Organizing myself for the new job…

I think I’m going to have to purchase a [Hipster PDA](http://www.43folders.com/2004/09/03/introducing-the-hipster-pda/.) From the website:

The Hipster PDA (Parietal Disgorgement Aid) is a fully extensible system for coordinating incoming and outgoing data for any aspect of your life and work. It scales brilliantly, degrades gracefully, supports optional categories and “beaming,” and is configurable to an unlimited number of options. Best of all, the Hipster PDA fits into your hip pocket and costs practically nothing to purchase and maintain. Let’s make one together.

All for around $3!

Thinking about the past, present, and future

So, the job change is coming up on me fast. I’ve spent a whole lot of time thinking about where I am in my career and how I got here, what work was like when I started vs. what it’s like now vs. what I think I’m heading to at [[The MathWorks]].

I remember when I first started work… green as hell but full of energy. I became part of the recreation committee at [[LTX]], played on the softball team, joined the golf league and played bridge every day at lunch. The work itself was new and interesting…. I had never done anything like it before. It was fun, and all the recreational activities just enhanced all that making work a joy.

Over the years, all that changed…. slowly but surely all the after-work activities got cancelled, the work got to be mundane (i.e. [[SOSDD]]).

So, this job I’m going to… it sure feels like it could be a return to the good old days. I’ll be doing work I’ve never done before in an environment that’s completely unfamiliar. They have great recreational activities at this place (everything that got taken away at [[LTX]] is there!), and what sounds like a great atmosphere.

Sounds like just what I need to get reinvigorated

So, does this work?

Yeah! I’m modifying the wordPressSuite to work on individual outlines for each day. Excellent! Now the content of the blog for each day gets saved in its own outline. This just seems better to me…. not sure though… still diggin’ (to quote Dave [[:-)]])

Does this part end up in the body?

My Kind of Lawn Care

Take a look [here](http://www.richsoil.com/lawn/index.jsp) to see the right way to deal with your lawn…. the cheap and lazy way [[:-)]]. I read this article and it sure seems to make a lot of sense. It certainly opened my eyes to how I’ve probably been destroying my yard’s ability to actually grow lawn.

You Gotta Hand it to Dave

I’ve always loved the idea of writing in outlines. My first exposure to them was with More on the Macintosh way back in the day. Ever since then, I always look at whatever tool I’m using to see if it understands outlining in any sort of reasonable way. None of them ever do.

I’ve done various things to maintain this blog over the years, bought various pieces of software, written some of my own. None of it has been entirely satisfying.

However, now I’m playing with the OPML editor from Dave Winer. Yup…. it’s a repackaged Frontier/Radio. Yup, it’s not what you’d call pretty by today’s standards, but it is easily more useful than just about any piece of blogging software I’ve used yet. Oh, it’ll take a bit of programming for me to make it exactly the way I want it to be, but the fact that I can change the way it behaves myself is a ***huge*** bonus.

I’m trying to find some of my old favorite Frontier scripts and can’t. Specifically, docRenderer, HALO, and metaRenderer. They must exist out there in the ether somewhere! Or, I’ll have to write a simple version myself… it should be THAT hard [[:-)]].
####Modified WordPress.root

OK… I’ve modified the renderer in wordpress.root to act more like a document renderer. This will get me started. Now, if an outline headline contains children, it is rendered as an html header (based on the level it is in the outline).

What does this mean practically? OK… the headline above “Modified WordPress.root” is a subheadline in the article, and the text for that subhead is indented on further level underneath it. It’s a very natural way to write and organize thoughts. By combining this with good use of cascading style sheets, the page can be presented in a very document-like way.

Hmmm…. I wonder why categories don’t work properly.