Blog

  • Worlds Collide Panel

    Was invited to speak with a panel selected for the next TIMA/Tag event yesterday evening. The concept, when worlds collide, was about taking members from the business, design, and developer worlds and putting them on a panel to ask questions to, and ask questions of. By keeping my mouth shut more than usual ( a feat, I know ) I learned some ways and attitudes that certain business leaders run their businesses with their different processes, their attitudes toward certain ideas and technologies, and how although dot com is so over-talked about, it’s still great to reflect upon to learn from.

    The questions ranged from “How did you survive the post dot com, 9/11 economy”, “How do you see technology now used in your business vs. before”, and “how integral is your business process”. The inter-panel questoins were shortened because of time, but my favorite was, “why does the developer community like Flash? Why are they so excited?”. The audience, too, posed some great questions. We all got hung up on defining terms, which is a road block any mediator needs to move beyond tactfully. For example, 3 times we revisted what creativity means to us, and how it fits into our business. However, it wasn’t really needed in the overall discussion as design means on thing in the ad agency world, and another in the programming one. Still, good points from the audience asking about “diversity”, “creativity’s importance in your workplace”, “where is usability’s representation on the panel” which I responded that someone on the email list before hand had suggested we ad a content writer and usability people to the panel, and a few more about change in client demo-graphics, competitors now customers, and my favorite: big company vs. the contractor. I’m a contractor working for a big company; what does that say?

    The one thing I wished I could of spoke more about was clarifying Flash before some of the more business looking members of the audience retired early, the correlation between a need for usability, and creation of jobs that fit those criteria and how that releates to the future of search engine placement. For the latter, content creation was usually done via developers/designers, or whoever was in charge of building the website/application. When journalists got involved, and other talented writers realized with a change in demographics, audience targeting, and modification of headline writing, they were a perfect fit for website and application copy creation. Thus, a new job position was borne. Same held true for the usability front. You now have people whose specific job is to create wireframes and/or do use/test cases on users (perceived or not). One woman had expressed concern about telling clients that come to her for search engine placement for their websites, and she has the dutiful task of telling them that their current site needs to be grossly modified to even have a chance of being listed with a decent rating on some keywords, even before you spend any money on Google keywords, or other search engine paid listing criteria. That last part I interjected. I responded that if history is any indication, as soon as people recognize the importance of those type of talent in up front planning, execution, and later re-factoring, job positions will open immediately. It’s like the usability stuff. First people recognized that a talented team flawlessely executing an application meant jack and lost money if the user couldn’t use it, thus they see the value of a usability person. Same will hold true of search engine placement as I can definately see it as a full time job. Hell, it’s a full time job just adding blog spam comments to MT-Blacklist.

    Anyway, it’s neat to hear other people’s perceptions on the dot com thing, regardless of how many times its rehashed, how they’ve remained profitable, how their process and attitudes have changed, how they are mutually exclusive and not in relation to those changes, and my favorite, talking to other contractors about what they are working on.

    BTW, working in Development at Bellsouth’s Internet Group, not R&D. This is where I specifically requested I wanted to work, so was mis-spoke to via the recruiter. It’s pretty phat so far. I’ve got my first wireframe here on my desk; I’ve never had a wireframe to develop a Flash app before; pretty neat! …specially ’cause I didn’t have to do it, hehe.

  • New Job, 3rd From Monster.com

    Today was my last day with Surgical Information Systems. I learned a lot from the smart & caring people there, and had the best manager; good role-model, too. The Vice President was cool because he’d answer all my questions. Since he was smart and part teacher, he’d give me good analogies, too.

    I start my new job Monday with Bellsouth.net/Bellsouth Online; not sure the exact name yet that I should be technically calling it. I’ll be working in their Research & Development with a few other technical departments using copious amounts of Flash & Flashcom. I’m not looking forward to the drive, but everything else is really exciting! I still can’t shake the sadness in my heart about leaving SIS, though. A lot of good people and good relationships were formed there. It’s for the better, though.

    This is the 3rd job I’ve gotten via Monster.com. When I quit Digital ArtifeX back in May of 2002, I was at square one. I didn’t have any work I could show as they locked me out of the building that day and gave me pieces of crap example work I had done… 4 months too late. After researching all the ways to get a job (plethora of this kind of stuff on the web, specially then since the economoy blew worse than it did now), majority said to not depend on online job sites. It’s ok to use them, but utilize other resources, too. There was a lot of other good information, but I listed myself everywhere anyway. First, a recruiter (well, 3 actually) found me there for IBM since I applied online. Then, I found SIS there. The most recent recruiter representing Bellsouth found me 2 weeks after I updated my resume. In my opinion, Monster.com works.

  • Can’t Export AS2 Classes in Frame that Doesn’t Exist

    They thought of everything… your probably like, “Duh, Jesse…”. Hey man, that’s neat. Your so smart. d00d, it’s late, and these things are fascinating this time of the night.

    If you have your AS2 classes export in frame 2, but have a 1 frame only movie, you get this error:

    “WARNING: The Export Frame for Classes specified in the Publish or Export settings, frame 2, does not exist. No bytecode for ActionScript 2.0 classes or interfaces was exported.”

    Thank you Flash!

  • Save as MX AS2 Gotcha

    If you have a Flash MX 2004 file your saving as MX, and it detects your using AS2 in the FLA, it’ll comment out the ActionScript, even if some of it is valid. Just something to watch out for. Just so we’re clear, I would have assumed it would of either removed the offending code, refused to compile like MX did for Flash 5 stuff, or brought you to the offending area to manually fix before compiling.