Monthly Archives: December 2007

Upgrades To Picture Album Coming

I’ve wanted to make some upgrades to the photo album for quite a while and have been working these ideas out on paper for a couple of months. Here’s kind of what I have in mind:

  1. Put in a general “photo gallery” category. Right now I have to create a topic and then add the pictures I want to the topic. Sometimes I just have pictures … they’re not around some specific topic. I’d like to be able to just put these pictures into the gallery category and have them show up newest to oldest when looking at that topic.
  2. Add tagging to the pictures, kind of like what Flickr does and many other social networking sites. The idea would be that a picture would belong to a specific topic (or to the general gallery), but it could also be associated with any number of additional tags. The tags would be entered as the picture was put on the album with no predetermined set of tags. In other words, the tag would be anything I wish it to be.

For instance, this picture

might have the following tags:

  • Nina
  • Crayola
  • Easton
  • Pennsylvania
  • smile

Then, from the page where the various picture topics are displayed, I could select a tag and see all of the pictures having that particular tag, again sorted from newest to oldest.

So, I’m working on these capabilities. First I needed to get a pretty good method working to display a set of selected pictures because then they are not in a “topic”. So I’ve built the code to do that. The initial version is at https://www.rnsmith.com/rkspics/photoalbum.php/. There are no other links to this web page, so the only way to get there is to remember it or to come to this post and click on it. Right now the program displays thumbnails of all the pictures on my web page, 25 at a time. Clicking on any of the pictures will show the full-sized version of the picture. Clicking on the full-sized version goes back to the thumbnail page. Clicking on the “next” link at the bottom of the page goes to the next 25 pictures. So, round 1 in this upgrade is underway. Let me know if you have other things you’d like to have done to the picture album software!

Tweets for 14 Dec 2007

My Twittering For the Past 24 Hours

  • Working on blog post about the sale of AMI Semiconductor (14-Dec-07 08:23 am)
  • My observations on the same of AMI Semiconductor: https://www.rnsmith.com/?p=899 (14-Dec-07 09:28 am)
  • My former employer AMI Semiconductor in Pocatello, Idaho was sold yesterday to On Semiconductor. (14-Dec-07 09:28 am)
  • same of AMI Semiconductor == sale of AMI Semiconductor. Dang keyboard! (14-Dec-07 09:29 am)
  • Finishing up a weekly status call. Enjoying being inside on a very cold day. (14-Dec-07 01:46 pm)
  • @sidx001 …. many unhappy Vista users are going back to WinXP … (grin) (14-Dec-07 03:51 pm)
  • Heading out to the Ward Christmas Party … our contribution: 10 pounds of mashed potatos! (14-Dec-07 06:40 pm)
  • Home from the party. Good food and good entertainment. Merry Christmas! (14-Dec-07 09:04 pm)
  • Finished playing with computers for the day. Good night! (14-Dec-07 10:25 pm)

Goodbye AMI Semiconductor….

The big news in Pocatello, Idaho yesterday was the impending sale of AMI Semiconductor to Phoenix-based On Semiconductor. I got several emails from people that I used to work with at AMIS asking what I thought of the sale and what the impact on AMIS in Pocatello will be.

On Semiconductor bought the Gresham, Oregon fab from LSI Logic almost two years ago. I have some friends working at the Gresham fab and heard from them a little about the culture changes that took place as On Semiconductor took over the facility.

Based on that information, what I’ve read in the press (both print and online), and my own observations about AMIS, here are my predictions:

  • AMIS has four fabs: a four-inch fab in Belgium which is in the slow process of being shut down, a five-inch fab in Pocatello which is doing fairly well, a six-inch fab in Belgium which is full, and an eight-inch fab in Pocatello which is running around half capacity. On will quickly shut down the four-inch fab and by mid 2009 there will be no fabs in Belgium and only one fab in Pocatello. I suspect the five-inch fab will stay and the eight-inch fab will be consolidated into On’s eight-inch fab in Gresham, Oregon.
  • Currently AMIS employs about 900 people in Pocatello. By mid-2009 that will be less than 300 and most of them will be design engineers. That means more than 600 people will be laid off in Pocatello. Most of them will have to move somewhere else to find a job.
  • AMIS has hired some pretty high-level talent over the past year or so, including a new President, a new CFO, a new Treasury person, and several others. These folks will be regretting having moved to Pocatello as their jobs will all go away.
  • Most other corporate functions will move away from Pocatello, particularly finance and IT. That makes me very sad as there are some top-drawer IT people at AMIS.

This sale will not be good for Pocatello but it won’t be devastating or even have much of a lasting impact. For many years, GE would build plants in small-town America and staff them with lower-cost non-union labor found in these rural communities. Then Jack Welch came along. He initiated a huge consolidation resulting in shutting down most of these rural operations (for which he was nicknamed “Neutron Jack” in reference to the neutron bomb which eradicated people but left the buildings intact). These rural towns were devastated and the hulking shells of former GE buildings dot the landscape in the midwest in these small, almost ghost towns. The sale of AMIS will not have that impact on Pocatello, but it will definitely not be good for the city.

Shortly after AMIS recruited me to Pocatello, I came to realize that the values at AMIS were widely at variance with the values in general in the Pocatello area. The people in Pocatello are a bit more liberal than the Idaho average, but still quite conservative in comparison with the other blue states. They want stable employment with good benefits. They are interested in clean, environmental friendly manufacturing. They want some growth, but controlled and managed growth.

AMIS, on the other hand, has become a company that hires and fires constantly. Employment will ratchet up to about a thousand and then a couple hundred people will be laid off. One joke around town is that eventually everyone in the city will have been laid off by AMIS. The company has become very short-term focused rather than looking and planning for the long term. They’ve made several acquisitions in the past couple of years, spending a lot of money, for little gain (in fact, a couple of acquisitions have cost the company significant money). They have ventured into markets for which they were unprepared and have gotten spanked as a result. For instance, AMIS bought a company in Canada to make a move into the medical market. The main market for those products is in the United States and at the same time, some serious changes were underway in the U.S. about how products will be qualified and allowed to be sold. Those changes caught AMIS by surprise and the ballyhooed growth in the medical marketplace stalled, causing knee-jerk reactions when the quarterly results fell short. Rather than holding the executives accountable, the working folks got stiffed.

I’ve felt for a long time that AMIS was a company busy committing suicide. Yesterday they sold the gun to the company that will pull the trigger. Goodbye, AMI Semiconductor….

Tweets for 13 Dec 2007

My Twittering For the Past 24 Hours

  • Started an advanced CSS/XHTML online class. So far quite challenging. (13-Dec-07 08:57 am)
  • It’s snowing…. (13-Dec-07 09:44 am)
  • Working on a couple of pictures in Photoshop. (13-Dec-07 11:21 am)
  • Debugging javascript. What a pain! (13-Dec-07 02:53 pm)
  • Brain fried … but got the javascript stuff to work. (13-Dec-07 05:41 pm)
  • Off to CES class… (13-Dec-07 06:41 pm)
  • Reading for a bit then off to bed. G’night all! (13-Dec-07 09:51 pm)

Tweets for 12 Dec 2007

My Twittering For the Past 24 Hours

  • You know you’re a Mormon if you’re disappointed that your son went to Harvard because he couldn’t get into BYU…. (12-Dec-07 12:49 pm)
  • At OfficeMax … Ink, paper. (12-Dec-07 02:06 pm)
  • Cold, grey day. Drugs are my friends today … Nina’s drivingm of course. I’m much too happy for that! (12-Dec-07 02:25 pm)
  • Starbucks Venti Hot Chocolate hit the spot. Sad it’s gone already. (12-Dec-07 03:18 pm)
  • Time to print the Christmas letter and address labels. Christmas Spirit — you’re needed! (12-Dec-07 03:42 pm)
  • Merging from Excel into Word on a Mac is easier than on my WinXP box! (12-Dec-07 06:18 pm)
  • Christmas cards (round 1) done! (12-Dec-07 08:29 pm)
  • Enough playing with Javascript tonight. Time for bed. (12-Dec-07 11:11 pm)

Tweets for 11 Dec 2007

My Twittering For the Past 24 Hours

  • Driveway snowblowed. Walks snowblowed. Steps shoveled. Ice melt down. More work than I wanted to do today! (11-Dec-07 08:54 am)
  • @robertmerrill 1)ability to make a difference, 2)smart people to work with, 3)growing company. Aged-boomer. (11-Dec-07 09:41 am)
  • 17 degrees outside in Pocatello, Idaho. Working on a high of 22. Thankfully clear, sunny skies and no wind. (11-Dec-07 01:27 pm)
  • Just finished with the Periodontist. Now picking up a hefty Percoset prescription. Pain, pain, go away! (11-Dec-07 04:51 pm)
  • Home again. I wonder how much pain killer I can take at a time? (11-Dec-07 05:44 pm)
  • Hmmm … percocet makes me kinda loopy. No pain, though. Feel like I could sleep for a week. (11-Dec-07 09:02 pm)

I Feel, Well, Loopy!

Today was another visit to the dentist’s chair. Actually, a bit beyond dentist as I was at the periodontist to have a “crown lengthening” done. I’m in the middle of a lengthly set of dental work being done to replace a long bridge in the upper left front of my mouth.

The dentist Dr. Akers (who hasn’t thought very much about a web presence, it seems) said as I got settled in the fairly uncomfortable chair, “This will be the easiest thing I’ve done in the past couple of days.” In the next breath he had his assistant call in an order for Vicodin to the pharmacy for me to pick up when he was finished. His assistant hooked up the nitrous oxide and off I went into la la land. Even though I know that the bones amplify the sounds going on in my mouth, it sure sounded like he was doing major work around #13 tooth. A couple of times he stopped and said that this was turning out to be a bit more complicated than he had originally thought.

After more than an hour in the chair, everything for this visit was completed. Dr. Akers then wrote out an prescription for Percocet! Vicodin wasn’t going to be enough, I guess. He told me to take a Percocet along with 800 mg of Ibuprofin when I got home and to repeat it when I went to bed, but not before 10 p.m. So, I’m on drugs tonight. Feeling no pain. In fact not feeling much of anything except that I’m a bit loopy.

We did get some snow yesterday but mostly we got COLD. Last night we went well below zero and the high today at the airport was 17 degrees. It’s going to be cold the rest of the week, but no more snow forecast for the next week. The snowblower got a small workout this morning. It’s working well. Now we just need enough snow for me to need it!