Working at a PAAS has helped be crystallize the very fundamental difference between Operating Expenses and COGS. These two accounts used forever confused me in college, and when working in a finance department for several years, I'd always blurt out the wrong one when trying to classify an expenditure. From Investopedia:
Well, mine was, so yours should be too. I barrelled right through, bringing over my one "blog post" content type and deleting the modules and fields I didn't need like a whale skirting between rocks to scrape off barnacles.
Gearing up for Drupalcamp Phoenix, GLADCamp, Midcamp. I am working up a new session on project management, which may be ~con-worthy. I vow to make them fun, challenging, and learn 10 things from each trip. Travel season begins...
Sound Opinions reviews the new Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds album. When I was 30 I all but stopped playing music, because I though I was too old. Apparently, no one told Cave that. Lesson learned.
So Corona's parent company (including Negro Modelo, Pacifico) resists the price increases that Anheuser-Busch sets and Miller generally conforms with (collusion?). This has increased their brands' market share. So with the underperformance of Bud Lime (how could that have failed?), AB looks to buy a controlling share of Modelo (AB owns 50% already, which seems odd to be threataned by a company you have that much equity in). But the DOJ is thinking anti-competitiveness. As for the millions of micro-beers?
Cool under pressure, a contrarian, yet completely comfortable changing his opinion. On Hannity and Colmes, he made everyone look silly. His story on the Moth reminded me how brilliant he was. The title is Mistaken Divinity, an excerpt of the even more excellently named show: Mentor, Tormentor, Progenitor. He was someone who faced his opposition in debate so often he was comfortable and unflinching.
It would be hard to listen to This American Life's two part series on Harper High School, found here and here, and still feel that teachers and school administrators don't care, are all incompetant union sluggards, or don't make a difference.
When I was project managing, if I was in the code, there was a problem. Now even moreso, I have little to add as a developer, little that I can do better than others on my team. Make no mistake, I get shit done, just not that. Same thing here in the *AAS world, if I am not removing roadblocks, or developing workflow, or helping to set client expectations, I am not serving my company best. It is tempting to get in the middle of it, but it's a mistake.