Well, It's just under a week to go before I pack my Microsoft
throwing devices (MSDN and Channel9 Guys), my box of Branflakes and my Coffee
machine under my arm and walk out the door after 8 short years and 8 shorter
months.
I am taking a break before I fully enter the 'identity metaverse' but it would
appear that I am not going to have much of a break as it would appear that I
feel the urge to metaphorically change to fifth gear before starting my new job.
I am going to be spending the next couple of weeks (when not changing my son's awfully
ripe nappies) taking stock on what I want to get out of the next 5 years. My
new job is going to be very exciting but none the less very challenging.
I've been following for the last months or so what some are
doing to 'make themselves a better developer' and think it's time that I did
something along the same lines. As of next Friday I will have the first 'free'
time I’ve had since Ryan was born and I plan to immerse
myself in books on Management style, OpenID, Cardspace and Identity in general.
As a side, I’m half way through PeopleWare by Tom DeMarco and
Timothy Lister (I appear to be the only one who hasn’t read it) and it would
seem that I have fallen deep into one of their classifications. Hello, My name is David and I am a workaholic. I am one who has reached the end of a major
project and his tether. The project rolled out very successfully due to in no
small part the 60hr weeks that I have pulled pretty much since February. I love
what I do with a passion, every aspect of it, but I have not really managed my
work/life balance very well recently – and indeed there is a similar pattern
over my professional career. I can relate very closely to what Tom and Timothy
say in their book about demands, quality, productivity and turnover – kinda case
in point is that I am now leaving a job that I loved.
So, I now recognise that the way I work is bad – or do I – I’ve
just spent the last couple of paragraphs talking about what I am going to do
during my time off and low and behold isn’t it work related.
So Doc, tell it to me straight, is it terminal?
</David Christiansen>
Glasgow, UK