Storylines and pair programming

A few months ago, I was approached to give a talk at Storylines.  I agreed, and we finally managed to get our schedules lined up so that I could give my talk last night.  I’ve been working on it for a few weeks leading up to it, trying to figure out what I can share that would be useful and meaningful to someone else.

As I was working on it, I was thinking about how I first got into computers in the first place.  When I was a kid, my dad was an enthusiast, and he got a Timex-Sinclair 1000.  He and I learned BASIC on it together, transcribing BASIC programs printed in computer enthusiast magazines into it, and then fixing the inevitable bugs (some typos, some transcription errors, some errors in the code as printed in the magazine).  Later on, he got a Radio Shack Model 100, and we upgraded from transcribing BASIC programs from magazines to transcribing BASIC programs from books.

Thinking back on learning BASIC with my dad, I realized that we were doing pair programming long before it became a thing.  We were way ahead of the curve!

I love easter eggs

I love easter eggs.  They’re a great user experience if done right. They make people feel more connected to your product because they know one of its secrets.  Easter eggs remind people that there are real people behind what they’re using.  They let the team show some personality and a sense of humor.

Last year, someone discovered that we’ve shipped a game of Pong.  Last week, someone else discovered that there’s more to Pong than meets the eye.

I’ll leave it as an exercise for the reader to discover other easter eggs …

Systers meet-up on Sept 18 at 7pm

I nearly forgot!  I’m hosting a meetup for women in tech in conjunction with Systers and the Anita Borg Institute at VMware’s headquarters on Wednesday, September 18, at 7pm.  We’ll be discussing how to get the most out of the upcoming Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing.

If you’re a local woman in tech but aren’t attending GHC, feel free to come anyway — most of what we’ll talk about will be applicable to other conferences.  This is a great opportunity to meet other local women in tech, learn about GHC as well as other conferences, and have some great conversations.

RSVP here, or email me if you’re having trouble RSVPing on that page.

multitasking impacts both your productivity and mine

There’s already plenty of research out there that says that multi-tasking is a myth, that you’re just context-switching and not actually getting any of your individual tasks done any faster.  New research suggests that it’s actually worse than that: not only does your multi-tasking keep you from getting your stuff done any faster, but it also impedes others from paying attention.

Let’s look at this the context of Anil Dash’s recent strawman-filled diatribe against those who wish people would turn off their mobile devices when they’re at the cinema, in which he says the following:

I hear the arguments the fussy film people are making. They’re all super, uniquely sensitive to light pollution, and the brightness of the screen is incredibly distracting to viewing the screen.

It’s not just people who are “fussy” or who are “super, uniquely sensitive to light pollution”.  It’s distracting, and (as the author of the study I referenced above puts it) disrespectful to your fellow audience members.

I’ve been trying to leave my laptop back in my office when I’m in meetings, unless I’m actively taking notes with the laptop (since I type faster than I write).  This gives me even more reason to do it.

things I learned today: the origins of the tree swing cartoon

I don’t know about you, but I’ve seen the tree swing cartoon a million times.  It’s a great cartoon that illustrates the difference between what the user wants and how it’s interpreted by various groups in engineering.  I’d never seen it attributed to anyone, and as I learned today, its origins have now been lost.  There’s lots of variations of it, too.  That article is an interesting one about the history and variations that the author has been able to track down.