Showing posts with label snrky.com. Show all posts
Showing posts with label snrky.com. Show all posts

Sunday, August 16, 2015

Reboot - Snarky

Update: I thought I should note that I've made it through six posts (posted and scheduled).  That's not a bad start.  I'm particularly pleased with the canary post.  Going with little yellow blobs in Paint rather than detailed canaries was the right move.

Original:
Poor Snrky.com.  Over a year without posts.  I've got a backlog, and it really doesn't take much effort, so I thought I'd give it a kick and run it for a while again.  We went from approximately 600 views per post to 2.  That's really going to impact the income rate on the site.  How will we maintain our $2 in annual income?  As an added side benefit, it should update the images on my site.


Friday, February 13, 2015

Technical Debt Metaphors Get it so Wrong

This is just a scratch on the surface, but I like the following statement from Technical Debt Metaphors Get It so Wrong and, anecdotally (only because I've never bothered to formally track it), I concur that developers will feel the pain (and try to hide it) before it impacts the business.

 "This isn’t a simple language problem. It is a fundamental misunderstanding of roles that is naive to the way software development works. Programmers will be the primary sufferers of technical debt. Eventually the business will suffer with a slower pace of innovation and development and higher turnover. But well before that, programmers will be fixing (and refixing) obscure bugs, will bristle under management that tells them to go faster, will be working extra hours to try to improve things, and will eventually burn out. The business will only suffer once real damage has been done to a programming team, and many have given up."

Erik once crafted a Snrky related to Technical Debt:
http://www.snrky.com/2013/02/does-this-mean-were-headed-over_21.html

So did I, although a lot less technical:
http://www.snrky.com/2012/01/deduct-it-from-you-iou.html


Friday, March 30, 2012

Reboot II

We decided to mix it up over at snrky.com again.  It took us a year to realize that with no text other than the alt and title image tags and title to the post, most search engines were doing a very poor job of finding the site.  At least now we show up when someone searches for snrky.  Even that didn't get a hit before.  So we're moving things around.  Dropping the title for the comic onto the bottom of the image (that's no good for search, but if people want to share it, at least they don't have to cut and paste a few things - we could lay the title into the image as well, but at the bottom is more interesting.  We may get rid of the * and move it truly to the bottom left).  Adding the title and alt as real text to the post - visible, not just as attributes of the image.  And....drum roll...adding content.  I have to say that's the most difficult part.  I can think up short funny blurbs, but trying to add some related content, regardless of how much I type in other capacities, is sort of painful.  The intent is to add it at the same time as the post so there's always a comic at the top of the page.

Additionally - we're going to be messing around with the white on black and perhaps going black on white and trying to pretty it up a bit while we're at it.  It's an interesting learning experience as a background thread to other things I do.

Sunday, November 27, 2011

Thanksgiving

Thanksgiving was once again held at our house.  We cooked both corporate turkeys.  Mine, and Leon's.  I think we could have once again done with one, but two ensured plenty of leftovers.  Lee and his family showed up.  Lloyd (my other uncle in law - or Eryn's great uncle, depending on how you color it).  My father in law and mother in law.  And my sister in law and her family.  Cookie Queen and her kids showed up later for some play time.

Apparently snrky.com did a special cartoon to celebrate our turkeys noting, "It's the intangibles that count."

There were two rounds of poker.  I lost the first, despite putting the hurt to my father in law and Eryn (that's right, no mercy in poker, even for my own daughter.  And yes, she plays Hold 'em.  I need to remind her to save some money for New Year's Eve).  And won the second.  $12.  Enough to offset half a bottle of one of the two bourbons I bought for Thanksgiving, as that seems to be the drink of choice - both for the menfolk and womenfolk.  The beer was virtually untouched.

Buffalo Trace and Eagle Rare.  Kyle's Kentucky trip influence is clearly visible in my choices.  When I was buying my bottles at The Cellars, there was a kid in a suit shopping for Scotch. He was clearly excited and I had the impression he was either hosting Thanksgiving, or taking a bottle to Thanksgiving, or had gotten a promotion.  He had some good $40 bottles in hand.  Then asked the guy from the Cellars, "So these are nice, but what's your favorite?"  The clerk noted his favorite was just over $100 a bottle and the kid looked simultaneously taken aback and intrigued.  Definitely the appropriate approach.  Some skepticism in your $100+ purchases.  I should have taken down his name and number so we could do scotch sharing nights.  That's the best way to try $100 bottles.  Hear that Kyle?  Up for Scotch or Bourbon nights with a group of 4 or 5?

My wife and I discussed the possibility of making squash soup for Thanksgiving next year.  I am loving the squash soup with crustini/french bread.  Don't panic.  In addition to the turkey, not instead of the turkey.  While listening to MPR, I heard them discussing this recipe, harvest stuffed squash, which I'd also like to try.  Might have to experiment earlier to get an idea for whether it's good.  But the ingredients sound delicious.  Here are the details, courtesy of Beth Dooley at MPR.

HARVEST STUFFED SQUASH
Serves 8
Ingredients: 
4 small Cinderella pumpkins or acorn squash, halved and seeded
2 tablespoons sunflower oil or olive oil
1 large onion, chopped
4 cloves garlic, minced
1 fennel bulb, diced
1 red bell pepper, seeded, deveined, and chopped
1 large carrot, finely diced
1/4 cup chopped hazelnuts
2 cups cooked wild rice or barley
1/2 cup chopped parsley
2 tablespoons rubbed sage
Salt and freshly ground black pepper

Directions: 
Preheat the oven to 375 degrees. Place the squash cut-side down on a baking sheet and bake until it is tender, about 40 minutes. Meanwhile, heat the oil in a large skillet and saute the onion, garlic, fennel, red pepper, carrot, and hazelnuts until the onions are translucent, about 5 minutes. Add the wild rice and herbs, and season with salt and pepper to taste. Remove the squash from the oven, turn it over, and place it cut-side up on the baking sheet. Fill the squash with the stuffing. Return the squash to the oven and bake it an additional 30 minutes.

Finally - you can't declare Thanksgiving over until the naked Barbie balances on an exercise ball.  Haven't heard that saying before?  Get used to it.  And just so you don't have to imagine it...

Monday, October 17, 2011

Snarky Reboot

Snrky.com has rebooted! You can probably see the picture/link on the right of this blog, but in case it's too small, the art is brand new.  The site is temporarily moving to five posts a week while it reposts three of the originals each week and posts two new cartoons as well.  There are even some new frames that will be showing up.  It finally looks like something that could be put on the side of a coffee cup or on a wall.