Archives for category: Digital Life and Misadventures

With a week’s worth of retrospection, I feel like I can look back on Seattle Startup Weekend and try to distill some lessons down from it.

I suppose it’s worth saying that these lessons come hard-earned; my company of eight people produced a viable prototype, but failed to land any prizes in the final competition against the twenty-one other startups at the Weekend; I have some ideas as to why.

So This is What the Future Looks Like

For those that haven’t been, the Weekend is a little surreal. It’s entirely based around tech startups – and a surprisingly homogenous class of web-app-like technology at that. I suspect that the negligible cost of remixing today’s information economy has allowed something of a gold rush mentality, complete with the shabby chic and messenger-bag cultural tide that carries tomorrow’s gurus.

My own part was as makeshift team leader – I had a dream of starting up a game company and racing to a first prototype in 48 hours, using a mixture of the Unity engine and backend metrics through an analytics engine like MixPanel.

I found out quickly that games weren’t really represented during this weekend. Information mashups, yes, automated forms, sure, but not games. Maybe they weren’t known, maybe nobody cared. Whatever the case, our initial team of three were the only game developers willing to represent there, when all was said and done.

Undaunted, I pitched the game company idea during the Friday “speed-dating” portion of the weekend, and it stuck well enough – out of the 60 ideas that were looking for teams, mine made the final cut of 20. By Friday night, my initial team of three had become a team of eight. By Saturday at noon, I promised, we’d have our game idea chosen and coding started.

It took us until Sunday afternoon to have everything done; we’d fought through idea changes, tech failures, sickness and absences, and a metric ton of conflicting priorities to come up with something viable – and a business plan around it – to show off to investors Sunday evening.

Thinking back on it, we really made a lot of mistakes.

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I must be crazy. I’ve chosen to give up not only alcohol for thirty days, but caffeine as well. What’s that sound, you ask? It’s just me crying, as I realize they’re never going to let me back in the Raymond Chandler Society after a stunt like this.

To be honest with myself, and you, dear reader, I feel better for having yanked the drips out of both arms. Intellectually, at any rate – my meat body is doing some weird shit. I’m craving sugar for the first time in years, and have inherited the unfortunate habit of micronapping at minorly career-inopportune moments. But energy levels are returning to normal and my stomach has cleaned up its act a bit; I no longer feel like half a loaf of walking suck. Alcohol consumption is down 94% by my count (the remaining 6% was a sip of beer and a glass of wine at some point), and I feel pleased by that.

By the way – if you’re ever off the firewater and still want to get that old-timey cocktail feeling, try a Southampton:

“The Southampton”
Fill a glass with ice, add tonic water to fill, squeeze in half a lime, three dashes of bitters. Serve with lime wheel.

Mornings are still tough. I never realized how much I got, spiritually, out of having a cup of coffee in the mornings. It wasn’t about some Elysian Folgers sunrise moment. It was about having the opportunity to grumble, to feel held down by The Man, and to take refuge in having the one jolt of slightly morally-tinged stimulant that unites all souls of good, honest working men the world over as they claw bloody nails against the drudgery of another day in the pit for wages.

My next thought: What a load of crap. I sit behind a desk and work on video games. Seriously. I don’t even write them or test them directly. I write plans, schedules, specifications and communications about stuff that’s about video games. What am I complaining about? By extension, what have I got to drink / smoke / caffeineate about? Not that I wouldn’t enjoy that cup of coffee, but something feels like a great big phony about it.

This past Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, I participated in a three-day “Startup Weekend” in an attempt to see if I could wrestle value out of something that didn’t carry the safety net of a salary. The results? Mixed. People liked my idea, I recruited a team of eight, we worked and got a prototype running, but at the end, we didn’t make the dramatic bridge leap to freedom, instead crashing the car into a wall of cynical investors. Ultimately, we didn’t win anything for our efforts and our startup went largely ignored by the local Twittermedia that was covering the event. BOOOOO!

This, plus the recent rejection of Hash is enough to make me feel ready to go back to life’s drawing board and figure out what I’m doing wrong.

Probably just need to throw more darts.

Rolling out the Boss Tweed costume to announce I’ll be at Seattle Startup Weekend today, Saturday, and Sunday.

It’d be no fun if I spoiled the surprise on what I’ll be working on – but you can follow me on Twitter as @agentcox, and catch the general action with the #startupweekend hash tag.

See you there!

It had to happen sometime. I’m giving myself a break from the booze. It’s got very little to do with being a writer (I am, in fact, going to be depriving myself of fully one-quarter of the Writer’s Food Pyramid) but there’s enough traffic that doesn’t need to be bothered with this on my Alter Ego’s site that I had might as well associate it here.

The reasons for this? Health-based, mostly. Just like cutting out caffeine after noon, this, like just about every health choice I make, is about trying to settle what, in polite terms, I’d have to call a somewhat dramatic digestive system. Like, two-time-Academy-Award-Winning dramatic. About this time a couple years ago, also at Microsoft, I got into a stressbound spiral, where food that entered me consistently and suddenly exited – depending on a script the director didn’t let me see – either stage up or stage down. It kept me guessing, let me tell you. Kept the doctors guessing, too, until I left Microsoft and suddenly all that crap cleared up.

Until now. I thought I was free, but it looks like it’s Oscar Season again.

To damp the fires down a bit, this one’s not nearly as debilitating as the first time, as I’d like to think I learned fairly well what my stressors were over that particular job. But, I’m searching for answers. Everything from stress to spinach to celiac to colitis to gall bladder blockage has been up the flagpole. I’m sure stress is a part of it, but I’ve noticed there’s something in common with both scenarios: alcohol. Now that I’m off antibiotics, alcohol is the next best contender for the muse that’s been giving my theatre-trained stomach its lessons in method acting.

As much as I hate to deprive anyone of their one true dream, I’m being mercifully honest when I tell you my stomach’s solo of Lear-on-the-Heath sucks, and I think we’ll all be done a favor if I hustle it off the stage and pack it a bindle back to Waukeegan. We’ll deal with refunds after the program, thanks.

On to business.

Some Principles

(or, “How does This Subject Not Carry a Stigma?)

1. This isn’t a self-intervention. I did not wake up in a gutter and make some kind of starry-brained decision that my life needed to flip an ethanol-free bitch. It’s a Tuesday. We all make reasonable decisions on Tuesdays. Right along with my decisions to have curry for lunch, follow up on a few emails after 3PM, and cancel tomorrow’s Shiproom meeting, I’m deciding to take a break from alcohol.

2. This isn’t spiritual. It isn’t even metaphysical. Having a drink is fun and relaxing. It’s not fun or relaxing to give it up. Hell, it’s plain uncomfortable. It doesn’t appear to be helping my chi, it doesn’t give me a boost to my self-esteem, and has, as far as I can tell, very little to do with God in any way - more to do with my brain deciding not to put certain liquids down my gullet. In fact, I know this is going to be uncomfortable for those around me. My apologies in advance. My advice to you? If you drink, keep on drinking. The poker party later this month is going to have a full bar, so take advantage.

3. This isn’t automatically so fantastically good for my body. Laying off moderate consumption of alcohol isn’t going to turn me into Lance Armstrong, and a lot of the quackery around body toxicity theories is just that – quackery. I expect my tolerance to go down, and as for the rest, we’ll see if it’s good for my body – more specifically, my gut. That’s the point of this whole exercise. If I don’t see a change after 30 days, I’m going to cross alcohol off my suspects list and have a martini while I’m going over the case notes. That’s how this is going to work.

4. This would be great as an all-or-nothing deal, but it won’t be. I’m being realistic here. Some way, some how, I’ll end up having booze in the next month. It’ll be a business thing, or a romantic dinner, or whatever else. And that sounds fine. The goal of this exercise is to cut out most of my drinking to see if it mostly helps my gut feel better. If I see enough of a correlation, I’ll know we’re onto something, then we’ll move on to whatever approach stabilizes me at the right mix of digestive health and enjoyable drinking.

Action Items for Friends and Family

1. Seriously, bring alcohol to the poker party. I’m relying on you to help everyone else get their drinking done and done right.

2. Do not tell me you’re happy I did this, that you’re proud of me or that “this is a good step”. I’m going to skip out on the validation part of this exercise; I’m staring down the barrel of thirty; I don’t need to hear I drew a pretty picture with my decision crayons.

3. Do not suggest other things I could do to “get better”. If I hear the terms colonic, high colonic, trans fat, exercise, or de-stress, something’s going out a window. De-stress isn’t even a word.

And last but not least – if you’re a drinker, keep drinking. In my deepest, darkest, most secret of hearts (well, the one I’m willing to blog with, at any rate), I’m quietly hoping alcohol isn’t the culprit. Instead, I dream that I’ll get a doctor’s note claiming I suffer from a little-known ”Vacation Deficit Disorder”, wherein my gut simply doesn’t engineer enough digest-y bits and I’ll need employer-sponsored vacations every month or so to, you know, get back up to 100%. Well, whichever way it goes, I hope to be back playing the gin fiddle with you all in short order.

I’ve just got to find the little bastard responsible for booking my stomach on the Charlie Sheen Opener tour, kick down its door, tear up its contract, and make myself clear beyond clear that it’s never going to work in this town again.

Bright lights of Broadway, my ass.

Calendar year, fiscal year, broadcast year. These days it seems more convenient to count time as sprints between intermittent trips to the Islands. San Juans up north, British Virgins down south, I’ve made it a yearly habit to hit one hot spot or the other, both if it’s a particularly banner year.

Seventeen months since the last trip, and the time’s come around again. In a little over 60 hours, I’ll be boarding a plane bound for the tropics, to relax with Alicia and eight of our closest friends aboard Voyage’s finest 440 catamaran. They’re going to be a great crew: sharp, eager, cohesive. I’ve missed the usual suspects of the island-hopping lifestyle, of course. The sunshine, the saltwater, the rig-whistle under sail.

Evolution

I have another, more recent appreciation for the art of sailing that’s come from an examination of my daily life in this last sprint. You saw that duct-taped PM email system I penned to pull my information management out of a nosedive. You’ve seen me come up for air in bursts on Twitter and Facebook to bemoan my fate of being eaten alive by Excel and PowerPoint.

I’ve never spent so much condensed time in a constant swirl of prototypes, presentation, deliberation and expert judgment as I have in the last year and a half. I’ve served on more committees, sat in more meetings, sent more prioritization emails, scheduled more sync-ups, and designed more presentations and worksheets in the last year than I have in the previous nine years of my career in this business.

The greatest psychological and social shakeup is the move from the hard track to the soft; management, instead of line-level execution. And at the end of each working day, I can’t even point at a widget that makes it off the factory floor, because we don’t do that sort of thing. It’s soft science to support software.

Even my own projects this sprint:

They’re all soft, all deliberative, all made to be chewed on, commented on, feedback’d into near oblivion.

I’ve reached my quota. I’ve done enough, I’ve asked to be judged enough, I’ve For-Your-Consideration’d until I’m blue in the face.

And if that’s not enough, it’s Annual Review time here at Microsoft.

It’d drive me mad if I kept thinking about it.

The Antithesis

Touch a canvas sail. Dip your finger in engine coolant. Strap on the fins and jump off the sugar scoop. Crank up the propane and grill.

There’s no committee. No council. No feedback but the molecules singing an ancient tone against your skin.

I’ve hit my quota, seventeen months without a boat is my limit.

I’m going sailing.

Been gone a while. Sorry about that – I’ve been working on this presentation for the TED Full-Spectrum Talk Contest:


I suppose it’s time I admitted it. After years of striving, now in both name and responsibility, I’m a Program Manager. And, when it rains, it pours; my current posting is even more PM-ish than my last one. By that I mean there’s more influence, less authority.

It is not by the threat of re-organizing or de-funding that I make my policies and processes real. Instead, my programs – and career – live and die by the strength of the narrative that I put together.

It’s not surprising that I’ve been thinking about a personal mytharc that extends to the larger scope of my work. Does it have a unifying thread? A purpose? Are there actual rules I live by? I sat down with a mentor of mine and he watched me contort for nigh on an hour as I tried to hash out just three – seriously, three – rules I would consider critical to my life – and a fourth that answered the question: what am I?

This is what I came up with, and I thought they might be interesting to share in a series of posts.

  1. Fail Fast.
  2. Listen Hard.
  3. Abandon Fearlessly.
  4. I Am What I Create.

Let’s start from the bottom today, and if there’s more to say, we can talk about it in other posts.

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