Winter Storm Now, Blizzard Later

(Feb 10, 7:30am): Woke up to 8″ of wet, heavy snow with a small layer of sleet.  Still snowing.  Later today, the wind will pick up, and we’ll have blizzard conditions.

(Feb 10, 12pm): Still snowing hard.  Wind has picked up.  Think I’ll wait ’til its over before shoveling again.

(Feb 10, 2pm): Snowing less, blowing more.  T and I just shoveled another 8″-10″ from the main walk and the end of the driveway.  She also brushed off the cars.  Screw the sidewalks (for now).  We had an idea… crank the house heat up to 80 degrees, mix margaritas, put on our swim suits, and sit in front of the HDTV with a slide show of beach photos.

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It’s Snowing Again…

(Feb 9, 5:45pm): It started this afternoon.  We’ve got 2″-3″ already.  Baltimore County has declared a snow emergency so the snow clearing machines can get to the secondary streets.

UPDATE (Feb 9, 10:30pm): Snowing steadily.  4″-6″ on the ground so far.  Supposed to gain in intensity over night and then have 40-50mph gusts of wind tomorrow.

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Uncle! 10″-20″ more ?!?!?!?!?!

OMG. We have another winter storm warning. It started a few days ago as 4″-6″. Since then, it has steadily increased to the point where we now expect another 10″-20″ before most of the snow from the weekend has even been removed.
I drove in to work this morning. Dumb idea. Slush, ice, and blocked lanes. Stupid, stupid drivers – too fast, too much turning, too much brakes. I’m working from home for the next 2 (3? 4? 10?) days. I don’t want to die for my company.

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Blizzard 2010 Photos

Here are some photos from the end of the day yesterday.  The sun came out just before sunset.  Today is bright and sunny and I liberated the CR-V, so we are no longer stranded.  We never lost power, although others did.

Blizzard2010

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20″+ and Still Snowing

At 8am this morning, we had 20″ inches or more, drifting quite deep.  I shoveled the front steps and walk and knocked the snow off the top of the Miata.  I was worried that the weight of the snow might cave in the soft roof.  However, the wind kept the snow down to about 8″-10″ there, so I guess I didn’t have to worry.

It’s still snowing steadily, but not hard.  I’m sure we’ll be outside shoveling a number of times.  It’s pretty heavy snow.  Good packing for snowballs and snowmen.

UPDATE (Feb 6, 2:30pm): At least 26″ have fallen, and it’s still snowing.  A bunch of us in the neighborhood got together and shoveled channels between our houses to facilitate the movement of children, dogs, and alcoholic beverages.

UPDATE (Feb 6, 4:00pm): It has stopped snowing, finally.  We got somewhere close to 30″ total.  I’ll post pictures later this weekend.

UPDATE (Feb 6, 7:00pm): The blizzard is over.  The sun came out a bit between 5 and 6:30.  Tomorrow, low 30’s and sunshine.  On Tuesday, we may get a few inches more, and then maybe some more next weekend.  Record-breaking all over this area.  Of course, this is par for the course in Cleveland.

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Bracing for the Storm, redux

For the first time since our move to Baltimore, we’ve had a second snow storm before the previous one had melted off.  And now there’s going to be another big storm starting tomorrow.  Forecast is for 12″-24″.  Ugh.

UPDATE (Feb 5, 1:15pm): Now they are calling for 20″-28″.  Baltimore record is 28″.  It started snowing 90 minutes ago.  It’s still light and not sticking.

UPDATE (Feb 5, 4:15pm): Snowing harder now, starting to stick.  Maybe an inch so far.  Blacksburg has 8″ already.  They are now calling for 20″-30″+.  Could set new records in Baltimore and DC.  Baltimore record is 26.8″ in 2003.

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Blizzard of December 2009

Over the last 36 hours we got about 18 inches of snow here in Baltimore.  This is why we left Cleveland!  Ugh! The series of pictures below tells the story.

Yesterday morning, I shoveled.  Then I shoveled again a couple hours later.  Then again a few more hours later.  Then just the house entry before bed.  Then one more time this morning.

Top row: Front of house Saturday morning, Saturday afternoon, Sunday morning.

2nd row: Driveway Saturday afternoon, Sunday morning.

3rd row: Sean and their Saab Saturday morning, buried Saab Sunday morning.

4th row: Canopy in back garden in November, and Saturday afternoon.

Final row: Snow and icicles sliding off back of house, neighbors shoveling and gathering on Sunday morning in the sun.

BlizzardDec2009

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Checking In from New Job

It’s been a while since I’ve posted.  My new work at MedAssurant has been keeping me very busy, and the holidays are upon us.

I’m really enjoying my new job.  I’m getting to do real collaborative design work, including direct participatory design.  I’ve been pioneering K-J analysis on the teams to prioritize and focus project efforts, and the meme has caught on.  I’m establishing standards for forms and questionnaires as well as information visualization for BI reporting.  And I’m helping ensure that Scrum methods are being used effectively and sustainably.

Lots of work to do, and it’s just me for now in the UX role.  I should be able to hire some additional designers sometime next year.

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Hello, MedAssurant

I’m into my third week at MedAssurant, as Senior User Experience Architect (the one and only UX dude).  Very different place than Rockwell… a small company that suddenly is getting big because of enormous growth.  Kinda fun being a “big dog” around here; putting in a lot of hours, though.

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Farewell, Rockwell Automation

Friday was my last day as an employee of Rockwell Automation.  Tomorrow I start the second half of my career at a new company.  Today, I want to spend a few minutes reflecting on the last 15 years and say thanks to all of my friends and coworkers.

My career and I grew up at Rockwell.  I started there in March 1994 when I was 24.  I thought I had worked on big software projects before… 50,000 lines of code!  I was a C++ and OO guru, with most of my experience on the client/UI side of software architecture and construction.

We were working on the most important product in recent Rockwell history… the Logix controller (then called the Automation Controller) and the software to program it, RSLogix 5000 (then known as ACE, then Tempest, before shipping).  When it shipped in 1997, v2.51, it revolutionized discrete automation control.  It had integrated motion control and used tags with meaningful names instead of cryptic addresses.

I was there while we shipped multiple releases, building RSLogix 5000 and the controller into a powerful process automation controller as well.   Function Block Diagrams, Sequential Function Charts, Phase Manager, and finally, Add-On Instructions.  Two million lines of code and counting.  We set new thresholds of usability, built  understanding of users in new markets and new domains.

I received training in team leadership, requirements, user interface design, user research, project management, and software development from some of the most accomplished and amazing people in the world such as Jerry Weinberg, Tom DeMarco, Karen Holtzblaat and Hugh Beyer, Joann Hackos, and  many more.

I spent two years in sales, which was a great experience.  I learned how our business really works, from pursuing and proposing projects to working with distributors to closing and losing deals.  The pace nearly killed me; I could never calibrate on how much was enough.

Then, my friends helped create the Usability Manager position that I’ve been in for the last 2 1/2 years.  We transformed the look and feel of the FactoryTalk suite.  We inspired many people to expect more from the use and aesthetics of engineering and IS tools.  We developed new products like FactoryTalk Historian and ViewPoint.  We integrated new acquisitions like DataSweep, Pavilion, and Incuity.  We deployed Scrum and other new methods to hundreds of developers.  We built a team of user experience specialists, built tools and promoted methods for good design and evaluation, and improved many products across the organization.

Of course, there were bad times as well.  Economic downturns caused retrenchment and loss of will to pursue new things and sustain UX efforts.  But the good times far outweigh those periods.  And we accomplished so much.  I am very proud.

Thanks to everyone I’ve worked with over the years, in development, in product management, in commercial engineering, in sales, in management, at our customers, at our distributors, in human resources, in commercial marketing, and everywhere else across the organization.

Thanks to Shosh, Rick, David, Scott, Jerry, Mike, Aundrea, Amit, Amar, Diane, Chris, Matt, Missy, Doug, Tone, Adam, Gigi, Andy, Alan, Elaine, Erica, Mark, Pat, Perscilla, Lee, Hee Jung, Bruce, Gordon, Terrie, Karen, John, Dave, Ron, Kevin, Randy, James, Keith, Steve, and so many more.  Many of you are my friends for life.  All of you are in my head and heart.  We did amazing things.  And we will continue to do so.

Cheers.

Logo by Jenn Morris-jemorris.com

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