January
I finished up the last of my three chapters for
The PHP Anthology, 2nd Edition,
and promptly used my advance to buy the family a Wii.
I was also introduced to Ivo Jansch through
work, and had him wow me with one of the
ibuildings products.
February
Mid-month, my boss at Zend, Boaz, got the
go-ahead to use the ibuildings WDE platform to build our new website CMS;
part of the plan would include training at the ibuildings home office in
Vlissingen, NL... which meant I had to get my passport pronto.
Towards the end of the month, I was invited to
BostonPHP to present
building a simple Zend Framework
CRUD application, along with Chuck Hagenbuch
of the HORDE project. While there,
Nate Abele heckled me, and
then joined Chuck and myself for an impromptu framework panel; a good time
was had by all.
March
I flew to Brussels, Belgium, where I met my supervisor, Boaz, so we could go
to Vlissingen. We spent the day in Brussels, walking around and visiting
such sites as the Cathedral of St. Michael, La Grand Place, and the Mannekin
Pis.
Our visit to ibuildings was very productive, and I was very impressed by the
team there; everybody was very knowledgeable and skilled. I presented a Zend
Framework overview, as well as an abbreviated version of the Best Practices
talk I'd given with Mike Naberezny at the 2006 ZendCon; the latter ignited a
ton of questions and enthusiasm.
On returning home, I had a ton of work to do on the zend.com CMS, and this
continued in spurts through November. The job was made much easier by the
ibuildings WDE product.
I closed out a ton of MVC issues in the Zend Framework, and we released the
first beta version late in the month.
April
At the beginning of the month, our landlord threw us for a loop and
announced he was going to sell our apartment... meaning that we either had
to step up our plans to purchase a home, or start looking for a new rental.
Ultimately, we ended up looking for a rental, due to time constraints. The
next two months would be highlighted with the look for a new place as well
as countless showings of our apartment to potential buyers.
Mid-month, we packed up the family and flew down to Atlanta, GA, to visit my
wife's family. While there, we were able to go to the Atlanta Zoo and see
Mei Lan, their baby panda -- way cute!
May
Mid-month, we found a new place in Richmond, VT -- a small village about 10
minutes from Burlington, near where we originally lived when we first moved
to Vermont.
During the first RC for Zend Framework, released at the end of the month, I
introduced the ViewRenderer, a feature for auto-rendering views based on the
current controller and action name -- a feature common to many frameworks.
However, it ostensibly broke a ton of existing applications by being enabled
by default -- not one of my more popular decisions. Since the 1.0.0 release,
I've heard little grumbling about it, and it's now often cited as an
ease-of-use feature -- go figure.
June
The first week of June, I flew to Tel Aviv, Israel, to start training people
on the new CMS, as well as to work with our entire ebiz team to finalize the
work plan for completing the CMS. It was, needless to say, my first time to
Israel or the Middle East, and I was constantly confronted with culture
shock. Europe was an easy transition to make, but Israel was completely
foreign to me -- everything from the way people drove, to the architecture,
to the food was different. Unfortunately, I arrived a day late due to a
flight cancellation, and missed the tour of Jerusalem my supervisor had
planned for all of us. However, he took me to the city of Yafa, an Arabic
city where the Israeli's originally tried to settle before building Tel Aviv
to the north. The architecture was amazing, as were the winding, narrow
streets of the old city.
I was also told during this trip that Andi had requested transferring me
full-time to the Zend Framework team. I would spend the next week or two
weighing my options, and ultimately decided to do so.
A week after I returned, we moved into our new rental in Richmond. The kids
love the new place, which has a bedroom for each of them, a yard, and
porches on each entrance.
Somehow, I also found time to record my first (and so far only)
PHP Abstract podcast.
July
We released Zend Framework 1.0.0 at
the beginning of the month, marking our first stable release. While many
still view it as incomplete, the overwhelming feedback has been positive,
and we've had over 2 million downloads to date.
I accepted the transfer to the Zend Framework team, but the condition was
made that I would stay part-time on the ebiz team until the new site was
launched. This meant that the next 5 months were spent splitting my time
between the two projects, often working late and on weekends to get work
done.
Towards the end of the month, we took a long weekend camping in Vermont's
Northeast Kingdom. The weather was unseasonably wet, but we persevered and
had a great time. 5 days of offline time was definitely needed!
I also finally released the first stable version of
File_Fortune on
PEAR, over a year since I'd first
proposed it. The package interfaces with mod_fortune files, allowing both
the ability to read and write such files, with full binary compatability.
August
Not much to report in August, except work, work, and more work.
September
My ebiz supervisor, Boaz, flew me to Tel Aviv for a second time, this time
to perform a "brain dump" for the rest of the team before I transitioned
fully out of the team, and also to help setup our new data center and
release procedures. This time, Boaz took me to Jerusalem himself during my
last full day in the country. If you've never been to the city, you should
definitely put it on your list of things to do before you die. With my
degree in religion, the place was full of meaning for me, but it would be
putting it lightly to say that religion is palpable in the air there. We
visited the Wailing Wall, the Via Dolorosa, the Church of the Holy
Sepulchre, and listened to the muezzins sing the call to prayer for the
muslims. The tour was simply amazing.
A few days after I returned, I flew down to New York City for a special
meeting of NYPHP, where
Mark de Visser presented on
various Zend products and initiatives, and I gave a Zend Framework overview.
A week after the NYPHP presentation, I did a
zend.com webinar
on the Zend Framework MVC layer.
October
October was the month of ZendCon. I
presented a full-day tutorial on best practices and unit testing with
Sebastian Bergmann and
Mike Naberezny; despite the length and
subject matter, we were SRO for most of the day.
I also did a main-stage presentation on Zend Framework's MVC components,
directly following Terry Chay -- an
intimidating situation at best. From the feedback I've seen, the
presentation was well-received, and I had somewhere between 120 and 150
attendees -- phenomenal! (Even more amazing was how many people were
familiar with MVC in general!)
One great thing about the conference was the fact that I got to network with
a number of framework developers, both Zend Framework and otherwise,
including Nate Abele of CakePHP as well as
Paul M. Jones of
the Solar framework. Many good
conversations were had.
Late in the month,
The PHP Anthology, 2nd Edition,
my first published book as an author, was finally released!
November
I spent much of the month working on
Zend_Layout,
a much requested component that simplifies and automates Two Step Views in
Zend Framework. I also started work implementing
Zend_View Enhanced,
a set of view helpers for making complex views with Zend_View possible.
I also started playing with Twitter a bit,
and came up with a
Zend_Service_Twitter
proposal for interacting with the Twitter API via PHP.
And finally, the Sunday before Thanksgiving, we finally launched the new
Zend.com site, which was well-received in
the blogosphere.
December
A goal I've had for some time has been to form a PHP user group in the
Burlington area. A friend of mine pointed out to me sometime this fall that
there's actually already
a Google Group
formed; he and the original founder started planning a meeting for early
December. I spoke at this inaugural meeting, presenting Zend Framework's MVC
layer yet again; a good time was had by all, and a lot of enthusiasm for
future meetings was generated.
I finished up Zend_Layout and Zend_View Enhanced with the help of Ralph
Schindler, and got a new proposal up for
Zend_Form,
just in time for my holidays to begin -- 11 days with family and with little
to no internet connectivity during a trip to Atlanta, GA for one of only a
handful of Christmases I've spent without snow.
Summary
This year was incredibly busy -- three cross-seas trips, one
cross-continent trip, a move, and several trips along the Eastern Seaboard;
three user group presentations, and eight presentations over the course of
the year; one conference; one move; one PEAR release; one podcast; one
webinar; one book; and countless hours of programming.
My goals for the coming year? I'm too tired to even think about it
.