Mark Hoekstra

October 4th, 2008

A friend passed away suddenly last month.

Mark, the world will forever be years behind without your creativity to guide it.

mark

Announcing BeerhugCamp

September 12th, 2008

We’re gathering on a porch at 24th and Bartlett with 40’s this Saturday after dark to discuss the future of microsocializing.

If you are not yet familiar with the term, “microsocializing” refers to the habitual, and near ritualistic, activity of attending all free events related heavily to one’s own industry wherein the main goal is to “ping” the group of people who attend such events in order to keep alive the semblance of a friendship that can be used for mutual benefit when either participants social capital is called into question.

Come join, bring a 40. You’ll know when you see us.

For Some Reason This Excites Me

August 28th, 2008

Just got the notification from Amazon that my pre-order of this game shipped

Demonic Overlord’s teach!?

Escalating Anti-Gentrification Sentiment in the Mission

August 6th, 2008

The neighborhood I live in, the mission district, specifically the area between 18th and 24th streets, has lately been the target of various anti-gentrification statements, culminating for me today while a man shouted insults from his window at people walking out of Ritual Roasters Coffee (there is already anti-gentrification sidewalk stenciling outside the entrance).

It seems Google is one of the parties being blamed for it as more crudely made sidewalk stenciling at Guerrero and 24th makes clear, and in part I can see how it contributes by having a shuttle pickup in the neighborhood but in reality the pickup locations are chosen based on existing housing situations so it would appear to be more of a feedback loop.

Anyway, with things like the “Mission Yuppie Eradication Project” in the past and being bucketed with the “yuppies” I don’t look forward to a continuation of this trend into the realm of reckless destruction or violence. Sidewalk stenciling is something I fully support, though I must say I prefer those that are better made or more clever than the ones mentioned here, but angry shouting from windows is definitely a large step in the wrong direction.

Termie’s Talent Agency, Take 2

June 26th, 2008

Lately the amount of people asking me for friends who code to work on their projects has been increasing so I think it is time to revive Termie’s Talent Agency, and add a little twist. Here’s the breakdown:

Developers, Designers

If you think that you could at some point in the future be interested in working on cool projects — and I’m not going to point you at stuff I think is stupid — shoot off an email to termietalent at gmail and please include the following:

  • whether you would like to travel or move, I hear about things in both Europe and the U.S.
  • what kinds of things you are actually enthusiastic about, if you code but are really into journalism I want to hear about; describe your dream job.
  • where I can dig up more info on you, like a blog or something
  • a recipe for one of your favorite dishes (i like food) or one of your favorite paragraphs from a book

Companies new!

If you are looking for great talent that will never hit a job board because they already have jobs and could find new ones every day — the kind that hate headhunters because they always represent horrible boring corporations — then send an email to termietalent at gmail and please include the following:

  • where you are located and if you need somebody to be located physical nearby
  • the size of the team our hero will be working with
  • a passionate description of your project that will instill a renewed sense of vitality and enthusiasm to any kindred spirit who reads it
  • a brief description (longer if you use illustrative metaphors) of what kind of hero you are looking for to fill out your squad
  • a recipe for one of your favorite dishes (i like food) or one of your favorite paragraphs from a book

Everybody

None of this information will be posted anywhere, it is for my own private use as a matchmaker extraordinaire, but should from aught a spark take light ‘tween brave souls I shall send both parties an intro email.

And hey, if you’ve got other crazy ideas about arrangements send ‘em in also, I’ve heard things like design for code barters (keeps the tax man away) and even dating requests.

–snip–

I had a great time doing this before, but at some point the server that handled that email got moved and DNS was in somebody else’s hands and everything sort of fell apart.

Likewise, if you’ve sent stuff in before, please send it again to refresh my memory and so that I’ll have it on record.

Stealth Mode

April 23rd, 2008

Received an email today asking me to evaluate the feasibility of an idea, this was my response to it:

Subject: Re: Question

Body:

| In a nutshell, I would like to create something - like [XXX] - that is geared more towards the [XXX] community.

| Is that enough information?

Obviously not.

| I don’t want to go to in depth because it may be a “very” good idea and I would like to know I could trust the person - hearing the whole presentation - to not disqualify it to me and then go on to develop it for their own personal gain.

That is in almost all cases a very flawed path to follow. Ideas aren’t worth much of anything, I assure you somebody else has had your idea and most likely many other people, the fewer people you tell your idea to the more likely it is that you will build yourself into a hole without input, fail to see things from other perspectives, fail to find out that your idea has already been done before you waste the time trying to build it, and in almost all cases simply fail. “Stealth Mode” is a worn out and useless concept perpetuated by people who expect to get something for nothing, what makes things happen is (1) actually fleshing out the idea through constant interaction with other people more knowledgeable than yourself, giving you additional reasons and urgency to actually build it, and (2) actually building it. The difference between the successful and the unsuccessful entrepreneur often has much more to do with how well that person can actually organize the people around her into making their dreams a reality than about an idea.

Good luck.

–andy

Things I Won’t Do

April 11th, 2008

Anybody who’s spent much time with me knows I’m neither the kind of guy to take no for an answer nor the kind to say something isn’t possible, rather I am the kind who feels like he can be great at everything and be everything to everyone. It’s a fault but I do well enough most of the time that I can skate by.

Today on the bus ride to work while finishing reading the play “Copenhagen” I came to the sudden realization that I would never make a significant contribution to mathematics. It wasn’t ever something I specifically strove for, nor anything I put any sort of commitment towards, but somewhere in the back of my mind I’m sure I hoped, as I do with an outrageous number of things, to wind up in a position where it would be possible and that by sheer force of character I could make it happen.

Even now, after tossing the thought around all day, I can’t quite bring myself to accept the word never in the paragraph above. It feels like a challenge. Even after deciding that I will not commit myself to the level of study and research it would take, even with the generally held statistic that most great contributions to mathematics happen by the time the contributor is 25, even after accepting the overall lunacy of the idea that I might be in some way qualified, never is still a tough pill to swallow.Loan with credit score Average national credit score Long term care insurance leads Best home insurance Home equity loans refinance credit Credit score help Credit score repair Debt consolidation companies New hampshire health insurance Faxless payday loan Refinance houses michigan Federal long term care insurance program Lifewise health insurance Free payday loan Hancock long term care insurance Home equity loan refinance credit Credit score auto loan Commercial construction loan Credit card debt settlement Health insurance online quote Commercial loan leads Student loans for bad credit Accept card credit online Credit repair help Equifax credit reporting Is credit score Fair credit and reporting Federal student loan forgiveness Consolidation debt loan payday Self help credit repair How to repair bad credit Credit score what Student loan for college Credit card debt history Good credit score New jersey payday loan Universal life insurance American home insurance Ovarian cancer health insurance lead Cheap payday loans 0 apr credit cards Commercial loan interest rates On line credit reports South carolina health insurance Credit card debt consolidation Oregon commercial loan Student loan consolidation rates Order credit reports Mortgage rate refinance loan home Metlife auto insurance Stop credit card offer Term life insurance protection Auto loan after bankruptcy Getting out of debt settlement Fair credit report California home loan refinance rate california mortgage Second mortgage home equity loan rate Refinance bay county Life insurance agent Commercial loan brokers Free credit card offers Arizona long term care insurance Online health insurance quote Long term health care insurance plans Credit repair specialist Auto loans bad credit Self credit repair State farm home insurance Auto loan refinance Colorado free credit report Home loan refinance rate bad credit refinance mortgage Texas health insurance provider Credit rating score scale South dakota health insurance Credit card debt deceased Three major credit reporting Payday advance loan

To All Those “Coachella’s Line Up Sucks This Year” People

April 7th, 2008

Andy wouldn’t mind seeing:

    • Friday -
  • The Verve
  • Tegan and Sara
  • The Breeders
  • Goldfrapp
  • Slightly Stoopid
  • Battles
  • Aesop Rock
  • Vampire Weekend
    • Saturday -
  • Kraftwerk (Zombienaaation)
  • Rilo Kiley
  • MIA
  • Animal Collective
  • Flogging Molly
  • Islands
  • Man Man (!!)
  • AkronFamily
  • Minus The Bear
  • Yelle
    • Sunday -
  • My Morning Jacket
  • Justice
  • Metric
  • Simian Mobile Disco
  • Autolux
  • Sia
  • Holy Fuck
  • Grand Ole Party

And there are a lot of other names that sound familiar/good:

    • Friday -
  • Les Savy Fav
  • The Bees
    • Saturday -
  • DeVotchka
  • Blonde Do Role
  • Kavinsky
  • The Bird and the Bee
  • 120 Days
    • Sunday -
  • The Field
  • Sons & Daughters
  • Austin TV
  • Shout Out Louds
  • Plasticines

Excess

April 6th, 2008

Social social social social.

I think I’d like to work a bit now.

My Performance Self-Review

March 25th, 2008

termie

So, at big companies like this it appears you get to do these “performance review things,” anyway I ended up spending far longer working on it than I wanted to when I should have been rapidly typing things like api.channel_post or request.user but I figured I could make up for some of that by posting a good chunk of it here.

Overall Performance

Just getting moving, between integrating myself with the company and pushing for support for Jaiku I feel these first months were certainly my slowest, but with a solid plan and commitment to it I feel that this is just the beginning.

Accomplishments

  • Oh em gee super sekret.
  • Biking to work about once a week.

Strengths

  • Contributing energy, excitement and enthusiasm / pleasant to work withness / constructive feedback and helpful suggestions is always one of my main strengths.
  • Code-wise, I feel I do a good job of contributing well-thought-out, simple, useful designs, generating great new ideas and staying abreast of new developments in the industry, a close connection to open source developers.
  • I move quite fast and make a lot of progress when the path is clear, tends to be very helpful for people wanting to experiment with an idea.
  • I’d like to think I cultivate relationships between engineering groups, I definitely feel that will be a strong point of mine once I’ve had a chance to interact with more groups.

Areas for Development

  • I feel I could always test much better and do better at keeping design docs up to date, I end up running ahead of those far too often, I feel this will improve greatly as I am exposed to more great testers via code reviews, nothing drives me forward as well as working with bright people.
  • I would love to teach and mentor others more, I feel I frequently skimp on this due to the feeling of lacking time or for getting frustrated with people who are still learning, I think I can improve this by beginning to write more documentation for projects, documentation for APIs and things like that.
  • Complete projects that I started is a big one for me, I’ve noticed myself dropping out of projects here at Google once the meetings become about what I feel is just large company red tape, I’d like to improve this by learning enough of what the issues people are facing are that I can solve them before my interest dies completely. Additionally, simply having the stamina to get through the boring parts long enough to be a useful contributor again.
  • Providing leadership, I’m quite used to running my own projects but at a company of this size and nature it requires much more to be a leader that can contribute, I plan to improve this by working with great leaders and taking on larger and larger responsibilities.

Career Development Objectives

My past objectives in career development have always been related to starting projects that bring together small groups of bright individuals in a way that allows them to thrive and produce free products that move towards making the world a better place and in the process learn greatly by being surrounded by these people and working with them.

So moving here felt like quite a departure at first, but I feel I’ve found the right niches to dive into where I can again contribute and progress towards those goals.

My plans are to bring about environments within the company that breed the kind of passion and excitement that I’ve always taken for granted at smaller companies and smaller projects, and through working in those environments implement and launch innovative products that assist other developers both internally and externally in bringing that same passion and excitement to their environments.

Having a platform like Jaiku on which to rapidly develop new tools is one way in which I intend to begin accomplishing, and working with some of the more interesting developer-facing projects internally and externally is another. Along the way I intend to re-acclimatize myself with C++ and Java so that I will be more quick to contribute to those projects that are based on those languages.