Ticked-off

Monday, August 25th, 2008

I’ve not had a good weekend; in fact, I’ve not had a good week - I’m thoroughly ticked-off (in the American sense). We have to deliver a big project next week and there are still some serious bugs remaining. In fact, if you look at the simplest measure in the bug database, there are 35 open “must-fix” bugs. The big-boss uses only this number as the measure of quality, and therefore asked me “formally” to inform my team that they were to come to the office to work this weekend in order to make sure that the number falls to zero for the shipping date (”otherwise, you and I will have some serious issues to discuss”, he said with what he obviously thought was a disarming smile). The problem with his request was that this involved asking two new guys to work this weekend, one of whom has been with us for only 3 weeks and has his child for the weekend only, and therefore would have to ask him to spend a sunny Saturday kicking his heels in an air-conditioned soulless office - a good preparation for later life maybe? The other unfortunate aspect of this is that I had to “formally” decline to come to the office, which made me feel even worse, and my boss even angrier, giving me a good ticking-off (in the British sense)

We planned to go to Beaune this weekend to leave the kids with Papi for the last week of the school holidays. I always enjoy these trips (see some of my first posts), as they are often accompanied by a purple haze of burgundy-red. To be honest, I could just have easily have sent my wife and sat in the office, presumably looking perplexedly at the list of bugs and writing a variation on this post, but what the hell, sorry guys, I’ve done the grind in the past, family and alcohol come first (not necessarily in that order).

Another reason not to work this weekend is that the hunting season starts next week, so the forests become off-limits to sane people for six months. This means that it is the last chance I will get to go mushrooming, it being a particularly good period, as the Girolles are in abundance (or so I thought). Saturday afternoon, after a long lunch, a siesta and a suitably concerned-sounding call to the office, we set off to the forest, armed with knives and bags for the kilos and kilos that we would undoubtedly be bringing back for dinner that evening.

French forests (the ones around Beaune anyway), are dense, dark, sprawling, and, at this time of year, damp underfoot. As you step on the fallen branches, they crumple like paper into a deep, shag-pile carpet of dead leaves. Girolles are orange mushrooms. Unfortunately, French slugs are orange too, as are dead leaves. In the past, when I have been looking for Girolles, you can put up with bending to pick up a slug, as you will always find clumps of mushrooms to make up for the disappointment. This time was different though. I saw nothing; clambering over the fallen branches, picking the spider’s webs from my hair and mouth,  slipping down embankments for an hour or so with not a single sniff of fungus soon ticked me off. The only bright moments were seeing an adder glide off the path into the undergrowth - the first time I have seen a wild snake in Europe - and son 2 picking a toad out of a puddle and putting it inside son 1’s Wellington boot, much to everyone except son 1s’ amusement. As time wore on however, I began to feel more and more guilty about not staying in the office to give moral support, and thinking that I would never get back in time to call the big-boss with a status update (as if that would change anything).

Believe it or not, as we got back through the door, my phone was ringing and it was the big boss. This left me on the horns of a dilemma - answer and tell him that I didn’t know what the status was, or don’t answer, call a team member, and then call him back pretending that I didn’t know he had already called. I’ll let you guess which option I chose…

In fact, things had moved on surprisingly well in terms of the product quality. In terms of the bug count, however, things weren’t so good, falling only by about 5 or 6. My attempts to explain that a pure bug-count is not necessarily the best way to measure things fell on stony ground. Big-boss, once again, ticked off. Software team; tired and ticked-off. Me; ticked-off by the big-boss. Bugger it, let’s get a bottle, off with its cork and back into a purple haze.

So now it’s Sunday afternoon; the guilt of not being in work has worn off with the wine from Sunday lunch, and the apprehension of going back to work tomorrow has not yet settled in. Good news though - they are showing Wigan Athle-tick versus Chelski on TV. Small comfort, but you take it where you can. I settle back on the sofa, arms behind my head, and my wife says, “what’s that black spot in your armpit?”. I twist to look, thinking that maybe it’s a previously undiscovered mole, but this black spot is surrounded by a red ring.

Tick

A closer look, and it turns out that the only thing I brought back from the forest yesterday was a tick, a small burrowing insect that gets under your skin, gorges itself on your blood over several days, leaving you with Lyme disease, a particularly nasty infection that needs treating with antibiotics, otherwise you end up with arthritis and heart failure. Tweezers out, tick - OFF!

So, as the weekend ticks to a close, I’ll take a break, and wait until later to post about a hospital visit during the week that was possibly the worst since I was diagnosed as an epilep-tick…

In the days before mobile phones and using the web for searching, my mate Andy needed to know the phone number of his friend. My mate Andy sensibly decided to call Directory Enquiries. When asked for the address, my mate Andy gave his own address. My mate Andy duly noted the phone number corresponding to the address and went as far as dialling it before realising that it was his own phone number. My mate Andy thought that they asked for your address for recording purposes and didn’t find it strange that they didn’t ask for his friend’s address. Alcohol has a tendency to make you accept warped logic. (0)
The 3 most important things I learnt at university were:
  1. You aren’t as big or as clever as you thought you were,
  2. Shut your mouth and listen, you might just learn something,
  3. When making instant coffee, put the milk in before pouring in the hot water; when making tea with a teabag in the cup, put the hot water in first.
All the rest was purely incidental. (0)
My mate Andy went to a party. My mate Andy stayed till late. My mate Andy left the party to go back home in his car. My mate Andy couldn’t find his car where he left it. My mate Andy called the police. The police came and drove him around the streets to see if he could find it. My mate Andy, sat in the back of the police car, drove past his car, but my mate Andy, too embarrassed, didn’t tell the police as they drove past it, parked in an identical street parallel to the one he thought it was in. Unsure what to do, my mate Andy called the police the next day to say that he’s found it after all. My mate Andy is a high-ranking executive in a large pharmaceutical company. My mate Andy is just as daft as when we were kids. What a relief. (0)

(Whats)MySpace.com

Thursday, May 1st, 2008

One year ago, I read very few blogs, and the thought of actually writing one made me cringe: lack of confidence, poor ideas, badly written, leaving you open to criticism. That was until John visited. He persuaded me to give it a go and I’ve never looked back. OK, so I do have poor ideas, badly expressed, however, for me it is a creative outlet that definitely beats sitting in front of French television or Sky News.

The problem is finding the time and the inspiration. I have several ideas that never make it here because I can’t see how to develop them and spin them out to a full post. That is why I have decided to add little soglets to the blog. Here is the dictionary definition:

Pronunciation “sog-lut“: a short blog post designed to provoke a short-lived emotion, usually a curve of the lip or a roll of the eyes, and to be immediately forgotten” (source, Lyon, 2008).

The advantage is that I can write a bit of nonsense quickly without having to develop it any further. The disadvantage being that I can write a bit of nonsense quickly without having to develop it any further.

So anyway, I might spew a few of these out when the spirit takes me.