By craig on January 15, 2012
It has now been 2 months since my shoulder injury (a grade 3 AC joint separation).
I am pleased with the progress that I’ve made to date, but was expecting the pain to have subsided more than it has.
Continue reading “Shoulder injury, 2 months later”
Posted in AC Joint |
By craig on January 1, 2012
- Automation is good.
- People make or break a project. Thanks Joel.
- Coding the right tests is hard, but infinitely valuable.
- “Cutting edge development” describes the processes and principles, not the technologies.
- Software must be tested in a representative environment.
- Knowing the gaps between marketing and reality in your vendor’s software is valuable.
- The timing of a discussion directly influences its outcome.
- Metrics are useful but can be gamed.
Posted in Software Development |
By craig on December 31, 2011
Deploying a sufficiently complicated application into a corporate environment involves navigating a sea of paperwork, getting all the appropriate “approvals” in place, co-ordinating with department managers to get time slots from their staff, and so on.
Continue reading “Dysfunctions of a corporation”
Posted in Software Development |
By craig on December 30, 2011
I read a great quote in I’m feeling lucky. It described a note sent from one Google employee to another as he handed over a piece of software.
- Here’s what I’ve done.
- Here’s how it’s running.
- Here are some things to look at.
- Here’s what’s going to go wrong if it goes wrong.
- Here are the steps to turn it off.
These five points would be invaluable documentation to any new code or functionality. Imagine how much time could be saved if you had this information before embarking upon a code change.
Posted in Software Development |
By craig on December 19, 2011
This morning I did my first weights workout since my Grade 3 AC joint separation 5 weeks ago. I didn’t push it hard, the point was to start building some strength slowly while trying to avoid further injury. Most of the weights were around my previous warmup levels. i.e. around 60%.
I was focusing on my legs and back, so the exercises were: Squats, bent-over rows, seated rows, deadlift, incline press. I tried doing some lat pulldowns but there was way too much movement in the AC joint for my comfort. I was surprised I was able to deadlift at all but it was quite comfortable. The rowing exercises required the most concentration to keep the joint stable, as did the incline press.
I’ll probably stick with this routine three times a week for a month or so, gradually increasing the weights. I hope to be back to my pre-injury strength by the end of January.
Posted in AC Joint, fitness |