Browsing the blog archives for November, 2006.

Griffery Redux: The Many Faces of a Man Called Griff

eBay

Lately I’ve noticed an increasing number of visitors to my original post about “the Many Faces of a Man Called Griff” and I’ve felt really bad about this because all those photos got deleted when I moved from TypePad to WordPress. I’ve just been “too busy” to repost them.

Until now. The Griffery Gallery has been republished. This new gallery may be especially interesting to my scrapbooking readers - I made it using a new online scrapbooking site called ScrapBlog. Now I’m no scrapbooker (as you will be able to tell upon viewing the first few pages) but ScrapBlog is a REALLY cool, fun webtoy that scrapbookers and digital photographers just might get a kick out of.

Check it out & leave a comment to let me know what you think. Would you use it?

Related Links
Scrapblog (http://www.scrapblog.com/default.aspx)

Update: Oh, look what got deleted when ScrapBlog went from Beta to Full-Launch. *@#&($#&!*

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Overdoing IT

eBay

One of my eBay Peeps just sent me a note that made my week.

Hi Jules,

I hope you guys are weathering the storms ok. Guess what we got at work today — The IT cookie cutter, because eBay LOVES the IT.

I overheard one of the analysts asking their lead if they had an “SH” cookie cutter too. The lead didn’t find that funny.

Seems that more than a few employees are tired of corporate’s never-ending enthrallment with ‘it’. It’s been one day and already the cookie cutters have hit the site.

IT Shit for sale:

Infringed IT Shit for sale:

Looking for IT Shit is fun. Especially because I see employees are still unloading my recognition items in the eBay-ana category.

I wonder if they’re getting ready to quit. People always seemed to sell their recognition stuff as some sort of revenge. I get that. What kills me is that they have no idea what a BITCH it was to get those gold pins made in the first place. That and the whole ‘contributing to a negative workplace by telling everyone you’re making $200 on a symbol of employee achievement’ thing.

Somewhere in my box of eBay goodies, I have an old faded blue lanyard with all three versions of those gold pins. I loved that lanyard - I got it at our first company meeting, wore it in Baltimore for Auction for America and throughout my six years at eBay. And if I’d had get rid of everything else - that was the one thing I wanted to keep.

Guess what got lost in the move. Damnit.

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Bad Building Ju-ju All Around: Falling Crane Kills Microsoft Employee

Microsoft, News, eBay

Off and on all day Friday I had been trying to reach the project manager for a vendor who’s helping me rehaul our internal field site Before I get ahead of myself here - she’s fine. It just seemed wierd that no matter how I tried, I could not get a hold of her. Or anyone on the team. Around 4pm I received an auto-responder from their office.

A crane fell on their building. About twenty hours before.

Nov 18, 2006

The Seattle Times


Offices of at least three businesses in the Plaza 305 building in downtown Bellevue are closed indefinitely after Thursday’s construction-crane accident.

Workers shuttled in and out of a Pacific Continental Bank branch, removing confidential documents because of severe damage to the building. Clients were told they could do their banking online, over the phone or at a branch in downtown Seattle.

At Civica Office Commons, windows were shattered in the offices of developer Schnitzer Northwest and public-relations firm Waggener Edstrom Worldwide when the crane slammed into the north tower of the complex. A Wells Fargo branch on the ground floor remained closed while workers removed debris.

I wonder now, how was it I was able to pick up a random news bite about a bomb going off at eBay in another state between the gossip and traffic on Jackie and Bender’s Morning Show - but I didn’t so much as hear a peep all day about a crane falling on three buildings less than ten miles from where I work?

But as much of a total ass I felt sitting at my desk that evening, reading about how completely clueless I’d been of a major disaster right down my street, in reality I only focused on that for about a half a second. Because the whole thing got a lot, lot worse.

Nov 17, 2006

KING / KING5.com Staff and Wire Reports

BELLEVUE, Wash. - The man who died in when a crane crashed into his apartment Thursday evening was 31-year-old Matthew Ammon, a patent attorney for Microsoft.

He had only worked there for five months, after moving from Kansas City. Ammon was originally from the Pittsburgh area, according to general counsel for Microsoft Brad Smith.

The 210-foot crane collapsed around 7:45 p.m. at the high-rise complex construction project on 108th Avenue NE near NE 4th Street, at 333 Bellevue Tower, which is an office building that has been vacant for a few years.

It smashed into the west side of the Pinnacle Bell Centre Apartments, killing Ammon, who lived on the top floor. It also sliced through two other buildings, the Civica Office Commons and Plaza 305.

Part of downtown Bellevue remained shut down Friday as investigators searched for what caused the construction crane to come crashing down Thursday night.

I didn’t know Matthew. I doubt that given another three, five, ten years on campus, I would ever even meet him. But do I know he was out here just like the rest of us, trying to accomplish something. I know he was probably kicking back watching a football game at the time of the accident. I know he was just one year younger than me, and I know that he had no expectation at all of what crashed down on him that night.

I’m sorry for his family. I’m sorry for him. But mostly I’m sorry for all those tomorrows, second chances, and next times he no longer has that I take for granted every day.

And I’m sorry that a month from now, I probably still will.

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