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Work Lately

Lately, I’ve been doing odd jobs and tasks in my local area. Hubby’s hours have been cut of late, so anything I can do to bring in more funds is a good thing. I’ve been making heavy use of a few specific services in my Freelance blogroll that feature tasks, whether it’s a session of dog walking, grocery delivery, computer or internet tutoring, cooking, event planning, or a myriad of other services that don’t require any particular skillset other than fierce entrepreneurialism.

That doesn’t bring in much but it does get me out of the house, off the computer, and lets me interact with my neighbors. I’ve met quite a few people that way who wish to utilize me for longer-term assignments, which of course I’m all for. Now that the car is running again, I can greatly widen my serviceable area, and the number and variety of tasks I’m able to perform. So huge thumbs up for that.

One of my personal websites were hacked and there was an insidious script somewhere in there that was redirecting traffic to various other sites that I certainly didn’t intend my visitors to see. It took me a couple of days to weed out all the bad code, but I seem to have succeeded on that front, as it hasn’t resurfaced. I acquainted myself with the most current security risks and measures for my specific webhost, changed passwords across the board, and went over everything meticulously to make sure everything was locked up tight. Seems to have done the trick there. I’m considering another webhost that has tighter security than mine provides. We’ll see.

There are a couple of long term goals I’ve worked out for hubby and me; it’s great motivation to do something each day to work towards that. New barriers and bumpy roads have cropped up that threaten that. It just makes me get more creative about getting through and over them.

A former friend came out of the woodwork to say hi; I’ve dissuaded all interaction, I’m too busy to make myself open to emotional attacks that don’t do anything but rile up tempers and further distract me from my goals. He’s welcome to the rest of the population for that. I’m out.

Probably related:


Updates

February has been an interesting month. I didn’t do so much work-wise that I was anticipating, though I did finish up a couple projects for various nonprofit organizations both domestic and foreign. I haven’t felt like blogging much, whether nattering about my personal stuffs or professional doings.

I cleaned up most of the fraud-related stuff that occurred at the beginning of the month; I have confirmation from my bank, iTunes, and Paypal that yes, I am not responsible for these charges from iTunes. I still have $300 overdrawn on my bank account, because refunds are slow in coming. I did finally get the bank to cancel the overdraft fees associated with the fraudulent purchases. And after it happened the second time (after I had changed my password everywhere to something horrifyingly difficult and long to decipher), I removed all financial information linking the aforementioned three websites. I’m confident that Paypal and my bank are reasonably secure, insofar as they are not responsible for the sanctity of my password or my electronic devices.

But iTunes… I no longer trust them, their security protocols or their ability to weed out fraudulent apps in their own store. How can you not be aware of exactly every activity of every i-Device and every account? It’s on their servers, surely they have fail-safes and safeguards for such. Apparently not. I’ve seen hundreds of written accounts of other people swindled out of money thanks to the iTunes Store. The apple is rotten, folks.

I’ve been filling my time with personal activities: watching and listening to podcasts relating to writing, crafts, and electronics; playing with other personal websites relating to interests I feel strongly about; writing; cooking; and cleaning the clutter out of my habitat and my daily life. My former friend J was once trying to articulate the varying moods he had, sometimes playing video games and involving himself with online activities, and sometimes writing or creating game stuff. I mentioned something about output vs. input, which he adopted into his own vernacular.

I have most definitely been on an input kick. That doesn’t mean that my output has stopped altogether; I have just felt like focusing on just one thing at a time, rather than spreading my interests and activities as far and wide as I’m prone to doing. I love to juggle, I never get bored of one thing for very long before something else comes along that amuses me or captures my attention to the exclusion of all else. I guess that Mercury is direct and not retrograde just now. In fact… *looks at astrology stuffs* Oh yeah. As that is my ruling planet, I am definitely prone to that planet’s meanderings, especially when I fall out of discipline and let my mood take me where it will.

Anyway, I felt like poking in here for a moment. Next month looks to be an interesting one as well. At the forefront, the promise of car repairs in the immediate future?? We’ll see. The rest of life is going along pretty well, hubby and I are still disgustingly close, we’re setting our eyes on moving, and I just picked up a new job position that could very much be a profitable one. Gotta love volunteering on ventures. We’ll see where that gets me. In the meantime, there are fresh new listings to paruse regarding my usual schtick of freelance and volunteerism.

Oh yeah, one thing I wanted to mention: gamification. I think it’d be really fun (ha) and profitable to get some training for that going; with as many Facebook apps and socially engaging websites I have been and will be involved in, this might be a really good skillset to have. It seems to be huge this year, and I love finding ways of making menial or necessary stuff fun.

Another thing, I have a recent new favorite blog that I thought you might like: Unf* Your Habitat (warning: f-bombs flung freely there). It’s almost gamifying in its straightforward kick-butt attitude about the crap you should be doing anyway. Do something that improves your environment, and celebrate the hell out of it. On one hand, it’s disturbing that society has apparently stooped to such a level that we must be praised for doing what we’re supposed to; on the other hand, it’s awesome to become aware of personal habits, and to improve them. So, there.

Probably related:


Being a Professional

There’s been a theme to this week’s work, and the business/entrepreneur/tech articles I’ve been reading: public (and business) relations.

I hit a small snafu with a business partner and friend. Each conversation between us generally has three parts: he requests work of me and details what I need to do; I articulate a price to which he agrees to; I complete the work and he sends me the agreed-to monetary compensation. It’s very informal, and I’ll often vary my price based on how many individual items he is asking me to put my attention to, and whether I anticipate that he will ask for “just one more thing” which can easily morph into five more things. This works for us, most times.

A few days ago, he asked me to edit some images in Photoshop, and to edit a video. Because the editing was a little more detailed than what I usually do for him and would take a tiny bit more time and computer power to render, I gave him a price that was a smidge higher than he was used to seeing. I price by queue load, not by individual item. I felt that would cover both the need of increased attention on my part, and his wait for the finished product.

He looked at my requested price, looked at what he was asking me to do, and then asked me if I were charging such&such for each image and video, and wasn’t that a bit higher than usual?

I explained that the images and the video required more of my time than usual, with more intricacies than are usually present in the assignments he gives me.

He then gave a reply that denoted concern that I was asking for too much, and that I should more concretely justify the price I had asked.

I said, a little snarkily (we are friends), that perhaps he ought to find someone else who would do the work he asked, who would use more expensive programs and charge roughly four times what I was asking, that this particular assignment warranted the slightly higher price because of the slight complexity to the tasks previously mentioned in this same conversation.

“No, it’s fine,” he reassured me. “I don’t much appreciate the tone of that last statement,” about him finding someone else to do the work. We sorted it all out a few minutes later.

I did the work, feeling a bit uncomfortable that I could have handled that conversation better. On one hand, he had never asked me before to more or less create an itemized list of why I am charging what I do per image or video or whatever else I do for him. I felt that was ridiculous, as I was doing this work at (well under) 1/4 the industry price that anyone not acquainted with him would charge, and I felt that at such bargain basement prices, I should be given the benefit of the doubt when something unusual comes down the pike, and I respond with a price that is (literally, in this case) a couple of dollars more than usual.

On the other hand, as a business owner and employer, he has every right to request such an itemized list from me if he wants to see exactly what he’s paying for. He’s one of those people who thinks that sitting in a computer chair and squinting at a computer screen doesn’t really warrant a token price for labor. I agree with that, except that I’m doing something when I am squinting at the computer screen, whether it’s pushing pixels around or editing a video to best effect, and yes, sitting is a given when one is working at the computer.

I felt a bit like a cranky designer after that little exchange. If he wants an itemized list, then he may find higher prices than what I had been giving him before, because again, I charge by bulk, not by individual item, and I often err on the side of quoting under a certain dollar amount, giving him a break for sending me so much to do at once. I suppose I will have to do that if he insists on a new practice of creating a need and then paying to have that need fulfilled.

Anyway, enough on that topic…

Related, there was an article on Matt Haughey‘s personal blog, a link to which I found on Mashable, the same day as the aforementioned snafu. The author relates an experience he had in funding a project on Kickstarter, which features fundraising opportunities for those who have a vision, a product, a movie, a goal, a required expense they cannot fund themselves, and turns to crowdsourcing to accomplish their fundraising goals.

I read, with horror, the process by which this funder was treated by the proprietors of the project he was funding. Anyone who wants lessons in what not to do in public relations, should read this article. There was no excuse for any of the mentioned interactions to have happened. With sufficient communication, honesty, and some sense of culpability, this project and its results might have turned out very differently. In this case, a product was being designed with obvious engineering and scientific flaws that should have been evident to any student of a high school science class. When these flaws were pointed out, the proprieters/fundees ignored all free advice given, ignored public commentary on alternatives (when they themselves created a poll to see what the majority of funders thought of a specific issue, 85% weighing in with a negative answer), required additional funds from funders above and beyond the original donation…

That last one really makes me shake my head. Who even does this? “Yes, we know you’ve already donated generously and voluntarily. Now, we demand even more than the amount you’ve already pledged, if you ever want to see this product.” Wow. Imagine if Netflix did that: “Yeah, we just raised our prices to 200% what they were before. Now, we require you to pay an additonal fee for the delivery of the streaming movie/movie on DVD disc.” I’d imagine their stock would be even lower than it already is (and let’s not forget the multiple lawsuits now filed against the company for its boneheadedness of late).

Getting back to the Kickstarter story, I understand that funding a dream, funding a goal, funding a good or necessary intention, is wrought with uncertainties as to odds of completion, odds of a (working) product actually being manufactured (and not just prototyped), even as to how many people will pledge to a given project. I don’t have much commentary about the specific story linked elsewhere in this article, but I do think that there are great lessons to be learned from how various companies treat their customers, and each other.

And I’m certainly not exempt from treating my “boss” with as much decorum and tact as anyone else doing business with or for another.

Probably related:


Links, Gigs, and Biz!

I’ve been adding a lot more freelance gig-getting websites to my blogroll. It’s been a slow time for short-term freelance assignments. One of my long-term clients has been giving me small assignments, editing video, photos, and website administration. I’ve been able to do most of the work on my iPad (first generation, no 3g)–I can’t tell you how much of a relief it is to be able to pick up the iOS tablet and wander around the house, sitting on varied surfaces besides my computer chair, or going to wherever there’s another pocket of WIFI, at the watering hole nearby or the grocery store when I want a change of scenery.

If it were not for the car repairs I’m saving up for, I would have totally purchased the second generation 3g iPad 2, to be truly untethered by location and to be able to do even more with the onboard cameras on the device. I even had the tablet in my shopping cart the other night, shipping calculated, and personal information shared, all ready to hit the “buy” button. Practicality prevailed, for now. The cost is just too much. Heck, I got this iPad 1 on deep discount through one of those one-deal-a-day websites. I’ve been scouring Craigslist for any iPad 2, only to find that any individual selling theirs wants the same unreasonable rate. I’ll wait.

There are more photos and videos to be edited for my longest-held client. I’m also spending the week recoding a website for a local food business who wanted more social interactivity along with their updated menu, hours, and other info. I’ll probably volunteer to do some webwork for a nonprofit, just to give myself something to do.

I asked my husband about a hair-brained idea I’d thought up the other day, and he gave his assent, so I’m poking at it. I’m starting a new business venture, designing the website for it, and getting a framework of electronica built up to assist me. He and I have been sharing a phone ever since we met; that’ll change when my new Android phone arrives, wherein I can receive professional queries and assignments on my own line. Again, found a great deal on a phone I couldn’t pass up. I required my husband’s input on the business idea, because it will involve relocation, and I asked him how badly he wanted that. He’s quite open to the idea, and it won’t cost us much to try, so I’m going for it. I’m going to see if I can set up some temporary employment for both of us while we get resettled. I found that he and I really do want to relocate to my former hometown, even if it is not through the means we thought we would have been, when an opportunity came up a year ago that we’ve been chomping at the bit to see realized since. And that’s a very clunky sentence, I apologize, it’s the middle of the night.

I purchased some fabric for a nifty sewing project in mid-November, though by the time the fabric arrived in the middle of December, I was deep in retail employment and couldn’t find the time to attack the project before the winter holiday arrived. With things as slow as they are, I don’t see a problem with getting started on that project as well, though I need to purchase more fabric, as I’d well-underestimated how much I’d need for the items I want to make.

I will someday learn how to work this sewing machine–haha, yet another project on my wild array of burners.

The cat has interjected himself on my lap, and I can’t think of anything else that’s come up that I feel like updating about, so I will now tend to him. And brainfart today’s goings-on.

Probably related:


Aftermaths and Hindsights

Whew, I finished my last shift at the grocery store on December 26; I’ve been sitting on my butt, allowing myself to sit back and relax for a bit between the major winter holidays. I’ll probably start looking for more webwork at the start of next year.

I’ve learned some things about myself this year that made me quirk an eyebrow.

I really enjoy working on my own. I’m organized, I can anticipate trends, and I’m a much happier person when I can work at my own frenetic pace without interruption. My manager and I have a great setup–he sets me loose and I give him periodic updates for any wonkiness I need addressed. After having done this fruit basket thing last year, I knew what to expect and I really knew what I was doing. So on the first day, my boss asked some minor questions to make sure I still remembered what I was doing, and told me to get busy. I arranged my workspace in an efficient way that I wanted, I got my supplies, and I bore down to produce some output.

I don’t like being micromanaged by someone not involved with my chain of command who thinks I’m mentally deficient in some way. Last year, this manager from another department would feel the need to wander over and grill me as to all content I was using in my work, inquiring as to which items originated from her department. She would make sure in no uncertain terms that I knew excruciatingly well that anything from her department had to be refrigerated. She also demanded that I alter my training and procedures, in order to accomodate her unique and overly OCD way of managing inventory. My coworker and I would always write down the UPC code, price, brand and name of the item being used in our product, the quantity, and the date we put the item to use. Every day we left this list of inventory on our manager’s desk, where he would then input the information into the store’s computer, thereby alerting any department that was not our own that an item not showing up in their inventory scans were still in the store, being used in our product. The aforementioned micro-manager insisted that rather than writing the item down, that we allow her to scan the item, using an inventory scanner.

This year, I got smart, and informed her that I would use no content from her department, unless directly asked by a customer with a custom order. I also let her know, the two times I did utilize something in her department, what exactly the item was, and that she was welcome to scan the item by using her scanner on an identical item still on the shelf. We still had clashes, but they were minimal, and she mostly left me alone as she was too busy picking on my coworker. I accept guidance from anyone who has a better idea than what I’m doing, or has knowledge about a procedure I’m not familiar with. But this woman was grossly out of line regarding our manner of dress (in a store with an already established dress code), and concerns that make sense in the food service realm she was a part of, but had no place in our put-fruit-in-basket thing. That woman was very much a Negative Nancy with her criticisms. I always nodded pleasantly, and filed away her daily admonitions in the proper mental receptacle. My coworker, new to this gig, eventually learned the same.

When my workspace is arranged in an efficient manner and I have every supply I need, my output is insane. I noticed that my coworker, hired as my backup, wasn’t backing me up nearly enough. We, the manager and I, had a simple formula and matra: “Two of everything on the shelf.” There were 12 different types of baskets we were instructed to make. 24 of them were enough to cover every flat surface available to us to place our product upon. And as I noticed them disappearing, I would make 6-10 of one particular basket, as they were selling so well. On my final day, my manager informed me with considerable glee that I was the top seller in the entire region, which encompasses towns up to 50 miles away and involves 30-some stores. That was even with my coworker being inefficient and at times, not being at her table but on the other side of the store, shopping.

On the days in which I was not scheduled to work, I had a pad of paper on which I left notes to my coworker, noticing trends in sales, and in the rotten fruit I was finding in the baskets she had filled. I don’t think she read them, but the inferior quality of some of our baskets was not for the want of me doing something to ensure they were of the highest quality. The log book was handy, regardless, as she was able to tell me about certain orders that had come in, questions and concerns she had, and excuses as to why the tables were empty when I came in from two days off. I tore the used pages out of the simple notepad of paper and left it with the supplies of leftover price stickers and baskets. If I’m here next year and take up the seasonal position again, it will come in handy, and if not, the pad may be used by the next set of people.

I’m not as physically fit as I used to be. I am overweight, but back in the day when I had a retail position and was schlepping over 100 150-pound containers full of store merchandise in weekly freight by hand, though I sweated a little, I was in good enough shape to feel only mildly sore the following day. It was my feet and inferior footwear that really gave me problems. When one of the managers from another department gave me a trial run, liking my attitude, I had to let myself go after three weeks, as I was schlepping heavy crates of gallons of milk daily, and I just couldn’t handle the pain. If I get picked up again for a permanent position somewhere in this store (where everyone already knows me), I’m going to have to make sure they know that I’m not able to lug such heavy stuff around.

I love that I challenged myself to arrive at work and get through the day with a smile and a positive attitude, no matter what was going on off the clock. I was determined to keep it no matter what I was faced with, being criticized by the micro-manager, having to disappoint a customer or being yelled at by same for not knowing an answer to their query. There wasn’t much to be negative about this year for which I’m very grateful, other than my flailing that my underling wasn’t doing her job and making me do her work as well as mine. That negativity vanished during the last two days when I realized there was no way I could catch up where she had slacked off, and figured I’d do as much as I was able, go home exhausted, and leave whatever was left for the following day. There was a moment in which I really wanted to discuss in no uncertain terms what she was doing wrong, but I was afraid that if I let her know how I was feeling, she wouldn’t come in to work anymore and then I really WOULD be working alone. I did point out to my manager, the store director, and some other coworkers when my table was empty upon me arriving at work and what the other gal had left me with. The assistant manager was fond of looking over the errant coworker’s shoulder and leading her by the ear back to the table she should not have left, and telling her to get back to work.

Next year, if I am to take this position again, I will make sure that the underling knows exactly what is expected from her from day to day. I was able to anticipate what we were going to need the following day, and wrote things like, “We need to pay attention to pears, those are getting squishy almost as fast as the bananas.” I should have realized she needed more direct guidance and wrote an actual list of things she needed to accomplish: “1) Visually inspect all baskets, try to squish the pear with your finger, bring all dated baskets back to the table. 2) Change out ALL fruit, not just the bananas (since I couldn’t rely on my coworker’s ability to realize when a fruit was about to go bad). 3) Make ## of the smalls, ## of the large handled, ## of the most expensive ones, and there’s an order for 2pm tomorrow that I won’t be here to fulfill that falls upon you to complete.” The 3rd item I didn’t think to write down, thinking that she knew exactly what was on the shelves, and to replace whatever was sold or thrown out.

I thought about using the colored bows to denote the day of the week it was first assembled, to keep a better eye on inventory, but for one, that would create a glut of one particular color on a given day of the week, and two, I was worried that my underling would fall under the assumption that if a basket was only two days old, that nothing in it would be unacceptably overripe, and wouldn’t inspect it more closely. No, I agree with the practice of using random colored ribbons for variety, preference, and to keep us looking at each basket suspiciously and daily.

I just felt like writing all of this out, in case I do take up the position next year, and try to remember what I learned this year, and what to do different next. Each hostess was invited to write out tips that they might include in next year’s manual, and different practices we might suggest they include in subsequent years. I wrote that we really need to provide for consumers some of the plastic wrap and cheaper bows, as I personally handed out over 50 of each to those who asked politely, and had to turn others away lest I run out of supplies for what I was being paid to do. I also thought we could use a better task system for taking and fulfilling custom orders as they come in. My coworker had a cluttered way of taking the order sheets, and throwing them away before the custom basket was even purchased, which made figuring out who had picked up their item and who needed to be called very confusing between the three of us taking orders. Next year, I might ask my manager to make a custom pamphlet with the store’s phone number, in order to take custom orders there too, about half our orders this year was through that venue, as people would take a pamphlet home and call in later after they’d chosen what they wanted.

Oh yeah, and one more thing I wanted to articulate. There are some people you won’t be able to please, no matter what you do for them. I had a business gentleman come in, see the array of stuff I was cramming into our more expensive baskets (salmon, cheese and crackers, and so on) and demanded I make such a basket for him at a reduced price. We had to barter for a few minutes before he was satisfied and I was sure I wasn’t giving away something that would hurt our profits. For customers like that, I will make allowances for, and give them more than the monetary value is, because I’d rather see a $30 basket with $45 worth of stuff walk out the door than to lose a sale of $30. Thankfully there weren’t too many of those types of customers as I would have had to have been more forceful about my absolute bottom line, what we can skimp on and what I could not. I’m sorry, I’m not going to price a $15 box of smoked salmon at $5. This is not a medieval farmer’s market and we do not work on the barter system. I’m not in a position to make such decisions.

Probably related:


Seasonal Retail

(This was written for Holidailies.)


Tom Lehrer – A Christmas Carol

I love the position I have at the supermarket that hubby works at. I arrange fruit in baskets for about four hours a day, interact with customers, joke with employees, hide from the manager from the other department who has no business micromanaging me anyway, and tell the lost where to find the department or the item they want.

I really rocked the position last year, raking in thousands of dollars more in sales than the previous person had the year before. This year, the product just is not a big seller. People see the (over)prices on the baskets, look directly behind me at the $.59 fruit, shrug and grab their own produce. Last year, a lot of customers wanted a free basket, free bows, free tags, and free wrapping paper, when I barely had enough for the product I was actually making. This year, a few other in-store departments have availed themselves to my stash of supplies under the display table, when I’m not there to stop them. That all comes out of MY department’s funds, which is a bit maddening but whatever.

I really love the position because it’s easy, short, lets me interact with the public demonstrating my mad skillz, and by the time I start to get tired of the grind and predictability of the retail environment, it’s time to sit at home and play with freelance assignments again. It’s a secondary (and sometimes tertiary) source of income, it gets me out of the house, I see hubby at work nearly every day, and I get to interact with the public. My direct manager is a really cool guy who loves to laugh and leaves me to my own devices, trusting that I know what I’m doing. With two years now under my belt, he knows he can leave me to it. Every time he glances over, I’m talking to a customer or my hands are busy making something. I pride myself on giving my company their money’s worth with efficiency, accuracy, and my mind firmly on what I’m doing.

I walk in every day with a smile, and maintain a positive attitude throughout the day no matter what I’m handed. I’m always rather amazed at the pool of energy I have when I’m on the clock. Others always remark how much of an overachiever I am; I’m always doing more than I’m asked to do, and volunteer for more, or go find something to do until directed otherwise. They know I’m good for it.

They hired an underling for me, an older woman, who doesn’t have the same attention to detail or pride in her work. Yesterday, I came back on shift after two days off and found a lot of rotten fruit in the baskets. They don’t get that way overnight, you can see pears ripening and bananas going south long before the point at which I saw them. It took me roughly an hour to sort it all out. I’ve watched the underling at work, it takes her the entire shift to finish what needs to be done. There’re certain things we’re supposed to do, and in the interests of cutting corners, she doesn’t do them. It usually falls to me to follow along behind her and rework what needs doing, so that we have a uniform and high-quality product for people to purchase.

Like I said, the sales halfway through the month now aren’t nearly what they were last year–I can tell merely by taking inventory of the number of baskets sitting day after day on the shelves, the number of empty baskets under the table, and the other supplies not pilfered by the other departments. I’m not sure if that will pick up as the close of the year arrives, but in the meantime, every two days, every fruit is inspected and replaced as necessary, which gets wasteful if they’re all sitting stagnant on the shelf rather than being sold. Nobody’s made a custom order, either. I’ve stepped up the display with brochures prominently showing the order forms, and I plan to use the overhead announcement system to advertise the more expensive ones and custom baskets as well. We’ll see.

In the meantime, I’m doing the work of 1.5 people, and I was very disappointed that they cut my pay rate from last year to the barest minimum wage. If they ask me to stay on, I shall have to say no, it’s so ridiculous that the bus fare and food costs cancel out any income I do get. That’s part of why I’m frantic about getting the car fixed (and keeping it running), we rent that car and it costs us for every day it sits there rather than get us from hither to yon.

Probably related:


In More Professional News…

I’m coding a fourth iOS app based on a brainfart I had the other night, regarding the local transit system and the open source API they have. It’s a little confusing to work with but I’m enjoying the exercise in getting to learn it a little more intimately.

I’m also redesigning one of my podcast websites. My roommate recently purchased a 52″ plasma TV (gotta love those spontaneous impulse buys, hehe) and I got to view my website on a very large screen, and decided I’d figure out a design that incorporates that along with everything else. Oh yeah, and I podcast too. :)

When I’m not coding, redesigning, or nanoing, I like to volunteer. I’m tackling a project I was approved for yesterday, helping translate a book’s worth of text into English from Spanish. They’re using an online translator and I’m editing up the text to make it more readable to a native speaker. I never thought my three years of high school Spanish would come in handy, but here we are. :) I’m being shadowed by a bilingual editor who will look for technical errors, but their focus is readability for native American English, and aforementioned editor didn’t want to have to clean up the text as well as edit, so, there I am.

I have a retail job lined up for December, 1) because I rocked the position so hard last year and was asked/begged to return, lol, 2) because extra spending money for the holidays is never a bad thing, and 3) just around the time that I start getting annoyed that I have to stand for 8-9 hours a day, it’s time for me to go work from home again. I enjoy interacting with the public very much, this unusual seasonal position isn’t very difficult, and I get to manage myself for the most part. There was one woman from another department who tried to micromanage me, she’s not there now and I daresay that those directly in charge of me know that I know what I’m doing.

One assistant manager even told me to knock down my output a little, there were way too many finished products as it was. *laughs* My philosophy is that people can’t buy your stuff if your stuff isn’t on display. (My product involved fresh fruit.) I’d rather have a few overripe bananas than for someone to feel that there wasn’t enough choice. Bananas are literally cents. The cheapest product was around $20. You do the math.

Probably related:


In Other News…

I’m at almost 60,000 words for my NaNoWriMo project, having just finished my first book of the set of five I’m aiming to pound out by the end of the month. I think this is a series I could easily edit and self-publish, and I’m really happy with it. I never thought I’d be the sort of person who would enjoy writing a fantasy novel (I like to read sci-fi almost exclusively), but here I am, and I’m quite enjoying it. I’m actually drawing upon a novel I originally wrote, also for NaNoWriMo almost two years ago, based on a dream I had in which I saw a bunch of characters doing something, and I was curious enough to see how the characters had gotten to that point, and what happened after, that I decided to write it out.

I could see doing this for a living. Hey, if Stephenie Meyer can do it, so can I, right? :)

I think I’ll do some nonprofit webwork to round out the week. I have my eye on a couple of easy projects that involve Facebook apps or fleshing out a new website. We’ll see if I’m motivated enough for more.

The household had a great time last night watching the Portland Irish band Darby O’Gill perform. A few other friends attended what ended up being this intimate acoustic set with Scott and Ken. We should make this a much more frequent occurrence, hehe.

We’re looking at having the car looked at by a professional at the close of the month. As I have a job lined up for December that will require me to be mobile, this is a bit worrisome. We’ll see. I’m also looking to acquire a new smartphone during the same time frame as the car. That will be a happy thing.

I should probably start visiting the local thrift stores for work pants and shirts…

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This Week’s Goings-On

This week, I decided to do a bunch of tasks through Fiverr at the cost of $5 per task, just like the website advertises. I tackled a bunch of new WordPress installs, including themes, for people who were interested in such (their domain and webspace were already there, or purchased separately), and did a few whimsical banners for those who were searching for such. There was one person who wanted a theme customized beyond what I considered to be mild tweaking, and so we negotiated an additional $5 for that. lol I have a list of plugins for WordPress that I group into different packages, depending on the client’s website needs; for example, a band would need to show booked events and showcase their music, while a realtor would require a consultation request form and a gallery for photos and layout diagrams. I love WordPress.

I’m about halfway through my current volunteering assignment, a social media campaign for an international nonprofit; Twitter is gaining a lot of momentum in the form of @replies, personal messages, and new subscribers, and the Facebook app has proven very popular. I’m not associated with the Adsense advertising also going on, but that’s also garnering a lot of web traffic for the organization. I get an email whenever a new ad goes up, and I watch the statistics spike as more and more people either click a link, or use Google to search for more information on the organization. Very fun. This would be the same firm for which I initially created the social media accounts, mentioned a few weeks back. The vice-chairperson I have the most contact with has expressed his approval of my work so far, and has asked me to train an English-speaking volunteer in France to continue the work I started. The vice said specifically that he’ll keep my contact information in mind for future projects regarding the various social networks out there. I am always pleased to gain another repeat customer.

My calendar of events is now virtually unlimited–for a couple of years I have had set hours due to the various real-life demands on my time each weekday. For example, I transport a friend to and from work. I gave her notice that with the recent changes to my household, it would be difficult to coordinate her schedule on top of everything else that is going on. My last day of transport was this Friday last. I don’t feel as frazzled about juggling online and offline responsibilities now.

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Quiet = Busy

I try to think of something most every day to post on this blog, be it an idea, an assignment, or a project I’m gnawing on. If I haven’t started or finished something, I’m always at least working on something.

I don’t update as often as I’d like, because sometimes I bury myself in something and don’t come up for air long enough to remember that there’s a blog here. There are days that are entirely devoted to somethingoranother that I’d like to work on, or a puzzle to work out.

For the past few days, for example, I’ve been busying myself with a newly found development kit. I made a pit stop here long enough to share a new link, and then I was back at work, or performing a daily errand, or I’d gone to sleep for the night.

Right now I’m playing with a text-to-speech app for the iOS, emulating the vocal properties of a couple specific famous people, and figuring out how best to render a static image that will automatically lip sync to whatever has been typed. It sounds silly but I have a specific audience in mind for this.

I’ve also added a few more freelance websites to the link list. I have an active profile on each site listed. Business is steady, the projects are small, but I’m having a lot of fun, and I pretty much get to afford foofy coffee, a recent and disturbing habit.

Woo, an update!

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