Friday, February 29, 2008

Hello Sonya and Chris

We're growing again...

Sonya. First a big welcome to Sonya Green (sonyagreen), who is going to be working on LibraryThing for Libraries, our effort to get LibraryThing goodness into library catalogs.

Sonya is taking the job we advertised a month ago; she is, as required, smart, personable, hard-working, organized, techy, a fast learner and libraryish.(1) Her job includes customer wrangling and hand-holding, but also a fair amout of CSS. I'm happy to say she passed our MySQL test, going from zero knowledge to the "if you like X, you'll like Y" statement in only a few hours. (I've interviewed programmers who couldn't get there at all.)

Sonya has a Masters in Library and Information Science from the University of lllinois and worked at the Millicent Library in Fairhaven, MA. She volunteers at the Papercut Zine Library in Boston, and will therefore be leading any future LT efforts with zines. She knits, bikes, pet kittens, and tries not to tip over her bucket of sunshine.(2)

Sonya is mostly going to do LTFL, but that didn't stop her from telling us she hates our colors immediately after arrival in Portland, so Abby, Sonya and I spent half the day playing with alternate color schemes. I think she's right, damn her.(3)

UPDATE: Sonya is excited to take part in boosting the Zinesters who LibraryThing group.

Chris. Christopher Holland (conceptdawg) is finally becoming a full-time, bona fide, honest-to-God, non-contract LibraryThing employee.

Chris, who does programming, has been with us from the start—he pointed out that he was hired the day before Abby(4)—but has always been a contractor. Once he even went away for six months, but he came back.

Chris has been the moving force behind Common Knowledge, the new work pages, the new library searching code(5), non-member throttling(6), and the forthcoming "LibraryThing local." He is a former graphic designer, a LibraryThing author and lives in Mobile, Alabama. His other projects have included DigMaster (article), an database of field and museum archaeological collections—like LibraryThing, but for old, dead things. (Chris has worked on archaeological digs in Greece, Cyprus, Israel and Mississippi.) He was a founder of the software company ConceptHouse.

Chris is "so LibraryThing" he keeps his own public what-I-did-today, even though the rest of us got fatigued and stopped updating ours.


1. She's also "super," but the "inspired" in the photo refers to the burritos of Boloco.
2. Can you tell the last sentence is not in my prose style? I wish I had a bucket of sunshine!
3. Unfortunately, then I installed the new Mac OS, and Photoshop stopped working, so the results of the redesign won't be evident for a little while.
4. However, Abby had already been working for the pre-LibraryThing company, me, nights and weekends while I was on paternity leave. So, Abby loses battle, wins war.
5. Which, for all the glitches along the way, is now one righteous piece of code. It's fast too.
6. Small feature; excellent name.

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15 Comments:

Blogger megacoupe said...

What's wrong with the colors? I quite like them. I've never come across another site with these colors (unless you count GoodReads, I suppose...).

2/29/2008 7:36 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Is non-member throttling the term for refraining from strangling people when they suggest yet again that you should be able to whip out wishlists in an afternoon? :)

(Just kidding, I know what it refers to, but putting the parentheses in the wrong place was just too entertaining.)

2/29/2008 8:16 PM  
Blogger Jenn said...

Sonya! Sonya! Sonya!

Just a small cheer to say congratulations on your first week at LibraryThing!

2/29/2008 8:30 PM  
Blogger Katya said...

Sonya is the bomb and not just because she always helps me when my knitting gets screwed up. :)

2/29/2008 9:02 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Alright!

Sonya represents!

3/01/2008 3:50 PM  
Blogger Ed said...

Conceptdawg, I lived in Mobile eons ago - you may have found traces of me during one of your archaeological expeditions there. It was 1973 - 1978, during the Jurassic period, I think. I lived on Delrose Dr., off Cottage Hill Rd. Also in the Lafayette Square Apartments briefly. I even attended USA at night while I was there. I worked for a company whose mailing address was Axis, AL. Just recently, a guy I work with now came to the office with a shirt on with a company logo and AXIS, AL embroidered on the front. Wow!

I know, not interesting to anyone but me, but I'm fascinated by by connections and coincidences like that. Now I'll shut up.

3/01/2008 4:47 PM  
Blogger jenny bento said...

Sonya fan club checking in! Congrats Sonya!

3/02/2008 12:51 PM  
Blogger Tim said...

Chris! Chris! Chris! Woooooooo!

(Chris needs a more effective blog-mobbing fan club.)

3/02/2008 1:00 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Maybe the Chris fan club is too busy drooling over the "hotness" that is Chris. Yowzah!!!

3/03/2008 9:58 AM  
Blogger Pawned! said...

Way, WAY too creepy... I just finished reading Neil Gaiman's "Coraline" a few hours ago. I go to the blog, and read Sonyas profile, and what ONE book does she have in her library? Uh, yeah. Creeepy.

3/03/2008 1:50 PM  
Blogger Bob Campbell said...

Sonya,
When our family moved to Mattapoisett in 1960, I quickly determined as a 15 year old, that its library would be inadequate, and took the bus to Fairhaven to see if there was a better one around. I did get a card at the Millicent Library. I even suggested that they buy a history of the Virginian Railway, which was built by Henry Huddleston Rogers, and they did. Having the Millicent library card, then gave me the entre to the New Bedford Public Library. In 1960/61, Mattapoisett was still having its high schoolers educated in Fairhaven: then Old Rochester Reg'l H.S. opened.

3/03/2008 4:02 PM  
Blogger Sonya said...

Hi all!

Pawned, I just moved to Boston, and I weeded a bunch of books. Last night I decided it would be easier to start from scratch, and deleted everything (except Coraline, because I don't have it here to scan with my Cue Cat), but then gave into my Nintendo DS craving, and have the silliest looking LibraryThing account of all time. Maybe we're supposed to be friends?

Bob, I still think Millicent is the superior library, but at least now a Mattapoisett card will get you books there!

3/03/2008 4:54 PM  
Blogger Abby said...

Can't we love both? I grew up in Mattapoisett (whose library is being renovated and expanded *right* now), but always went to Millicent with my grandmother...

3/03/2008 5:24 PM  
Blogger Bob Campbell said...

I lived in Mattapoisett, 1960-63, age 15-18. I then went off to Univ of Penna in Philadelphia.

Abby, I didn't think I would ever meet someone else from Mattapoisett. The only person I can think of who might still live there from my time is Bill Blasdale

My dad was a Navy man, and we moved a fair bit. We lived on Pine Island Rd. I still have an affection for Mattapoisett, and I like the idea of electing the Herring Weir Inspector.

Bob Campbell

3/04/2008 3:14 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

LibraryThing,

I could not figure out how to leave my feedback elsewhere. I just logged on and found out that I am not able to add any more books as I have reached the "free limit" of 200 books. To enter more, I must subscribe for a yearly fee (probably auto renews unless I go and explicitly opt-out).

Unfortunately for you, I was not informed about the "free for the first 200 books" limit prior to my spending hours and hours entering the 211 books I could recall off the top of my head I had read. Perhaps your warning was "hidden" or intentionally non-obvious. For me, that is the same as not being informed. For you it is the same effect, I am departing your service.

I have absolutely no intention of paying you for the priviledge of my updating my own list of books. Are you freakin INSANE?! Good luck with your model (ROTFLMAO - still living in the 1990's with your charging models, I can see).

Just to be clear, I have deleted all of my books and intend for my account to go dormant.

Thank you for the great idea. I am saddened you chose to charge the $10 a month. I don't think I am the only client who feels this way. I am just one in a hundred that is vocal about my choice.


Jim

3/23/2008 12:24 AM  

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