Monday, 17 December 2007

Cooking, Christmas Pounces

Blimey hasn't it been a while since my last post - although nothing much has changed in that time so nothing to report, folks. What has happened is that I've devised a plan to get what I want from this job and have submitted it to the relevant people, so we'll see what we'll see, I guess.

The current phase of this project is due to end this week, and we've actually been reasonably productive despite it having been a rather painful process. I suppose it'd have helped to know more about what we were building before starting to build it but unfortunately that's sort of the nature of this project; it's defining itself as it goes.

On a more positive note, a brilliant weekend just passed, beginning with the Kaiser Chiefs supported by We Are Scientists at Earl's Court on Friday night, followed by an early trip to Borough Market (introduced the Kiwi to Monmouth Coffee) for breakfast at Maria's followed by unrestrained and enthusiastic food shopping. Once we'd ensured we were well and truly skint, we headed back, laden with pork, scallops, preserved lemons, cheeses, truffle oil etc and (once I'd installed BT Vision, which is ace) promptly fell asleep.

We cooked a jalfrezi on the Saturday night, which was brilliant, all vibrant, fresh flavours and a decent belt of chilli too. Sunday involved cooking what we'd bought the previous day, scallops with sweetcorn puree and truffle cream followed by roast belly pork with sage and lemon potatoes, followed by white chocolate torte with dark chocolate sauce. Two other Kiwis came over for lunch - a sort of pre-Christmas thingy. Scallops sounded odd, but worked really well, despite a minor crisis involving quails eggs.

Later that afternoon we headed up to the Green Man near Great Portland St tube to meet the Kiwi's cousin and new husband (although they've been together for ages) which was ace - they moved out to Australia about two years ago and we've not seen them since so was great to catch up.

This morning, back to work. I felt like someone had squeezed an extra week into the year without me noticing, and then I realised that we're headed up north this weekend to see the family and that sort of made it alright.

Wednesday, 28 November 2007

Keeping it going

Everything's gone sort of mental this week, and it's been a while since I had a proper rant so here it is. It's the first proper week of building the Irish project, and as I sort of suspected, it's taking the team some time to grasp the relatively complex concepts we're dealing with. Unfortunately it tends to come down to the business analyst to sort all this stuff out. Which is me.

Now, as I've said before on this blog, I'm not a natural business analyst. It's all about detail, translating business and functional requirements into technical tasks and so on. I hate this sort of stuff, and because I'm not naturally predisposed to break things out to the tiniest bit of detail, it's a bit of a struggle for me, and I'm convinced that I'm not doing a particularly good job. To be brutally honest, there are natural BAs in the business who could be doing this job much better. They're the buttoned-down looking people with lots of pens.

My natural role, as colleagues have pretty much mentioned in my reviews, is business consultant - the strategy, business modeling pieces which use my experience to bring context to the businesses we work with. This is where I'm comfortable - the fluffy stuff, basically. Delivering on it is one great big bore.

Add this to the fact that there's still loads of genuinely exciting stuff going on elsewhere in the business that I ought to be involved in, not to mention very real requests for help coming from colleagues involved in projects with very large clients, and you get one rather conflicted blogger.

However, I'm not blind to the fact that beggars can't be choosers and, particularly with a mere six months under my belt, I'm not in a position to go around demanding certain roles, and billable work is billable work. So, I'm buckling down and sifting through the billion pieces of detail that go to make up a website these days, answering the billion tiny (and some massive) questions that the development team have to ask, and all this until Christmas. There's another 5 months to go on this project, but frankly the that thought terrifies me.

So this gives me three weeks to engineer my way out of this and onto something more interesting. Watch. This. Space.

Wednesday, 21 November 2007

Grumpy, stress, but some good news

Ooooh something of a day of contradictions today. On one hand, the Irish project I'm on is becoming somewhat tiresome, with fiddly bits of detail bothering me slightly and those who know me will know that I'm so not in the detail. So this is bothering me. I'm also seeing things going on in the business that I'm sure could benefit from my input but instead I'm here counting servers and adding up license costs.

Bah.

Anyway, if I'm seeming a little bit ungrateful and unwilling to do the necessary grunt work to get ahead career-wise, that's because I am. I reckon I just need to get my head down and plough on through it for a month or so before pulling the 'been there, done that, now show me something interesting' card and we'll see what happens.

That said, I am learning a ton of stuff at the moment, not only in terms of the techie stuff I'm being forced to read up on (who knew how useful an MVC Model could be?), but also in the whole project management, business analyst sense. Much though it galls me to say. It's a bit like muesli - you know what I mean, good for you but no fun.

On the other hand then, I've passed my six month probation period, which means I'm now officially an employee with rights and everything. The feedback I've had has been really quite good too, and constructive, so I'm feeling an odd mixture of massive smugness and huge inadequacy as I make my shoddy attempts to write technical specifications.

So woo for that. And for my Kiwi, who despite her monthly headache, presented me with a pretty good-looking bottle of wine as a well done present. No drinking in the week right now mind... GOD I'm so dull right now. I'm going to have to have a moment of irresponsibility soon, I can feel it coming on...

Wednesday, 14 November 2007

Hermitude

I know, I know, it's been ages since I last posted. I'm not ignoring you all or getting bored with bloggery, I've just been making a concerted effort to preserve my health and bank balances by staying in (and thus out of trouble) for the past couple of weeks. Bar half a night out with some old digital people (Blair, Dan A and some others) last week I've been very good indeed, even last weekend when I practically became one with the sofa. Bliss.

On the work front, things are pootling along quite nicely thank you very much. I've made my decision and am staying firmly within the retail team, as firstly it's what I understand and secondly there's a fair old job to be done in getting this business to behave like the market leader it's become. So that's that. It does mean I've now got a ton of work to do as well as my day job though...

The Kiwi and I went to the premiere of Beowulf on Sunday, what a lark that was - red carpet, Angelina Jolie, Anthony Hopkins (who was very gracious when the Kiwi burst out in solitary applause when he walked past - he'd so play her dad in the film of her life) etc. Truth be told it's a distinctly average film, but the 3D imagery really is quite special. It also gives you the opportunity to turn around halfway through the film and titter at the whole audience looking like Buddy Holly with their 3D specs on.

And as those who keep an eye on my Facebook profile will know, I'm less than impressed with Ms Jolie up close, which continues my trend in finding women who're known for being something special a bit average in the flesh. Shallow, I know, but I just can't help it. They all need to just eat some pies or something.

Tuesday, 6 November 2007

How crap are BA air miles?

I prefer not to use my blog for stuff like this but I can't hold this one in. Ok here we go. Why do you join a frequent flyer program? No, it's not for the free flights, because you rarely earn enough points to actually get one. You join these schemes because, after saving a few points, you get to go in the airport lounges, so that instead of spending the 45 minutes you invariably have to wait for your flight in a comfy chair instead of on a bench.

Now, recently the Kiwi and I booked a hire car (as regular readers will know). We booked this specific one because it got me 500 extra BA points. Woo. Looking at my balance, I should be nearly a Silver member by now, and I can almost taste the lounge.

However, these (plus the ones I've got from recent flights) are ornery air miles. They (if I save until I'm 50 I might get a free ride between terminals at Gatwick) don't affect my VIP level. You can only get these 'special' points by flying on very specific flights, which of course BA won't tell you about.

What a monumental pile of arse. Here's hoping my Aer Lingus points don't have the same effect. Pier B at Dublin airport is no place for a sane person to spend any time at all.

Thursday, 1 November 2007

Back in Dublin

It's been a while since I was over here for more than a day trip, so it's weird to be away from my Kiwi again. This is slightly different though; we're running a workshop for a prospective client over here (all five hours of it) which isn't exactly a pitch but there are undertones of sales-y-ness there. It should be interesting.

The important thing, though, is the hotel. We're staying in a much nicer place this time, all old-school opulence and marble everywhere. The thing I think I like the most so far (having just checked in) is the quiet efficiency of the staff - me trying to check in with a Maestro card usually causes some fuss as they can't pre-authorise it, but here it was dealt with simply and smoothly. And they had chocolate brownies on reception.

So far, so good. Whether this means I'll be over here more in the future (on two Irish projects) remains to be seen.

Interesting thing just happened though. Last week, the head of my team mentioned that there would be a bit of a reshuffle within the team, and that I'd been put forward for one of the more interesting and high profile roles within the new structure. Excellent. This forms part of the proposals all the dept heads are putting together for their own bits of the business next year.

Today though, I've been told that there's a new part of the business being created, and that I've been earmarked to be part of that team. Controversial. So there's a decision to be made fairly soonish. Politics to consider. I think it's going to come down to 60% what do I really want to do and which route would get me there quickest, and 40% who do I want to piss off the least.

An interesting challenge. Fortunately I have a little time to consider my future. Watch this space.

Friday, 26 October 2007

er... about that last post

Small retraction (rather than editing the original post, how big of me): apparently MS have bought a minority stake in Facebook for $240m, which values the site at an expected $15bn. Serves me right for reading early reports on Valleywag.

The move looks like one calculated to piss Google - who were also in the running to buy Facebook - off, and I have to say, in the terms of large business like this, that's utterly childish and massively hilarious.

I wish I could drop $240m just to bug someone. Hugh wouldn't know what'd hit him.

Wednesday, 24 October 2007

Facebook: on the way out?

facebook

Don't get me wrong, I love Facebook as much as the next person. It's helped me get back in touch with loads of people I'd drifted away from and it's generally lovely and a nice place to spend a few hours a week. However...

I don't know about anyone else, but I've noticed things slowing down a bit on FB. Not everyone's as active as they used to be - I know I've certainly stopped the poking and vampires and group-joining, and my homepage feed suggests many of my friends are doing the same. There's always going to be a usage profile like this with social sites; it's the ones which settle down into the background fabric of your life that win out - I say this but realistically haven't experienced it yet.

So, that's the user perspective: the honeymoon is over, boredom and real life sets in. Now two points from a business viewpoint, neither of which are news particularly but hey, it's my blog and I'll regurgitate hackneyed viewpoints if I want to.

1. Their business model just doesn't work. It's based on advertising revenues and yes, a normal revenue model would go through the roof given their traffic stats. However, not only do they have one of the lowest click through rates I've ever seen, their much-vaunted targeting is non-existent and they're massively overcharging for the privilege. There's a limit to how many £300k cash dumps a marketing budget can take before someone starts asking for proof of ROI.

2. They're on the verge, within a few hours I reckon, of being bought. Microsoft and Google are both in the running, but strong rumours suggest that MS is a front runner with a $15bn deal. Although Mr Zuckerberg will only get a tiny slice (if you call $240m tiny, it's still only a 2% stake), so it looks like Steve Ballmer had him over a desk.

Now, the cumulative effect of these two things is this. As a $15bn new toy, it's got to be made to work. So it'll be monetized in different, more aggressive ways. The problem with this is that the relative advertising quiet was / is one of the things that makes Facebook a nice place to be. Given that I'm getting bored already, it won't take many poorly targeted advertising gambits to make me pack up my vampires and head over to Orkut or something.

All that said, I'd genuinely love it to stick around. Partly as I do find it useful, partly as making something as genuinely Web 2.0 as Facebook work as a business would prove that the internet is evolving in a solidly commercial way. And that would make a web professional like me sleep soundly at night.

Next post will be back to rambling nonsense about shoes or something, I promise.

Monday, 22 October 2007

Freeloading, weekend, tentatively satisfied

saatchi

I'm not sure if you can quite make this out, but it's a photo of the handwash stuff from the men's loos in the Saatchi & Saatchi building on Golden Square. I've posted this purely as it seemed hilarious that after looking up to said organisation for most of my professional life, I found myself on Wednesday night spilling beer and eating more than my fair share of canapes in the foyer whilst Rudy used their lovely plant pots to knock the caps off beer bottles. What class and suaveness.

Anyway, the reason I was there was that a thing has launched recently called Voeveo, which is basically a global platform for sharing and selling content through one's mobile. So anyone who owns anything digital, be it music, video or whatever, can upload it to Voeveo and anyone in the world can buy it and download it. Very interesting stuff, mostly from a financial and back-end point of view which I won't bore you with here. They're from New Zealand, which generally makes them all-round good eggs in my book.

Apart from that, things have been reasonably quiet of late. The rugby finished on Saturday with a fairly limp game on the whole, which the Kiwi and I watched in the Temperance as usual before going home early and going to sleep more or less instantly. Sunday was more eventful; we had lunch with some friends who're not only heading back to NZ for good soon but pregnant as well. Despite one of our party being with child we managed a fairly long lunch and returned home tired and emotional at about 8, I think. Fortunately my rule of going ugly early on a Sunday worked and I have been hangover-free all day.

Last week was project management week, our PM being on holiday. I've refrained from posting on the subject whilst it was all going on, so I could give an overview of how it all went, and I'm pleased to report it all seems to have gone off pretty smoothly. The week wasn't without its learnings, suffice it to say, but on the whole much better than last time, which is good. #

And another thing - I'm only 30% of the way to my target, so dig deep, people. So far, Melvis, the Kiwi and the Milkman have all successfully bought my favour.

Monday, 15 October 2007

A slightly grumpy post

My word, what a weekend. I'll try to give something of a snapshot in a short pre-work post:

 

Friday night, dinner at Satay in Brixton before Maximo Park, which was a brilliant affair although some cruel prankster had slipped some pieces of orange into an otherwise tasty grilled lamb dish (heathens). The Kiwi had the foresight (not to mention the contacts) to check the stage times beforehand, so unlike Kathryn we arrived at about 2145 with enough time to struggle to the bar, narrowly avoid a fight, purchase four pints (THIRTEEN QUID!!) and shuffle to my favoured Academy spot (three quarters of the way down, on the left-hand side) just as they launched into their set.

Now, although they were superb as always, there was something amiss. I'm going to come across as awfully snobby here, but I've consistently noticed that the more popular a band is, the less enjoyable their gigs are. Up to a point - massive stadium shows have their place. What I'm talking about is this. When the Kiwi and I went to see the Park at ULU in early 2005, before the album release, we paid about £9, got into a packed venue and generally got a bit excitable with the rest of the crowd. The Academy on Friday night was full of proper part-timers: drunk, lairy, pushy and aggressive. Barely paying any attention to what they'd paid £18 to see, acting more like they were in the local Wetherspoon's. Sort of takes the edge off the whole thing, if you catch my drift.

As for the band, predictably ace, with an almighty version of Limassol which built up into a massive, practically Jesus and Mary Chain-like frenzy of feedback and general noise. Graffiti and Our Velocity also stood out, note perfect. My one criticism, and again accuse me of being elitist or whatever, was that they lacked their earlier sense of desperation and mania - hate to use the word but I think 'edginess' is what they lacked here. Paul Smith always seemed on the verge of a complete breakdown whilst performing; on Friday there was more swagger, more comfortable self-assuredness, and that really didn't sit with the Park brand. Even Lukas Wooler's trademark jerky flailing seemed a touch contrived.

I guess it's unavoidable in some ways - if success removes you from the environment that formed part of your original formula, it'll be hard to reproduce with any credibility. Oasis are a case in point here. And maybe I'd been put in a sour mood by paying thirteen quid for four pints of watered down Carling.

Anyway, the rest of the weekend consisted of the two of us driving up to West Yorkshire in a lovely silver Peugeot convertible (much good that did us this weekend...), staying with an old friend who's just moved up there, watching the rugby (hooray!) and coming home again. It's so good to be reminded that there's more to this country than horrid old London, and the north really does have the best bits. 

Friday, 12 October 2007

Flying

There's always something a little unreal about travelling to Dublin like this. I think it's got something to do with getting up at 0445 and stumbling dreamlike through the passages from home to tube to plane to bus to office. It doesn't entirely leave one in a suitable frame of mind for presenting complex multi-million Euro business models.

This morning, though, has been unusually calming. I've found that as I've got used to the journey (although I've not been too much lately), I've started to notice littler things about it which sort of take the edge off - the example this morning which prompted me to get out the laptop and document it before coming back down to earth was on take-off.

London was covered in thick fog this morning, the resultant gloom confusing the mind into thinking it was earlier than it was. Surging off the runway, the Airbus 321 broke through the fog within 10 seconds or so, into glorious sunlight and clear blue skies.

I don't think I'll ever get bored of flying. I know it's quotidian and mundane to many of us these days, but there's something about the seeming impossibility of getting off the ground, travelling so fast and ending up in a completely different country (and in Dublin's case, a completely different century) that never ceases to fascinate. You'd have to be pretty dull-minded not to marvel in childish wonder at it all, you really would.

Anyway, today's the last day of this sprint. The Irish project is still barrelling forwards, alarming some and exciting others. The Project Manager, with whom I'm getting on much better now I'm more comfortable in my role, is on holiday next week, leaving me to pick up from him and drive the project forwards into the next phase. Hopefully this time I'll be able to get a proper handover and won't end up feeling like the idiot I did last time.

And tonight - the perennially amazing Maximo Park at Brixton Academy. I've not seen them since the release of their last album earlier this year and, although I've seen this lot more often than any other act, I'm still so looking forwards to it - it's guaranteed to be brilliant.

Thursday, 11 October 2007

Phase end, widget, drinking

More techie stuff, sorry. I'm writing this post using Microsoft Live Writer, which is a little app which lets me write blog posts without necessarily being online, something that's potentially quite useful when travelling etc. Provided it actually works, it'll change the way I use this blog quite a bit.

 

That said, you might start to see more maudlin entries from Dublin hotel rooms moaning about being bored and / or overworked etc. We'll just have to see.

 

Lately work appears to be picking up - I'm feeling less like I've no clue what I'm talking about, which is a good start, and of late have occasionally been producing stuff I'm actually rather proud of, even if it's just a well-turned spreadsheet. So that's all good. This phase of the Irish project finishes tomorrow (day trip to Dublin, bah), with next week once again resembling a great unknown filled with terrifyingly unbillable days.

 

However, I'm largely ignoring that at the moment, looking forward instead to heading up to Leeds to see an old friend and watch the England v France game amid a storm of homemade cocktails. Speaking of which, caught up with Melvin on Tuesday in the lovely La Perla on Maiden Lane, happy hour margaritas and top notch Mexican food, all good, highly recommended.

Friday, 5 October 2007

The floodgates open...

Wow! In an unprecedented show of generosity, my appeal for lunch money has already garnered a whole two dollars (thanks, Kiwi & Melvin)! Tremendous stuff. I have to confess I'm finding this whole thing absolutely hilarious and, instead of forgetting all about it and eventually deleting it, I've decided to campaign even harder and commit to getting to that target one way or another (if only to see what happens when I do).

We'll get there folks....

Thursday, 4 October 2007

Shameless Panhandling

This is brilliant, and I hope you all see it in the same light as me because otherwise it might come across as little more than licensed begging, which in a way I suppose it is. Anyway, the new addition to my blog on the right there is my latest internet toy discovery.

ChipIn is a service where you can raise money for an event, or collect cash a group of people owe you. It's all secure, and the money you put in goes into my PayPal account. Once the cash starts pouring in, you should be able to see the money level rise. As an experiment, I'm seeing if I can raise ten US dollars, which by my reckoning should cover a sarnie and a bag of crisps in central London. Will it work, I wonder?

It's on my Facebook page, too. I know no shame.

Monday, 1 October 2007

Prague 2


Home again, and I can't say I'm sorry to be back - Prague was great and we had a great time, but it's charm was somewhat lost on me I think. Perhaps it was the enormous crowds of shambling octogenarian American tourists (which put me in mind of the Night of the Living Dead for some reason), I'm really not sure. I'm not the world's biggest dumpling fan, either.


This is coming out sounding less charitable than I mean it to - we did have a storming night on Saturday night (bar - restaurant - bar - bar - bar - bar - bar), which was a mighty success by anyone's standards. The smarter bars in Prague really seem to know how to treat you; cigars arriving with proper ashtrays, lighting splints and cutters, malt whisky with water and ice on the side, should you wish to interfere with your drink. Martinis were pretty damn good and they even sold absinthe properly, with the flaming spoon of sugar to swirl into it.


That was all in one bar. We got out for about a tenner each. Amazing. On the whole I'd say it's a great place for a weekend; go for the nightlife, go for the more expensive looking places and don't bother sightseeing unless you particularly fancy gaining first hand evidence to back up your creeping prejudice against the colonial elderly.


As you can imagine, I'm still a bit sleepy. Work is increasingly mental as we're speeding up towards the end of this four-week sprint (still on the Irish project), building a business model and an organisational blueprint for our client. It's all new to me, but I'm learning fast, I think. I hope so, anyway. Two weeks to go...
The picture is the door handle on the inside of our amazing apartment, by the way. What a find...

Saturday, 29 September 2007

Prague 1

So we're here! Arrived late last night following a minor drama when a
lass fainted on the plane, cue dramatic calls for a doctor etc. How
very TV movie.

Prague seems lovely, from what I can gather from a wander round at
midnight last night. If we manage to avoid the roaming packs of stag
parties we should be ok...

Now, what do they do for breakfast in the Czech Republic?

Wednesday, 26 September 2007

Change of plans

Hooray for plans changing at the last minute – I’m not going to Dublin today after all, instead am going to a conference / exhibition about online advertising technologies, which wonderfully is at Olympia, just down the road from my house. Tremendous stuff.

Anyway, this blog post’s more about showing off that I’m posting it by email than anything else – who knows, later in the day I might actually blog from the conference using my phone, purely to show off. Hooray!

Monday, 24 September 2007

More Dublin, training, lost clothes

Re my last post, I've over it now, and am quietly getting on with the serious business of sucking all 2.whatever million tracks out of the service whilst I still can, as I believe a number of other 'subscribers' are. Hooray for small mercies, I say. Oh, and whilst the mochaccino from the machine on the first floor wasn't that bad, the espresso was lethal. Although there were some mornings when Bruno (bless 'im) got in before me and was thoughtful enough to place a MUG full of it on my desk, which I think had no fewer than four rocket-fuel espressos in it. 30 minutes later and elephant tranquilisers couldn't slow me down. My most productive mornings, I think.

Anyway, back to Dublin this week, fortunately only for a day trip (although these tend to be the most tiring of all, out on Wednesday at 0430 and back around 2000, straight to the pub for the old place's semi-official leaving do, which I'm really looking forward to. This week I'm mostly writing a business case which is turning out to be more detailed than it has any right to be, and hoping fervently that all my adding up's correct. I noticed a small error the other day where I'd forgotten to divide by 1,000. Aaaanyway....

Then, on Thursday and Friday I'm in some hotel out near Reading somewhere (ooh the glamour; Kathryn gets to go to all sorts of shiny places; I'm somewhere off the M4...) on a Consultancy Skills course. I've no idea what'll be involved, but with any luck I'll be all skilled up after that and won't have to pretend at being a Consultant as I've been doing with varying degrees of success for some months now. It's been a bit like a real-life 'Faking It'; I wonder if anyone's cottoned on yet....

... and then, on Friday night, the Kiwi and I are off to Prague with some other kiwis for the weekend, hooray. I'm told it's back to its former loveliness after the recent influx of stag dos (who've all gone to Tallinn now) so I'm rather looking forward to it.

And on a final note, I've just heard a production designer on the Vodaphone Live Music awards describe Motley Crue as 'heavy metal herberts', which has made my evening, pretty much. More when I get back from Prague, unless there's wireless at the hotel on Thursday night. Looks set to be an interesting week.

Oh, and one more thing - lost clothes. I thought that, in the interest of maintaining the underlying theme of this blog (The Adventures of the Kiwi) I thought I should mention the absolutely wonderful episode yesterday where she had to knock on the door of one of the flats in the building next door to retrieve her shorts and a towel which had blown off our balcony whilst drying. We're still one towel, a dressing gown and a pair of knickers short; the people who own the properties they blew onto are away, so the knickers will have to stare forlornly at us through our kitchen window til they get back. What must the neighbours think....

Friday, 21 September 2007

The end of an era

Today, Virgin Digital announced it will be closing down in about a month's time, following the MBO at Virgin Retail and the accompanying rebrand to the defiantly non-digital 'Zavvi'.

This hasn't surprised me (or anyone else) in the slightest, but I can't help feeling a little bit crestfallen about the whole thing. An ex-colleague (and good friend) of mine once described working for the company we then worked for as like being in an abusive relationship. Sounds like a joke, but he'd noticed that the behaviour patterns are exactly the same: you hate it, you're constantly beaten down by it, you become a shadow of your former self, but you keep telling yourself that things will get better. When you come to leave, they say 'don't go, hang around, things will change', and when you finally pluck up the courage to go, you realise how abused you really were.

But still, when you hear about the hard times they've fallen on after you've left, the old feelings come flooding back and that tiny little ache makes itself felt inside. Call me unnecessarily poetic, but I (and those around me) poured a lot of ourselves into that business and, although we're all going on to bigger and better things, it is a real shame that it didn't achieve what we hoped it would.

I'm thinking specifically of the 14 hour days, the working on Christmas Eve, Christmas Day, Boxing Day, the bank holidays, the 3am calls from LA, the constant, bitter battle with Virgin Retail's board and the frighteningly bad coffee from the machine on the 1st floor. No one can say we didn't give it everything we had.

So, shame it didn't work out, but some things are beyond our control.

Thursday, 20 September 2007

Advertising?

Yes. I've allowed advertising on this blog, and although I know it might bug some of you, a little back story and an explanation of how it works follows...

One of the things I'm working on at the moment involves looking at advertising options for a media website, and Google Adsense (or a derivative of it) is one of the options. I thought I'd give it a go for myself to get a better understanding of it, so here we are.

How it works is that, when you load the page, Google has a quick scan of the page content, and chooses a contextually appropriate advert from its bank of thousands of adverts. Advertisers pay Google every time someone clicks on one of their adverts, and Google pays a little bit of that to whoever owns the website.

So every time you click on one of the ads on this site, I'll get a weeny bit of cash. Apparently it's bad form to ask ones readers to click stuff, so I definitely won't say anything about how it'd be lovely if you could clicky over there every now and then. Definitely not.

I'll have a play around with different formats and positionings etc, and when I'm a millionaire from all your friendly clickery I'll buy you all hats. Apart from anything else, it could result in some amusing ad / editorial juxtapositions...

Tuesday, 11 September 2007

The Microblog

Two quick things that aren't holiday-related but are relevant right this minute:
1. Instead of starting yesterday, the next phase of the Irish project isn't due to start until next week at the earliest. This means I'm at a bit of a loose end this week and am pimping myself around the business trying to bill at least three days this week to anyone who'll take me. This explains why I'm blogging during working hours as I've literally nothing else to do.

2. I've moved the Twitter feed from the bottom of the page to the top and changed its title to The Microblog. Originally I'd called it something pithy about Web 2.0, as I've always been deeply sceptical about how useful Twitter actually is to people with, y'know, lives. It hit me whilst I was on hols thinking about this sort of thing (groans inwardly) that it can actually be quite handy in this sense.

Basically, Twitter is a way of posting very short, text message-sized (140 characters, I think) on the internet, either using the Twitter website itself, by text message or using a widgety sort of thing that plugs into your Google toolbar for example. You can 'sign up' to someone's Twitter feed and receive updates when there's a new post, or you can pull the feed onto another website, like I've done here. What I'll be doing is using this like a mini version of this blog, so even if I don't post anything for a week or so, I can still blather on at you from the sidebar, albeit in 140 character bursts. It's a sort of experiment; we'll see how it goes.

If anyone has any thoughts on this bit of stuff that aren't calling me a ponce for using words like Web 2.0 and microblogging, I'd be interested to hear them...

the holiday post

And we're back. Or am I? Tell you the truth, the line between holiday and not-holiday has been a bit blurred this time, which is all a bit weird and unexpected. Anyway, I'm sure you all want to hear about my holiday, don't you? If not, I recommend you skip this entry and buy a Pond Vac or something instead.

Following on from the last post then, we arrived in Nice in the early evening with the Kiwi's cold getting worse by the minute. She rallied after we'd checked in at the hotel and we went for a wander and got a quick pizza in a manically busy place in the town, complete with our first beer in over a month - so, so good. Back to the room, knackered, sleep.

Come the morning she was in a terrible state, awful sore throat and much distress, game attempts to go down to the beach thwarted by huge coughing fits and so on. On the second attempt I managed to convince a pharmacist that we really needed something full-strength, which took the pain away enough for her to get some sleep whilst I went for a wander and some lunch. That afternoon we did get to the beach briefly (you can only lie on big pebbles for so long), cooling off in the amazingly opaque blue water, sort of milky blue like a glacial stream.

We spent a few hours in the afternoon in a bar in the old flower market too, a gorgeous part of town, all fading pastel buildings and languid sleepiness, before deciding to come back in a few hours for dinner, which we did. Oysters, steak, mussels, tremendous. Early night and an early start to get the 0730 ferry to Corsica. Now, arriving in Calvi was a bit of an odd experience, as firstly we hadn't been given the actual address of the apartment we were staying in, so I had to translate the directions we'd been given to the taxi driver, despite the fact that the directions were from the airport, not the port, hence no use at all. Secondly, the route we took to the apartment somehow took us through the least picturesque bit of Calvi (which really is quite lovely on the whole) before dumping us outside a block on what seemed to be a main road.

Still, we got there, and by the time we'd got into the flat, we could see from the balcony that the beach was literally just across the road and the town a few minutes walk to the left, and although the road probably was a main road of sorts, in Corsica that just tends to mean
it's tarmac'ed.

We got into the swing of things pretty quickly, the rhythm of 'breakfast/beach/lunch/beach/dinner' forming the backbone of the coming week. Food-wise, Corsica's reasonably well-served, with decent cured meats (although they do like a light cure and very thick slices, so their charcuterie tends to be a bit more... challenging than the Italians') and some pretty awesome cheese. I'd heard of the infamous Corsican 'A Filetta' before, and was keen to get involved so we picked up a jar (a jar!) at the supermarket on the first day. It's a sort of cheese paste, god only knows how it's made but it's mental: an intensely rich ammonia smell which burns the eyes, and on the palate it seems to fizz and writhe before drying the mouth out completely and filling your head with an acrid ammonia sensation. The finish is marked by a few minutes of dizziness and choking.

It stayed in the fridge for the rest of the holiday. I have brought it home with me to try out on unsuspecting house guests and to ward off evil spirits. I have never in my life been beaten by a cheese, but this one has me hands down, I'm afraid.

On the wine front, Corsica does produce a fair amount of its own wine and beer, but doesn't tend to export, and we were pleasantly surprised. There's a ton of rose produced there, all of which is of the crisply aromatic variety (all indigenous unpronounceable grapes); the whites are similarly floral and the reds that sort of good, gutsy style you'd expect in that sort of place. The only not-lovely bottle we had was one we got from the local domaine, but it was only slightly sub-standard and cost about €4, so I'm not complaining. Their local beer was a full-flavoured lager with a healthy 6% ABV which, two bottles in after a day in the sun was not unlike being hit around the head with a cricket bat.

One more thing which really astounded us both about Corsica was the landscape - lying on a beach of the softest white sand I think I've felt, you would look up across the bay and see incredibly rugged mountains stretching up into the sky, apparently up to 2700m in places. There's something about that that gives you a whole lot more perspective than you're used to, somehow. In fact, I refused to believe they were more than 750m at most, and unfortunately the Kiwi found out what the truth was and I had to deal with being wrong, which as you'll all know I'm not very good at (doesn't happen that often, you see).

And so, bar a train trip to the nearby beach town of Ile Rousse and watching the start of the rugby world cup in some of the bars in the town, that was Calvi.

On the following Sunday morning we got the 0800 ferry back to Nice, negotiated our way through Nice to get the train to Cannes, just down the coast, and had a long lunch in a restaurant on the beach followed by wonderfully aimless wandering round town. That evening we sat chatting in a painfully cool bar just off the Croisette for so long we'd drunk too much and were too tired to go out, so we got a pizza on the way back to the hotel and gently wound down to the end of the holiday.

Back to Nice in the morning with my version of the Kiwi's cold (which she'd more or less got over with the help of super-strength French throat spray) developing nicely. On the way back, we stopped in the pub at the end of our road for a proper-sized beer and a bag of properly flavoured crisps before finally going home.

All in all, it was precisely what we needed. I'd definitely go back, too, although the jury's still out on whether it beat Sardinia or not. Photographic evidence will be linked to as soon as the Kiwi uploads the photos from her camera. Reasons why I'm typing this at work will be in my next post...

Friday, 31 August 2007

Holidays

... and so we're off. In 10 minutes that is, but I thought I'd take the final few minutes of the Kiwi's 'getting ready' to knock out a quick blog entry.

Last night's wine tasting went down a storm, by all accounts - they always start the same, fairly subdued and everyone acting a bit nervous, and by the third wine everyone loosens up a bit and starts to interact. Job well done. The success of the tasting somewhat made up for the inevitable depression which followed a meeting with a financial advisor who assessed my position as 'in a bit of a state' and then smugly told me the saving plan he'd followed all his life etc etc etc before returning to the fact that I'm going to die penniless.

Pah.

Anyway, I'm hungover and the Kiwi's got some sort of 'flu going on which has decimated her entire office and is forcing her to speak in a whisper, which makes everything she says sound like a really big secret and I'm so trying to be supportive and caring but I think it's coming off more like I'm just laughing at her, which is sort of true. Bad boyfriend, again.

Aha - she's clothed, made up and hairdone, looking lovely as usual, so I'm guessing this is my cue to shut down the PC... see you in a week!

Wednesday, 29 August 2007

Happy Birthday!

Apparently, blogging is ten years old this year (at some point). Which makes me feel not only tremendously old, but way behind the curve. Thanks be to the Lord for the lovely new Super Furry Animals album to keep my spirits up. Despite the fact that I'm at work at 0800 and alone in the office, for the sole reason that the Kiwi gets up early and thus so do I.

Does get me thinking about the whole blogging thing though. Bloggers always used to really get on my nerves - all that baseless ranting and opinion-mongery - but I came to see it as a way of documenting your own personal experiences for your own record, plus that of those close friends and family you might invite to view.

Personally, I reckon that it's purely the high profile of the medium that's giving it a bad name. It's an open, public media platform, available for free (which is a first in history), so naturally those with an axe to grind will get on board and grind away in full public view. The sort of nasally self-righteous muppet who's more than happy to proclaim forth on any topic in any situation for a bit of attention. Who tends to start sentences with 'What I don't understand is...' followed by an inexpert and poorly-informed view of why they know better than a multi-million pound corporation guided by hundreds of years of direct experience.

So unfortunately the loudest voices in the blogosphere (can't believe I actually used that word) are consequently the most idiotic. It's a shame, really. They're spoiling it for everyone else.

Monday, 27 August 2007

Are we there yet?

For those of you not in the UK, today is a bank holiday, and what I'm doing instead of feeding my beer baby in the pub is sortofworking. I've had to invent a new word for it, because it's not really working, but I am actually doing constructive professional things in between doing this damn thing that Kathryn posted on her blog and has been intermittently occupying my time all morning. I've also been listening to more Pet Shop Boys than is probably healthy, but I'm in a sunny sort of disco mood and have had Se A Vida E going through my head since I woke up, so there you go.

However, apart from doing my expenses form (yay!) and fiddling around on Facebook (damn you facebook), I have actually been working this morning, and the main reason for this is that the Dublin project appears to have slipped another week, sort of. I have found this in the past though - instead of everything being delivered with a triumphant flourish on the due date, it all sort of trickles in over a period of several weeks. This is feeling like the last week of it all though - we've got a fair idea what we're building and how long it'll take, so work could conceivably begin next week.

I'll be involved then, although the build is taking place in the UK, so the visits to Dublin and their accompanying 0430 wake up calls will be less frequent, fortunately. I'm also going to miss the first week of the project because I'll be in Corsica working on my ability to do nothing for hours at a time (which I got quite good at in Sardinia last year). That's ok, as as far as I can see, week one will be all about working out who's sitting where and all the techies making sure their development environment is all working and so on. Nothing I really need to be involved in, I don't think.

One thing I will have to do before hols is give a wine tasting to my colleagues. 30 of them have responded to an invite to one on Thursday evening - normally 10 is a challenge to keep under control, so this could be something of a challenge, but I'm looking forwards to it. Will be a nice way to end the week - although it could make packing on Friday morning something of a challenge.

So, holiday then! Off on Friday, two nights in Nice (must... make... joke...), a week in Corsica and then one night in Cannes on the way back. Well, it's not really on the way back, but it's in the area and the Kiwi's never been. Personally I thought it was pretty dull, but it's a bit iconic I suppose and the train ride down the coast past Antibes is really lovely. Good cocktails at the hotel bars on the Croisette, too...

I can't bloody wait, to be honest. Apart from anything else, I've forsaken beer for the past month or so in an effort to be able to see my toes again, and I'm so looking forwards to that first cold one by the sea. That said, I've noticed a real improvement - I've cut out beer and almost entirely cut out bread lately. I've not really been exercising all that much more, but I'm visibly trimmer, so that's my top dieting tip - drink less beer.

I'm sure there'll be photos and all when we get back, but for now you'll have to make do with one of a pile of unnaturally shiny apples on reception at last week's hotel. They were definitely real: I think they'd been polished.

Sunday, 19 August 2007

Bad boyfriend

I've been told off today. For being a bad boyfriend, not once, but twice. I'm staying at home in penance whilst the Kiwi goes off to watch a film with another kiwi. To think about what I've done.

The second thing that happened was this. I'm in the kitchen, debating whether to finish the Jaffa Cakes in order to throw the box away and make space in the cupboard (honest), when I turned around to see our white duvet cover in the hallway, full of Kiwi and thrashing around somewhat. She'd got herself completely inside it and was giggling quietly to herself. Soon though, giggling turned to a panicky 'I'm getting claustrophobic now - help me. HELP ME!' accompanied by more urgent thrashes and struggling.

I'd love to say that I sprang to the rescue like the valiant boyfriend I am but, dear reader, it saddens me to say that I was paralysed and helpless with laughter, and could do nothing but wait until that lovely little red angry face eventually appeared from under the cover, with words like 'how could you' and 'why didn't you' and 'worst boyfriend in the world' spluttering from it.

The first time was when she called through to me from the living room to the kitchen. It sounded urgent, but I had my hands full (with eggshells, which I hate) and called back 'wait a minute'. It turned out all she wanted was for me to put some music on, but the fact that I'd thought she might've been in terrible danger and yet decided she could wait until I'd dealt with the eggshells (which I hate) was enough to tick off a few brownie points.

So I'm ruminatively finishing the Jaffa Cakes, reflecting on how I've never enjoyed spending time with another human being quite as much as I do with my Kiwi, who's so thoughtful and brilliant and lovely and who gets lost in duvet covers and who talks to her mechanical cat when I'm not there.

I really do love her very much.

Saturday, 18 August 2007

.... and another thing...

I'm doing this a lot, aren't I? Anyway, I just wanted to point out that I've just seen the video to The Smiths 'There Is A Light That Never Goes Out' on TMF, which is a funny little channel that sometimes comes up with some intriguing stuff.

Anyway, as anyone who's ever spent any time in Manchester will know instantly, it's filmed around there (Salford, I believe). And it reminded me how much I love and miss that amazing city - even the boarded up council houses and dodgy industrial areas - there's a familiarity and a melancholy friendliness even in the rusting gasometers and crappy broken up roads. I did once plan to move back there one day...

On another note, the next video TMF served up was Adam Ant's 'Prince Charming', which instantly extinguished any longing thoughts of the north with 'By golly you're right Adam: ridicule is nothing to be scared of!'. It's been a funny old day.

Update etc

So, you've probably noticed that it's been a while since my last entry, and so it has. I've not got bored of this blogging thing, I've been alternately manically busy and avoiding getting online for non-work purposes in a kind of 'laptop brings pain' sort of way. So here I am, with a rare Saturday to myself and in a bit of a communicative mood. Work is finished for the day, having spent this morning trying to get something right that's been plaguing me all week.

On that. One of the major frustrations I'm finding at the moment is that whole thing about just not knowing stuff. There are things that are expected of me which I'm just not being told about, and of course when it turns out that I've not done whatever it was, I end up looking a bit rubbish. There's also the annoying thing about knowing what it is I need to say or communicate, but not knowing the 'proper' ways of doing it. These have been a recurrent themes over the past week or so and have been getting on my nerves somewhat. I think we're almost over the worst though, for now.

This particular phase of this project has slipped by a week, which isn't great news. The Project Manager came back from holiday on Monday (my 30th, incidentally, more on that later) and predictably was appalled by how random it'd all got in his absence. Personally I reckon that properly briefing the team and formally appointing a de facto team leader might've helped, but there you go, what do I know? One more week to go, looks like a bit of a week of absolute hell to me, most of it spent in Ireland with nowhere to hide.

On a more fun note, I turned 30 on Monday, which was horrifying. I'd never really been that bothered about it, but all of a sudden towards the end of last week I was starting to feel like I'd really not got to where I wanted to be in general by this age. I reckon I was being a bit too hard on myself, but it got to me a bit all the same. The pain was eased slightly by an afternoon in the park with some friends on Saturday and lunch at the River Cafe on Monday, which was absolutely tremendous, something I'd wanted to do for years.

The Kiwi, continuing her trend in buying me potentially lethal gifts (last Christmas she had me thrown out of a plane at 15,000ft), has bought me a first helicopter flying lesson. I'm really looking forwards to it - one of my life's ambitions has been to learn to fly a helicopter, so she's done well, I'm amazed and so touched that she's picked up on it. I suppose the only worrying thing about it (apart from the fact that there's no reason to be found in most schools of physics why something like that should actually fly) is that having wished for it for so long I turn out to be rubbish at it. We'll see. I'm bracing myself for my Christmas present, which will no doubt be a 'Beginner's Lion Wrestling' course or something. She's ace - always helping me push my boundaries.

Speaking of continuing trends, I've discovered that for the first time in my life, I'm actually getting fat. This is truly horrific. I've always been slim, and yes, sometimes tended towards a little beer belly, but I've never actually noticed wobbliness. Until now. I've cut out beer (sob), bread (making finding lunch more tricky) and I'm trying to get some exercise in where I can. Which reminds me - must go for a swim. In fact, I think I'll do that right now.

Wednesday, 8 August 2007

Phew

Sorry about that. Feel much better now.

PS - on the whole I'm still really proud of what the company is achieving, what we have done is really good stuff. It'll be even better once it's built...

Rant. Pure, unfettered rant.

There, warned you. I've been in the most appalling mood for the past few days, inspired almost entirely by the people around me and their complete inability to follow instructions. Let me paint you a picture of recent times, starting with a mid-point presentation to the client at the end of last week.

All the way through this project, I've been clear to the creative team what the priorities are from the client's point of view, and how the fact that we've understood what these priorities are is crucial to maintaining our credibility. Despite this fact, two key points were missed off the presentation. I mean, so key that the client had to spend about an hour going over them again, pointedly looking at me with a sort of 'are you some kind of idiot' look on his face.

Coming out of the presentation, I mildly voiced my concerns to the group, and we settled on redesigning the whole thing the following day. That was actually quite productive, and I thought we were getting somewhere. We did, to an extent. The plan was to re-present to the client (who's on holiday - we presented over the internet) today, with more fully formed designs and technical solution.

Everything turned out well, except for the fact that we presented a homepage design without any advertising, one of the key points missed off the first session. Cue me going very red-faced and coming up with a number of excuses and again, looking like a bit of a fool.

So, whilst we're more or less back on track and I'm reasonably sure of getting this all sorted by the end of next week, I'm not exactly loving some of my colleagues right now. Stuff like that, by which I mean blatantly not listening to briefs and following one's own agenda, really doesn't help speed things along. It doesn't help that my 30th birthday falls right in the middle of it all, and I don't think I'll be able to properly relax with all this going on, in fact I know I won't be able to.

Still, all good experience I guess. Off to Dublin again tomorrow, thankfully just for a day trip, back there again next week for a couple of days. Can't decide if I want to stay on this project after this phase... jury's out on that one.

Thursday, 2 August 2007

Must... blog...

Very quick one, as falling asleep on keyboard. Somehow wearing self out without seeming to be terribly productive. Hotel was lovely, lunch today at Tate Modern was too (albeit rushed), going to Manchester this weekend hooray, only in Dublin for a day trip next Thursday hooray again, mind leaking out of ears due to uncontrollable heaving beast of a project - booooo.

More comprehensive stuff next time, promise. When I've had some sleep. And maybe some of that EPO stuff that gets cyclists to the top of hills. Should be able to get me to week 5, I reckon...

Saturday, 28 July 2007

Tales of Mayhem

This week's been one of those which is a bit like crashing whilst snowboarding. You're careering along at a fair pace and all of a sudden, nothing quite goes wrong as such, but for some reason the world's going upside down and round and round and things are hitting you from all sides and everything's white and then it stops. And you think 'Am I still alive?', before gingerly picking yourself up and doing it all again.

There's a few reasons for this. One is that the whole project is gathering pace, and now we're properly into the thick of it. Once you get into the detail you tend to find out a lot about the people around you - how much they're really involved, whether they're actually bothered about delivery, how good they actually are at their job, what their personal expectations from this are and so on. Can be a tense time.

The other reason is that the Project Manager went on holiday yesterday and that sort of puts me in that position. Which is fine and all, but to continue the analogy-fest, it's a bit like being in the passenger seat of an 18-wheeler and looking over to find the driver's jumped out. I'm intending that when he comes back in two weeks' time he'll find himself surplus to requirements, but I'm not sure I can quite pull off that sort of coup just yet.

So the past week has been productive, tiring, a fair bit of fun and generally ok. Thought I'd share with you the view from our office in Dublin, too. It's rather nice, can be distracting sometimes. I've also managed to upgrade our hotel slightly, possibly a bit further than I thought: one of the chaps who came over last week asked me to get a better hotel next time, as we'd been relying on the client to sort that element of the logistics and although the hotel's alright, it's not great. I gently mentioned this to the client, who said that they only had an account with the one we'd been staying at so we might as well sort it ourselves. I found the next closest hotel on a map and asked our travel elves to book it for me, which they did.
Turns out it's Bono's hotel. Well done me. Thought I'd get a bit of stick about this but apparently it's a sort of thing they do at our place. The thinking being that if you're being forced to spend time on your own, in a foreign city and away from your loved ones etc, you ought really to at least be able to do this in a pleasant environment. Round of applause for my employers, please.
In other news, everyone should check out www.wefeelfine.org. It's ace.

Sunday, 22 July 2007

And here we go again...

Another 0430 start tomorrow, shudder. It really does leave you feeling a bit dislocated all week, that sort of thing, and dropping out of my normal routine does tend to leave me somewhat ruffled. I'm sure I'll learn to deal with it in time, the rest of the team seem to manage ok.

Given the relative silence from me this week I've decided to jot a little entry down now (whilst telling the Kiwi that I'm working, which I sort of am. Sort of.). You see, we have but one ethernet connection in the Irish office, between numerous people, and the connection in the hotel is appalling, so my opportunities to do interweb stuff are a bit limited. I'd hoped to be able to give nightly updates or something, but there you go. Oh, and if you think I'm doing this from my phone, stop right there. It took me 20 minutes to write an email the other day.

On the whole it's been a productive week. I'm fortunate enough to be working with a very experienced Project Manager who's giving me a fair bit of guidance, which is great as I've not worked as a Business Analyst before. There's a certain discipline to it, which seems to be aimed at coaching people for whom analysis doesn't come naturally through the whole thing. It's a case of putting fairly rigid processes around what for me is a pretty natural way of thinking, so once I'm through the learning curve of understanding those processes I should be ok. End of next week, I reckon. It's sort of fun, in a challenging kind of way.

One of the things I'm having to learn about at the moment is unions. See, as a child of the Thatcher era, I know nothing of unions in practice. All I know about them is that getting rid of them left a lot of working people rather exposed but meant that more senior people could make more money, or something like that. Anyway, the unions are alive and well in Ireland, and one has to tread extremely carefully when entering a business to potentially effect change. I've horrible visions of the Irish fondness for kneecappings and the like, but I'm told that doesn't happen nearly as much these days.

I did actually write a big long blog post last week, typing it into Notepad and intending to paste it in when I next got online, but I decided not to expose you all to what was a fairly downbeat entry about how bored I was and how over this whole working away from home thing I was. True, I was getting a bit sick of crap TV, no swimming and no Kiwi, and any city's pretty much the same old boring nonsense when you're there on your own (as I was for much of last week, effectively), but I decided in the cold light of day to count my blessings etc. I went for a run the next morning south through the canals of Dublin, with all the hedges sparkly with dew and the morning sun just starting to warm up the cobbles and everything sort of popped into perspective.

Flying back into London on Thursday was a real eye-opener, can't tell you how good it was to get back to this city which, despite all its failings I really am starting to love. Was truly amazing to walk out of the tube later that day into the Kiwi's arms and get back HOME, where there are unthreatening pubs and normal money and decent food and reliable internet connections. She made a brilliant paella on Friday night too, fantastic thing that she is, having batted those lovely lashes at the fishmonger in Notting Hill and come home with some of the fattest tiger prawns I've ever seen. I'm a very lucky chap.

So, lunch today at the best pub in West London, the Temperance just by Putney Bridge with some friends of ours who've just announced that one of them's in a family way, and then an early night and doing it all again next week - we have pivotal workshops Tuesday and Wednesday, including dinner out on Tuesday which apparently might stand a chance of changing my opinion of Dublin cuisine. Presumably this means it's not in one of the thousands of kebab shops which seem to be the cornerstone of Irish foodiness. Here's hoping...

Tuesday, 17 July 2007

Dublin 1

Very quick one today as I'm supposed to be working really and have a meeting in 23 mins, but I wanted to drop a note in to say the I'm installed in Dublin and about to embark on this project proper.

After getting up at 0445 yesterday morning and flying over here, we got straight into the client's offices and went through all the admin stuff you have to do when working on a client site; security passes, laptop access etc and went through a series of project kick off meetings, resulting in a very tired and head-spun me stumbling off to the hotel later that afternoon in no mood for anything except a hot bath and a big soft bed.

Bit clearer this morning having had some sleep, went for a run down the Liffey for an hour or so at 0600 and very lovely it was too on this sunny, crisp morning. I got thinking about river cities on the way out and back, the Liffey's a very quiet, slow river, very calm and inky black and so still you can see the insects rippling the surface in places. Compared to the churning, milky, rolling Seine or the purposeful power of the Thames it's really quite sleepy and village-like. Got me wondering if you can define the sense of a city through the character of its river, which is the sort of not-entirely-nonsense-but-nearly I'm prone to dreaming up whilst running.

I know I've only been here a day, but I've not really got the measure of this town yet (it's my first time here). Architecturally it's a weird mish-mash of styles which don't really compliment each other at all; this feeling carries on into every aspect of the place creating a sense of laissez-faire and general lack of aesthetics which I'm not finding too endearing at the moment. Perhaps I'm being too harsh, but it still feels like a bit of a frontier town, with everyone building their own thing regardless of context - don't they have town planners here?

Anyway, I'll have more of a wander round later in the week. Everyone says this place is wonderful; I'm never one to take the received view without finding out for myself though. The client is great though, very welcoming, very forthcoming and supportive, and in many ways we've a totally blank sheet to work from, and a 7th floor office with a gorgeous view to work in. Fingers crossed this could turn out to be a very cool project to work on... although four days a week without my Kiwi is a very high price to pay.

Saturday, 14 July 2007

Oh, and another thing

I should point out two more things:

1. This particular pigeon actually looked in fairly good nick, unlike some of the scabbier ones you get in London. It is Kensington after all.

2. Said pigeon has been perched on the ledge outside out kitchen window glaring at the Kiwi and fixing her with 'that look' all morning. Evil little bugger's really freaking her out.

The Incident With The Pigeon

Well, what a busy morning we've had. Picture the scene - I'm still in bed, reading a truly awful bit of chick-lit I found under the bed for want of anything better to read. The Kiwi's on the phone to her dad in Australia. We hear a bit of a commotion going on in the kitchen and, still on the phone, the Kiwi wanders through to find out what's going on. I remain in bed, pondering quite how chivalrous it is for me to leave her to investigate the goings on in our kitchen.

Cue reentry of the Kiwi into our bedroom, wide-eyed, screaming and generally in a state of abject terror, poor father on the other end of the phone and the other side of the world wondering what the dickens is going on.

"OHMYGODTHERESAPIGEONINTHEKITCHENGETRIDOFITGETRIDOFIT"

Now, as I think I've mentioned before, we live on the third floor. Our kitchen window is a sash, and looks out onto the back of the building and that of the building in the next street over. The sash was open this morning, and a great stupid flying rat had managed to get itself into our kitchen and was perched awkwardly on the top of the bottom sash, which was raised up to more or less the top of the window.

Those who know the Kiwi well will know that she has a bit of a thing about birds. For me, this is the first time I've actually encountered a genuine phobia up close. The difference between a mild dislike (oh, I don't care much for birds) and a phobia (running away, shaking, tears) is quite striking. It's a fairly serious and alarming thing to see someone you care about in such distress and I hope this doesn't come across as poking fun at it.

Anyway, back to the story. Still in a complete state, I shut the Kiwi in the bedroom where I think her dad tried to talk her down a bit. Got a dressing gown on and went through to the kitchen where the poor thing was perching on the sash, supporting itself against the window with its wing and eyeing me nervously. A bit of armwaving and verbal abuse later (from me, directed at the bird) and a few headlong flights into the window pane (the bird, not me), it was off.

So the Kiwi is calmed, stops quaking a few minutes later. Finishes conversation with father. I get in the shower to shave my head, as I tend to do of a Saturday morning. 1 minute in, knock on the door. Woeful face appears through it.

"It's pooed."

Histrionics begin again, quietened down and sent to the shop to get breakfast whilst I 'deal with it'.

And so out of the shower, looking like I'm about to have brain surgery with about a quarter of my head shaven and a towel wrapped round me, disinfecting the kitchen. Mentally jacking up my brownie point score.

I think we're ok now - post-breakfast, showered, reading paper and with a kitchen that even C-Difficile wouldn't survive in. I'm off to Dublin next week with work (FOR A MONTH), so you should expect a fair bit of bloggage during that time as I'll be lonely and bored. I'm back for weekends though, so it's not too bad and I'm sort of excited despite being a bit terrified. More on that later - it's lunchtime and I'm hungry again.

Sunday, 8 July 2007

Eh?

Weird. Really really weird. You know how I've been building up for the past 7 weeks to this earth-shatteringly important presentation which was supposed to happen last Thursday? Well, it didn't happen. Things all went, in the words of our MD: 'a bit Roald Dahl'. Took me a while to work out the 'Tales of the Unexpected' link but there you go, pay attention, 007.

What went on, basically, is that whilst we've been beavering away working on a spanky retail solution for a media entity, said media entity was considering alternative options itself. And as happens has decided to go down a completely different route from the one we were working on. This isn't entirely a bad thing, as they're still keen to work with us on whatever it turns out to be, but it's still mildly galling to have worked on something for ages and have it all turn to custard in the final couple of days.

So, the poor Project Manager will be on this for a week longer than she expected, whilst I go on to start work on a really-quite-exciting project for a bunch of chaps in Ireland. Being sanguine about it for a minute I suppose it was a good first project - plenty of experience gained but as nothing was actually produced, nothing to be judged by in months to come. And we did get paid for it, so it'll all count at bonus time.

The Kiwi and I have been dead cultured this weekend. Friday evening we went to the much talked about Anthony Gormley exhibition at the Hayward, 'Blind Light'. Now I've always been a bit of a Gormley fan, ever since I first saw 1991's 'Field'. I'm not sure what it is about his stuff that attracts me - his writings on his work always leave me cold, but the work itself really gets me in quite an alarming way.

'Blind Light' is no exception. The titular piece is quite astounding (the glass box filled with a thick white fog, into which you walk), a genuinely unique and extremely disorientating experience. Visibility is about 18 inches, so you can see about to your waist once you're right in there. It's strangely calming and I really quite enjoyed it. I'm not sure what to draw from it though, the novelty factor sort of overwhelms any deeper reading, which is a criticism I sometimes do have about showy installation work.

The other bits of the show were also typically brilliant, although overshadowed by the party piece. I was absolutely transfixed by 'Event Horizon', which consisted of a number of casts of Gormley's body placed on top of buildings within a 1.5km square from the gallery. Once you're outside on one of the gallery's sculpture terraces, you begin noticing the figures, all of which are turned to face the terrace that you're on (there are a few of them). There's this really eerie sense of being watched, of a silent army of witnesses impassively staring at you.

There's also something incredibly melancholy about these chaps all lonely and exposed on the tops of buildings - in a way the sympathy this stirs up cancels out the unease they generate, leaving an odd but delicious confusion and mixed sentiment. It's also great to be able to see this piece from all around that part of London - every now and then you'll notice one brooding down at you from a rooftop and some of the initial wonder and excitement you experienced on the first view will briefly come creeping back.

There must be something in the air at the moment. Yesterday afternoon whilst drinking a bit more rum than was decent (Havana Club 7yo though, so it's sort of allowed) in a cuban bar off Kensington High Street I got transfixed by a snippet of Shelley in an article in the Guardian and properly went off on one to the Kiwi who presumably thought I'd finally gone entirely mad.

And that's the lot of late - we spent most of today in Kew Gardens at a gentle family event laid on by work, which was lovely and sunny, now I'm blogging from the kitchen (I'm so cutting edge) whilst roasting a chicken and trying to remember how to make cauliflower cheese. On the whole, stuff is good.

Saturday, 30 June 2007

Final week

Six weeks have flown by in a whirl of new people, places, numbers, processes and clothes. I'm not totally sure I'd really looked this far into the future when I started (even seeing the end of the first week was a struggle), so everything's seeming like it's all becoming very real all of a sudden. I suppose this is the reality of consulting; we'll deliver the multi-million pound business model to the client at the end of next week (Thursday morning, to be precise) and then I'll be onto something else, another client, another site, another project.

Provided our proposal's taken up, the development elves will take our place, filling the client's offices with computers, wires and gadgetry whilst they build the shiny new commerce platform we've been sketching out in Visio. While all this happens, I'll be somewhere else dreaming up big dreams for another client.

I know this sounds like a dead cert for Pseud's Corner, but the thought struck me whilst walking along the river yesterday and the sunset was colouring a damp Embankment that sort of nicotine yellow and Ryan Adams' new album was playing (specifically 'Two') and for a few minutes everything seemed silent and calm - in these sort of moments things seem to fall into sharp relief, and I noticed the somewhat nebulous quality of my role. Still, pays the bills and keeps me out of trouble I suppose. And I do enjoy it, very much.

So, the reason I was wandering thataways was that I was en route to meet my old boss in a bar in the Oxo Tower, who spectacularly failed to turn up (not that I was that surprised as he'd been somewhat cryptic about whether he would or not). Not to worry, enjoyed the sunset overlooking the Thames with a couple of Peronis and chuckled at the typically splenetic Evening Standard until the Kiwi arrived. Dinner at a so-so pizza place on Gabriel's Wharf, quick look round the newly refurbed Royal Festival Hall (considering membership, decided to probably not), then a final pint in a horrid pub on Villiers St as the lovely Gordon's was rammed and then home.

So, today I'm doing a bit of work, nothing strenuous, then off to drop in briefly on a birthday party and tomorrow's lunch in Sarf London with the family who so kindly put me up for the first few months of me living in London. Writing this has also reminded me that I really should be looking around for something else to work on post-next week. I'm not sure how this works but something tells me I'd better find out pretty quickly...

Tuesday, 26 June 2007

'Normality' returns

From what the Kiwi's told me, New York is a rather splendid place which apparently I'd lurve, must pencil that one in for a sneaky work trip or something. My new masters do have an office there, or so I hear. One can dream....

It's good to have her back. Apart from the empty fridge and full washing baskets, I really was starting to miss her and so on - I'm sure you picked up on that so I'll not go into it all over again. Anyway, weekend was lovely, did a wine tasting for some friends of friends on Saturday which was predictably raucous - these things always descend into anarchy some time around the fourth or fifth wine. I'm available for hire should anyone fancy trying it on themselves.

Week 6 begins with sheer, full-on panic. This project's reaching fever pitch and I'm starting to adopt a sort of pained, hunted expression most of the time and am constantly fretting about having missed out a number or something. A proper assessment of how it's really gone won't be available until it's finished though, so watch this space pop pickers.

In answer to Tingo, the fashion thing went very well thanks - got some hot insider info from a friend on Thursday night so could be reasonably smug on Friday - I think I might be asked to properly present to the whole biz at some point. Am also angling to get onto one of the several clothing-related projects we're working on too.

Right - to work. Bah. I'm slightly hungover from meeting up with an ex-colleague last night in Covent Garden. Which was ace - The Cove Bar is a little haven of normality in the tourist hell that is the piazza.

Friday, 22 June 2007

Quickie

A few quick words before bed (remember, that timestamp isn't accurate for some reason - it's actually 00:45 on Friday morning, have been up chatting on MSN for hours).

SHE'S BACK TOMORROW! And once again all will be well - can't tell you how much I'm looking forwards to seeing her again - I've tried to downplay it a bit for the sake of a less sugary blog read but there you go - sugary warts and all. Ewww. So my beloved will be on a plane right about now, heading for touchdown about the time I wake up tomorrow.

This week has seemed reasonably productive, in the way that a month spent prising a teeny diamond out of solid rock seems productive. It's been mighty intense, tricky and we feel like we're moving forwards in measurements of millimetres, but at least we're moving forwards. Final presentation minus two weeks.

Marigold update: they're now such monsters they're falling over in light breezes. I've had to wedge the pot up with the Kiwi's herb trough. I'm a victim of my own success, I think.

Other stuff - had two significantly ego-puncturing moments recently:

1. Walking down High St Kensington with the Kiwi, woman strides up to her thrusting a leaflet and says "do you need your eyes testing, love?"
2. Bought two pairs of trousers later that day, the only two out of several my size I tried on to fit me. Later noted that both pairs have no fewer than four (four!) trusses and fastenings intended to keep my burgeoning beer baby in check.

My only conclusion: I *am* the rightful heir to Jabba the Hutt's throne. Might as well learn to wash myself with a rag on a stick right now.

Monday, 18 June 2007

All... by... my... seeeeeellf

It's all very well having a wonderful successful and important girlfriend who jollies off to New York, but frankly it does leave me slightly out of sorts. I suppose you'd call it loneliness, but it's more fun to just get grumpy about it. Bah.

But to be honest I am missing her like I really didn't expect. I kind of thought it'd be a time to do lots of stuff and, y'know, generally be dead productive but realistically it's mainly been a lot of sitting around guffawing at the internet and going to work, sort of.

On the work note, it's all going a bit mental again following Friday's lull, and we're painfully aware that we've got less than three weeks til we present the final product,which really means two weeks as we'll need a week of tweaking and final design work to get it shipshape. Personally I'm not really 100% on this; I reckon they're on a hiding to nothing and haven't really got the commitment to really make this a success - an opinion which, whilst unpopular, I've been keen to express. In gentle, non-threatening terms, that is. When one is a retailer one can throw ones weight around and generally be a bit of an ogre; when one is being paid many thousands of pounds for ones opinion, it needs to be put across with some delicacy. Another learning experience there, I reckon...

So, on the floral front, as you can see my masterpieces continue to thrive and we have no fewer than 10 (ten!!) buds on their way to add to the four we've already got. This is ace - although to be honest I'm not sure how such a tiny pot of what's basically mud can support quite so much flowerage. Perhaps this is one of those things one shouldn't question.

It's all going quite well then. The Kiwi's back on Friday morning, so plenty to do between now and then, including setting up a wine tasting for the weekend and working on a presentation about the fashion industry (now sure how I got myself into that one). Oooh, and I bought some shoes last week off the internet, how daring of me. Some tan round-toed semi-brogue type things which were in the sale at ASOS for a mere £19 - they arrived today and ladies and gentlemen I think we have a hit. Which I sort of didn't expect. Amazing. Now to buy some clothes to go with them.

Thursday, 14 June 2007

Addendum

Two things I've realised on reading that last post:

1. We will be doing some work in the afternoon. I have no intention of staying in the pub from lunchtime, it just sounded like that. Gone are the days when you could actually do that sort of thing.

2. For some reason my Last.FM widget isn't working. I've been listening to tons of stuff lately no matter what that thing on the right says; if you're interested, my profile is here.

First milestone

Ok, quick work update. Mid-project presentation this morning with about a million people from the client and no shortage of people from our place, including the CEO and assorted senior chaps. This is basically the point in the seven week process where we say where we've got to, describe the approach we're taking and open it all to debate.

Now this might sound all huggy and friendly, but realistically this is crunch time. We are presenting everything from the commercial model to the processes and people involved in operating what we're implementing. We're talking about a business which will need to turn over hundreds of millions of pounds in a few years' time. It's worth a fair bit to my company so if this meeting goes well, we're half way there.

It went well. The client engaged with us enough to show they were listening and taking us seriously, we got plenty of interaction and some very positive comments, and to top it off, the main sponsor of the project made it abundantly clear at the end that he was very happy with what he'd seen.

Marvellous. Much thanks from internal people (including the CEO, who's ace, btw) and the sheer relief of a job well done. This far, at least. We do have three weeks to go and a whole lot of work to be done and difficult questions to be answered in that time. Nonetheless I'm happy with the result of my first presentation - by my reckoning, I and the project manager did very well indeed.

So a moment's relaxation is called for. Tomorrow will be a bit of regrouping, one or two catch up meetings, lunch from Borough Market (I'm heading for the cassoulet myself), perhaps a pint or two in the Market Porter and then home for a quiet one with the Kiwi before she jollies off to New York for a week to do massively important stuff with really important people. Dead proud of her I am: my girlfriend's going to New York on a business trip. That's how important she is.

And the rest of the marigolds are flowering.

Wednesday, 13 June 2007

Coming out

So having recently left the entertainment business, I recently bought the first two CDs I've bought in around two years. An odd experience, and to be honest one which compounded my lack of faith in digital music as a mass format. I use iTunes and WMP as my media players, and have a Creative Zen as a portable player. At some point in the future I might consider going back to an iPod, so I need my music library as MP3s. Which means buying CDs, unless I'm after something that happens to be available as such, which is relatively unlikely. I don't steal music, so CDs are my only option.

Anyway, I'm skirting the point. The confessional nature of this post is brought on by the realisation that something I've always suspected about myself needs to come out. I need to come out of the closet as a bit of a country music fan. One of the CDs which arrived last night was an earlier album from the lovely Neko Case, whose 'Fox Confessor Brings The Flood' is one of my all time faves. That particular album is, as they say, 'a little bit country, a little bit rock 'n' roll', but this one, 'The Virginian' is proper a-wailin' and a-toe-kickin' Dolly Parton / Carlene Carter COUNTRY music. And I rather like it.

Well that was a surprise. I might go out and buy a rhinestone jacket or something, not really sure where this leaves me.

FYI - the other CD was Jenny Wilson's 'Love and Youth', which I've not really listened to yet, but bought on the strength of 'Let My Shoes Lead Me Forward', off the latest Modular 'Leave Them All Behind' mix. And also, can't help but mention this, I'm not that far from the entertainment industry that I can't get into the premiere of the new Fantastic Four film last night, and the aftershow to boot. Celeb-tastic... although it has brought me a bit more into the size zero debate as Oh My God they're all practically emaciated and frankly that's not attractive. I'm talking to you Jessica Alba: eat more pies.

... and now to work. It's actually 0704; the clock on this blog seems to be out. More later...

Saturday, 9 June 2007

More gardening, dinner out, weekend



It's slowly opening... and developing a lovely deep blood red colouring alongside the yellow. There are about 7 more buds coming up too - although I'm a tad concerned for the health of my marigold as it seems to start looking a bit despondent if I miss watering it for as little as 24 hours. In the background you can see a bit more of the Kiwi's herbs, which are starting to look visibly cowed by my amazing gardening efforts.

On to other things. For one reason or another we've not been going out as much of late, and the other day decided that as we couldn't actually remember the last time we went out for dinner we should do so. A dinner party last night was cancelled and so at amazingly short notice I managed to get us a table at the recently opened and Michelin-starred Arbutus on Frith St. It was sort of a 'hooray for new job' thing.

Oh. My. God. Best meal out ever? Possibly. We couldn't fault this place, from the relaxed but supremely professional staff to the really really clever habit of offering more or less everything on their judciously chosen wine list by the 250ml carafe... and of course the stellar and *shock* reasonably priced food.

I'm going to make you both hungry and jealous now. I kicked off with a squid and mackerel 'burger' with a delicately dressed light salad - whopping chunks of meaty mackerel surrounded by perfectly cooked (ie still tender) squid pieces. The Kiwi opted for the Dorset crab salad, fresh as a daisy and with a nice dollop of garlic mayonnaise to set it off.

Next up, Elwy valley lamb for me, sweet and melting, and accompanied by its sweetbreads and a couple of baby artichokes. On the other side of the table was a hefty slab of sea bass which by all accounts was about as good as it gets.

Wine-wise, an Albarino (Spain) sorted out the seafood starters, a Kiwi Pinot and a 1er Cru Santenay worked wonders with the main event; chosen as much for their affinity with the dishes as for a good old fashioned NZ vs France Pinot-off. Personally I reckon it was a draw. The Kiwi felt otherwise, but there you go.

Desserts (Cashel Blue and Mothais cheeses for me, chocolate soup - more of a warm mousse really - and caramelised milk ice-cream for her), liqueurs and coffees followed. And the bill.

Now, let's see. London (Soho, specifically). Michelin star. Hard to get into. Rave reviews all over the place, excellent wine list, top-notch ingredients. By any normal standards you'd be starting at £100 a head, and with our lording it up a bit, surfing the top end of the wine list and sneakily finishing with a 15yo Armagnac, you'd be pushing £150 each. It turned out about half that, and you really could've got away with £50 apiece without too much trouble. Amazing.

So there you go. A little luxury that turned out not to be all that expensive, which has to be about one of the best things in the entire world. To be honest, it was worth the full price just to see the look on my girlfriend's face on the first mouthful of that dessert...

And so to the weekend; currently contemplating breakfast to the sounds of the brilliant Scott Matthews, will be heading to the shops later on to continue my never-ending hunt for trousers. Work? Let's not go there, it's the weekend. All good though - big week next week.

Thursday, 7 June 2007

It's happening!


Now, I wasn't going to do this until it'd fully opened, but I'm just a bit too excited about it - my first marigold is opening! I'll post a few more pics once it's properly open, and probably take them on a better camera, but here you go.
I know it's not the most manly thing in the world to get all excited about a little flower that you've grown from seed but trust me, this has taken bloody ages and plenty of TLC from yours truly over the past months (months!) so it's a bit of a momentous occasion. I wanted to prove to myself that I could grow stuff, as throughout my whole life I've shied away from it having once killed a couple of house plants in my youth. How growed up do I feel now? Tremendous. What you can't see next to my lovely flower is the Kiwi's pot - full of rocket and chives, which are both lovely but are now frankly overshadowed by my majestic Marigold, which I'm sure will be the envy of the neighbourhood before too long.

Tuesday, 5 June 2007

Head : Boom

So, half way through Week 3 (I'm as old as my first project and am tending to have an all-too obvious measuring point as a result), I'm feeling strangely calm. The project manager on this one is less so, but she's got nothing to worry about, I'm sure. At least, I keep telling her (and myself) that...

It's been a while since my last post - longer than I'd hoped - mainly as by the time I get home I'm KNACKERED and can't look my laptop in the eye without feeling guilty about how much there is left to do before we present at the end of Week 7. Doing this much thinking has been a bit of a shock to me - it feels like I've gone from mentally running a 5k once a week to attempting a full marathon every day in full view of the olympic council. Although were that the case I'd still find time to ask what that godforsaken logo is all about.

I'm still enjoying it though. Tomorrow morning we have a bit of an update with our MD who's sponsoring this project internally, so things may be different after that, but I'm quietly confident things will be ok. Thinking about it, you could say that the honeymoon period is wearing off, and I'm starting to become aware that what we're doing here is really quite serious so I'd better like, do some, like, 'work' and all.

Anyway, more on this later in the week, with any luck. The Kiwi has wonderfully made dinner and I'm being very rude still typing whilst it's ready and on the table. So I'm told.

Monday, 28 May 2007

Week Two...

... and it's a four-day week, how wonderful. Very chilled weekend, finishing up on the sofa with a light dinner - the Kiwi's made some world-beating potato salad with some chives we've been coaxing into life over the past few weeks. Having never successfully grown anything in my life this is a momentous occasion. The other day I used some thyme which has been growing on my windowsill - can't tell you how proud I was. God I'm getting old.

Actually it's more like a three-day week, as Friday is one of the six-weekly 'community days' that my new employer likes to throw. I'm quite looking forwards to it - it's an opportunity to get involved in seminars and discussion groups with the rest of the consultants, basically a way of ensuring that the wealth of knowledge in the business is distributed as evenly as possible. Consultants rarely socialise when not on the same project, as we tend to be onsite with clients most of the time, so this seems like a pretty good idea I reckon.

As the new boy I need all the help I can get, so I'll be there all eager-eyed, notebook in hand and pencil poised to capture all the words of wisdom I can.

However, before you start thinking I'm strolling down easy street in this new role, my colleague and I have to write up a reasonably detailed ecommerce plan for one of the UK's biggest news corps by Thursday night, which although I'm reasonably confident about it at this stage, is no small ask as there are potentially millions of quid at stake one way or another. No pressure, then... fortunately we're talking about the nuts and bolts of retail here so I'm more or less in my comfort zone.

Less so with the nuts and bolts of consulting. In my previous lives, an hour spent slacking off a bit yielded nothing more serious than a bit more work to do later in the week; a few days extra on a project meant annoying someone more senior but could usually be explained away and forgotten about. Things are different now - slipping a day can add several grand to a project; that extra hour spent MSNing someone is an hour the client's paying for... and if you come off your billable project to give some time to someone else as a favour, your bonus will be directly affected. This is all very new to me and initially a bit freaky and all so very growed up.

So how does all this feel? Brilliant, is the honest answer. Like the way you ache slightly when leaving the gym for the first time in too long, I'm exhausted. The sheer mental effort of being on form for 8 hours a day is something I'm (slightly shamefully) just not used to, but I'm loving it all the same. I'm being made to feel like the experience of working in retail for the past 15 years is finally worth something to somebody.

Along with all this, I'm slowly realising, an old thing is raising its ugly head again. I can't cruise in this job. I can't drift or tread water. I need to be responsible for myself, and in control of what goes on. Self-responsibility, eh? Let's see if I can get this one cracked whilst still in my twenties... now that would be an achievement.

Monday, 21 May 2007

Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa

Talk about feet not touching the ground - I was in front of clients at 1100 this morning, no time for induction, straight into it. Naturally I sat there for two hours like a stunned rabbit and didn't say a word. Way to go, newly-fledged business consultant, really knocked them dead.

Anyway, sniffly man-cold and muteness notwithstanding, it looks like I've definitely made the right choice in the move. First impressions speak of a bunch of highly intelligent, insightful and experienced people who're all more than happy to share all this wonderfulness - I'm sure the honeymoon period will wear off at some point but right now I'm sort of in awe of all this - someone asked my opinion today and not only seemed to actually care what I had to say, they seemed to take my feedback to heart.

That sort of thing rarely happens on the client side. This is a genuine eye-opener for me. So add to that a working laptop and email account being in place prior to my arrival and I'm sold.

On another note - mentioned my lovely girlfriend the Kiwi in my last post, very remiss of me not to expand... together for an amazing 2-and-a-bit years, living together for just over a year of that, sickeningly happy and pondering a move to New Zealand at some point in the not too distant future. She has, as always, been unbelievably supportive since I've started looking for a new job, including dealing with gloom and grumpiness and generally atypical behaviour during the process. Love? God yes.