea”.  Bad idea for two reasons.  First, I’m the type of GoDaddy customer they want to acquire.  I buy domain names like other girls go clothes shopping online.  Second, it doesn’t seem to occur to anyone, these guys and my friends that were with me last week, that securing a domain name by phone is a good feature.
  • Seeing how truly humble Scott Beale is from Laughing Squid.  I follow him on twitter, and have been reading his blog since I moved out here in fall 2005.  When he came to the tshirt table, and I saw his name tag, I said something to the likes of “hey you’re that guy”.  He seemed surprised that I would recognize him, which really impressed me since he has 40K followers on twitter and a significant fan base.

If any of you are reading this, come say hi!

March 1, 2009

Finding a Place for my HAMB Background Image

Filed under: geeks, twitter — Lindsay @ 12:33 pm

In my previous post. I wrote about HAMB SF, my idea for a neighborhood workout group in Russian Hill and Nob Hill.  I showed you a couple of the website designs that I played around with, all using this basic image:

The Original HAMB SF Background Image

The Original HAMB SF Background Image

If you are not familiar with San Francisco, the left building is Coit Tower on Telegraph Hill and the right building is the Transamerica building downtown; I can see both of these from my apartment.

I have yet to write Part 2 of my post on HAMB SF, but you might be able to guess that the project idea is on hold for various reasons.  That being said, I wanted to use this background image and some of the other photoshop collateral I created for something else.  Since I don’t really use MySpace, or care to, I needed another venue where I could post a customized background.  I decided on Twitter.

I removed the HAMB header and added a few clouds, as well as a notation that attributed the background to me.  Here’s how the background looks alone:

My San Francisco Twitter Background

My San Francisco Twitter Background

I had to change the dimensions of the file, as well as increase the depth of the hill at the bottom to adjust for different browser sizes.  Of course, depending on how a viewer’s browser is adjusted, the background may look a little off.

Here’s how it looks when the sizing is just right:

My Background on Twitter

My Background on Twitter

February 17, 2009

Supa Dupa Fly Flash

Filed under: geeks, learnings, smallaccomplishment — Tags: — Lindsay @ 11:02 pm

Without the internet on my flight back from DC this weekend, I was forced to just make something up in Flash to see if I could learn something new. Compared to the last project, I can say that my significant accomplishments and growth in this skill are astounding, but I’ll let you judge for yourself:

You know this video is as fly as these shoes I bought this weekend:

supa dupa fly kicks

February 11, 2009

Learning Adobe Flash

Filed under: geeks, learnings, smallaccomplishment — Tags: — Lindsay @ 9:08 am

I’m learning Adobe Flash this morning, and just completed my first movie following this guide.

I know you are super impressed by my amazing flash skills, but what did you do before 8 am this morning?

December 20, 2008

A Responsive and Persuasive Audio Device to Stimulate Exercise and Fitness in Children

Filed under: geeks, learnings, side project — Lindsay @ 10:22 am

While I’m in the business of posting videos about musical instruments for children, I wanted to post a link to the video my group created for the New Product Development class in the Fall of 2005. The course had students from the Engineering School, the School of Information, the Haas School of Business (all from UC-Berkeley) and Industrial Design students from the California College of the Arts. Here’s a link to the paper we wrote fro CHI 2006 and the poster.

The basic idea of the product is to motivate children to move and dance by varying the speed at which the music is played. The speed changes based on how quickly and energetically the child is dancing.

December 12, 2008

Akismet WordPress Plugin is Amazing!

Filed under: geeks, learnings, tools, wordpress — Tags: , , — Lindsay @ 4:14 pm

So I wrote about it once or twice before, but WordPress spam is horrible.  Before I added Akismet, I had over 2500 spam comments.  I was deleting batches, maybe 20 at a time.  It was tedious.  With some help from my buddy Ivan, I got my WordPress API key and installed Akismet.  The plugin adds a button to your comments’ options called “Check for Spam”

Once I selected “Check for Spam” all 2000+ comments were absolutely gone!  I felt like a huge load had been lifted off my shoulders.

Note:  Also in this post, I’m testing RealMac Software’s LittleSnapper (its hosting the screenshot) and Twitme (my twitter should update with a link to this blog).

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