Gregory Robleto

Metro Riders making the right choice.

Sep 28 2007 | Comments (0)

I have been tempted recently to shake things up and start driving into work instead of taking the Metro.  On empty roads, it would take save over an hour of commute.  The problem is there are never empty roads.  The Texas Transportation Institute reports that Washington DC has jumped up two spots past San Francisco and into a tie with Atlanta for the 2nd worst traffic in the nation.  Combine that with a report from last year stating the 270 spur, a necessary part of my drive, as the 8th worst traffic spot in the nation, and I will be continuing to add money to my Metro SmartCard, at least until the rate hike.

Metro Center Macy’s – Putting the Customer Out on the Streets

Sep 28 2007 | Comments (0)

In Macy’s at closing time, I headed for the exit that goes directly into the Metro Center station, only to find a locked door and a guard telling a confused tourist “The Metro’s closed.”  ( I assured the now frantic woman that the Metro was actually still quite open, that this guard had simply locked this door). 

How much would it cost Macy’s to keep that same guard (or one better at communicating with customers) stationed at that same door, but leave it unlocked until the store was emptied? Wouldn’t that simple act provide the convenience of allowing Metro customers to use the exit they are familiar with?  Instead Macy’s forced this tourist, and I and all their other paying customers out onto the streets of downtown DC at night to find our way back to the Metro ourselves.

Why can’t I create a custom-ordered slideshow?

Sep 28 2007 | Comments (0)

Has no one ever wanted to display a slideshow in the order they choose?  This can’t be a new idea.  Yet, unless you are uploading your slideshow onto the web or importing it into Powerpoint or Flash, this is unachievable.

-Windows Explorer will not save your custom order, once you leave that folder it reverts to the sort by name or date.

- Picaca 2 will allow you to create an album and set the order, but does not provide a means for saving that album.  Trying to export the album will result in a new order that is not only not your intented order, but not sorted by date or name either.  It’s a completely random new structure.

Perhaps one of the Apple apps has a solution, but for me and my PC, we are left with having to rename every picture (A001.jpg, A002.jpg…) so they will be forced to keep the intended custom order.

This can’t be the best approach.  What have you discovered?

User Stories

Sep 28 2007 | Comments (1)

Spec. documents are faulty, they are often too cumbersome to read (let alone write). They dive into such specifics that the developer may assume that all the details is addressed. That’s when pragmatic thinking and common sense are taken out of the equation.The preferred method is to tell the development team a story; a very simple one sentence story. This story has a single character who is trying to achieve a single task, such as “As a frequent flyer, I want to be able to check how many mileage points I have” or “As a parent, I want to be able to see my student’s grades”.   That’s all that’s needed that’s the story.

Unlike a spec document, this story is not contractual, it is the desired goal, which can be complimented with the criteria of how this was be deemed acceptable (i.e. “All grades are displayed together; Parents can see grades, but public can not.”).

Suddenly, the development team is back to doing what they do best, providing solutions.  They are driving how they will technically achieve this goal to fulfill the story, based off the acceptance criteria.

In search of a good shopping cart.

Jul 3 2007 | Comments (1)

I am working on trying to get the father-in-law-to-be’s brick and morter store online. I have a site design put together, and because it’s a competitive industry, it needs to be good to get any hope of attention.

Here’s my issue. I need a shopping cart, and most of the ones I see are either 1) too complex to be able to be maintained by someone who isn’t web savvy and 2) built on really constricting and ugly templates that beyond be subjectively horrible will diminished any consumer confidence.

Can anyone recommend a good shopping cart for a new online business that is intuitive and allows some non-templetized styling?

Update: I found it. A shopping cart that has an obvious care for marrying good clean coding with a simple and functional cart application. It’s Shopify.

Hooked by the Bear Tragedy

Jun 15 2007 | Comments (0)

Editors can be so easily overlooked when talking about creative types. It is often forgotten that amidst the scanning for spelling or punctuation errors, they have to creatively synopize and sell the article in only a handful of words.

I really enjoyed this article headline from The Motley Fool (circled below), it made me click through to an article I would otherwise never have read, which in my book means it triumphantly succeeded.
Housing Collapse Squishes Bear

So wanting an iPhone

Jun 14 2007 | Comments (4)

Apple iPhoneI have a cell phone, iPod, portable DVD player, and PDA that are all quivering because they are about to become paperweights as soon as I finish serving the second year of my current Sprint contract. If the last day of the contract is October 1st, then come October 2nd I will be in line at the Cingular store for my new iPhone. I’m drinking the kool-aid on this one. I can see how it will suddenly change everything. Not convinced, try watching this video.

Olympics maintain consistancy with another really bad logo.

Jun 4 2007 | Comments (6)

London 2012 OlympicsI can’t think of any Olympic logo that is really good, excepting the five rings themselves. What is this one? Is it a map? Is it numbers? Is it indecently displaying a bloke on the left and a woman on the right? This abstract mess is the new logo for the Olympics. Seth Godin pulled the quote in defense of it, and it sure doesn’t sell me. I keep wondering how this made it to the public. Isn’t this exactly why there is so much red tape in creative design?

Lego Art

May 31 2007 | Comments (1)

Lego Art

The key to a remarkable photograph is seeing the world at a slightly different artistic angle. I’ll wager then that the key to a remarkable sculpture is presenting the work in a slightly different way. For Nathan Sawaya, that unique angle is using Lego’s.

I used to have thousands of these things all over our house as a kid. I build everything from moonlanders to cityscapes, but I never had that inginiuity to try to create art.

See Sawaya’s collection of Lego Art over at CNN.com

The Force is strong at the airport

May 22 2007 | Comments (1)

Star Wars at the AirportCheck out the new billboards going up in Orlando International Airport (MCO) in preparation for Star Wars Weekends and MGM Studios. I want to believe I appreciate this for being eye-catching creative advertising, but who am I kidding, I am simply marking out because I’m, at heart, a huge Star Wars fan.

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robleto back from the awards and after-party. Not a good night for our theatre (the Shakespeare), but still a very good night for fun with friends. 2008-04-28
Greg Robleto

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