It was the best of times, it was the worst of times!
Goodbye, so long, and thanks for all the memories!
Remember us!
(Photo courtesy of Ludo on flickr.com)
Andy.
It was the best of times, it was the worst of times!
Goodbye, so long, and thanks for all the memories!
Remember us!
(Photo courtesy of Ludo on flickr.com)
Andy.
It’s seems now, looking back, that it was somewhat fitting that my last blog post three months ago was centered around death; or to put it another way that isn’t so morbid, about endings. I didn’t know back then with any surety that something foul was happening, but I could sense in the wind that things were changing with work. The rock that had been my standing stone for going on two years was suddenly starting to tip and roll. If only I had’ve been able to see the cruel fall that was to come. Perhaps if I had’ve taken off the rose coloured glasses I was wearing, or maybe adjusted my world view to something more akin to our waking reality I would have. But alas, I was blinded by my hope and desire for my brutal relationship with Joost to continue. So it came to pass that on a fateful Tuesday – the week before this particular entries publish date – our estranged leader personally came to us in Europe and dropped his corporate ‘Fat Boy’ on the assembled masses. The result: total anhilation! In his wake he had left the complete and utter destruction of our dearly beloved Leiden office (metaphorically speaking).
That weekend saw a rampage of emotions playout within my humble flat back in Amsterdam. It was like a medium term relationship with a psychotic abusive girlfriend had come to an end; I still loved her, even after all the shit she had put me through, and I didn’t want it to be over. In the end, she gave me a half hearted hug and pat on the back by way of apology, and then she walked out the door. I walked the hallways of my apartment in a pissed off swager wishing a face would present itself that I could slap with a closed fist. I wanted something tangible I could vent at, some focus for the built up negativity that was swimming in my blood. That we were wronged was without argument, we had in fact been fucked pretty badly on a number of different levels. But really, by staying as long as we did, we’d all agreed to be corporately fucked. Deep down, we all knew it was going to come to this, so we had noone to blame but ourselves. Maybe that’s what hurt me the most, the fact that I didn’t want to see what was inevitable, but rather surround myself with delusion made out of fluffy hope.
I struggled through Sunday and Monday. When Tuesday came around I had reached the final end; I lay myself down on a bed of ashes that was my nuked Joost carreer and calmly smoothered the last of the self pity. It was over, and there was nothing I or anyone else could do that was going to change that. For all the ex venice chat griping rhetoric, and endless games of what-if, Joost was gone, never to be seen again.
I suppose it’s when life is at its lowest ebb that you tend see the lifelines that are thrown to you from outside the mists of uncertainity. Three of us that day took a train ride up to Amsterdam for a meeting with an unlikely pair of allies; a young company of two guys spinning up an outsource venture, who brought with them a tempting offer. They had a promise of work, and desire to partner with the company that so far we’d only talked about. Who would have believed such luck was possible with such auspicious timing? Certainly not me.
While the future still has vast tracts of uncertainity, I’m feeling a heightened sense of excitement and enthusiasm that I’ve only felt on very rare and momentous occassions; such as when I left Brisbane for the first time on a one way plane ticket to London. It’s during times like these that there is no such thing as mindless repetition, each day presents challenges that are immediate reward when you overcome them – and you do overcome them, you sometimes don’t even know how, you simply do.
At the risk of being overly poetic, I feel that my own personal pheonix has risen from the ashes, and while he is very small with only a few feathers, he’s definitely in the air and moving!
Time to give thanks for all blessings great and small, I say!
Andy.
That’s my catch cry these days, and something I’ve said more than a couple of times in the last few weeks since we started the roll out of our new media service to the world at the web media startup I work for. It’s been a pretty intense time, definitely the most intense time in my work life so far, but then, this is definitely the company with the biggest vision and biggest dreams I’ve ever worked for too.
Working in a web startup though is anything but orderly and by the numbers. I won’t go into a technical rant on software development and time-to-market cycles for web services but imagine this, if I was working for a construction company that built four bedroom houses, it would take us nine months to build that house, we’d do it without using plans, but more napkin drawings and scratches in the dirt. The team that would build it wouldn’t actually be one team, but more groups of individuals that you can only work out who’s doing what by seeing who’s huddled into a gang and yelling at another gang. If you try to ask what someone is doing in his group, you’d be told to STFU and GTFO. We’d deliver you a house that we knew leaked when it rained, and half the electricity points wouldn’t have any power, and you would have no idea how to flush the toilet, but we would smile and pat you on the back and tell you we worked very hard on it, and we’ll fix those problems as quick as we can AND give you some cool new stuff when we do. You thought you would get a house with a nice green lawn, and a trampoline in the back, with a gas barbequeue under a patio. Instead we gave you astroturf that’s orange, with a hole in the ground for a hangi that’s under a circus tent marquee that looks modelled off Joseph’s technicolour dreamcoat. Even though you might try to argue that’s not quite right, we’ll tell you it’s fantastic, and much better than your neighbour who has no taste, style or sense!
If you thought all these cool web services that you use and get enjoyment from were made by well oiled technology companies that knew what they were doing, then you’ve been taken in by the bling bling of the shiney web sites they have. Most of the time these web companies are putting stuff together by the seat of their pants, making decisions in meetings that would remind you of the way a group of 8 year old kids decide who their best friends for that day are. The fact that anything works on the web absolutely amazes me, and just goes to show how productive children can be when they put their hugely intelligent minds to it.
Having said that though, it is hugely fun, and there is a real sense for me of redefining the models of how content is distributed to consumers. This is more than just working on a gimmik of the day, but instead is about being part of a very special time and place that is influencing the biggest paradigm shift in media content distribution since the invention of the television. In twenty years time when we all take for granted our wall sized televisions taking real time feeds of content covering every genre that we’ve put into our personalised aggregators, and interacting with social groups around content. That will be because of the work and vision of the people – me being one of them – enabling change. It’s going to be a very exciting time the next couple of years, so make sure to stay close to your internet enabled devices!
Andy.
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