My travel time today will not be spent in vain, for I will talk to my boss about making a regular habit out of working from home; I wouldn't feel half as frustrated if I actually needed to be here most days. Most of my work is on my laptop, and everything else is on Internet-accessible machines. Facetime with orkers is good, but I don't need to do that every day, and usually I feel nuisanced by all the office noise. Meh meh meh.
Mar. 6th, 2003
My travel time today will not be spent in vain, for I will talk to my boss about making a regular habit out of working from home; I wouldn't feel half as frustrated if I actually needed to be here most days. Most of my work is on my laptop, and everything else is on Internet-accessible machines. Facetime with orkers is good, but I don't need to do that every day, and usually I feel nuisanced by all the office noise. Meh meh meh.
Generally, I like writing short technical columns a lot, and am lucky to have a receptive outlet like the O'Reilly Network that appreciates and encourages my natural writing style. I ought to consider taking a pass on the book and pumping out more of these instead. Maybe. Hmmf.
(no subject)
Mar. 6th, 2003 09:56 pmWhile the title, "Sympathy for the devil", is a cliché, it still resonates with me regarding this whole business. I continually seek viewpoints to sanely balance the extreme anti-war and generally anti-Bush stance that the local geopolitical tub has me soaking in. (I'm quite sure I'd feel and act inversely if I lived and worked in a conservative climate.) Today an orker asked me if I was anti-war, and I had to say "My feelings on this topic are subtle and complex." In truth, my internal parliament of demons has a solid anti-war majority -- I can tell because that's the current state of my gut feeling -- but had I just said "yes", the vocal minority would have been bawling within my head for the rest of the day. It's all about tact.