So by the time the party started, I was totally and profoundly exhausted. Kate and I had done our best to recharge with a yummy Thai dinner following a brisk walk up Market Street, which had been just the trick to recover from the way-too-dance-clubby music and the way-too-comfortable comfy chairs in the W lobby, where we had been attempting to relax after a several-hour client meeting where I had walked client and web developer through the web design process I was envisioning, which, in the end, was the reason I was even in The City -- not for the party.
But here I was at the party, not quite awake, not at all alert, and, among all these brilliant, beautiful and oh-so-hip and in-the-know BlogHers, feeling like a total dork from the boonies -- and probably acting like a pod person. And this was not good, considering that the celebration was for the official beta launch of the BlogHer website, which was designed and developed by yours truly.
"Hi, I'm Marnie Webb. I'm involved with a lot of web projects that use Drupal and CivicSpace...." I prepare a response and she's now ten feet away, turned in the other direction....
Several people came up and introduced themselves like this. A big guy named Marc came up and sat at the next table, and I listened to him talk about structured blogging. Elisa and Jory introduced themselves. I had moments of clarity, but otherwise I was on the event horizon of a black hole, moving in slower time relativity, not quite able to keep up with everything. In fact, I think what shook me out of orbit was Jennifer Myronuk's Sony DV camera. Here I was, tired after 20 hours of driving, untold hours of website preparation, several hours of client meetings and not nearly enough hours of sleep, and feeling like a tired kitchen towel; there was no way anyone was going to get me on tape. She was quite insistent. I was quite resistant. Jennifer is tall, and I appreciated the company above 5'8", but I did not appreciate the camera -- or, rather, the tape inside it, ready to roll.
Suddenly, Lisa Stone was in front of me, saying, "Make your escape now, while you can!" It took a moment to register, but then I saw Jennifer's camera pointing my way and I dragged by rolling computer bag on out of the restaurant.
#
I have a general sense that people liked the site. It took a lot of doing to pull together. I had to hack several of the modules, and write a few php calls to pull up content dynamically in ways Drupal and its contributed modules don't quite do. But that wasn't the hard part.
The hard part was getting the theme to work on all major browsers. (A pox on Internet Explorer!)
In the end, it came together and, if I do say so myself, the site looks pretty good, and people are using it in the ways that it was designed for. And as things progress as they must, the designer/developer fades from their awareness ... until there's a problem. Such is life.
I still have to clean up the theme -- there's some extraneous stuff in the stylesheet, for example, from things tried and nixed -- and make sure there are no unused data calls in the custom php. And then, over the coming months, the evolution takes place as the site grows from what it is to something akin to what it could be.
But thankfully the launch parties are behind us. I appreciated the kind words and well wishes, and I look forward to meeting these women again for the first time ... when I'm just another person in the room.
(Thank you, everyone!)




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Comments
*Very* sorry I missed your response. The site looks great!
"Zone" being the operative word.
I think the blogher site is great -- THANK YOU!
It's always nice to get compliments!