Jim Lawrence
accessd at shaw.ca
Mon Feb 21 22:59:46 CST 2005
Hi Jeffrey: Another very inspirational story. Jim >-----Original Message----- >From: accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com >[mailto:accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com] On Behalf Of Steve Erbach >Sent: Monday, February 21, 2005 4:44 AM >To: Access Developers discussion and problem solving >Subject: Re: [AccessD] OT: What are you lot doing now and then? > >Roz, Gustav, John C., Gary, Jeffrey, Jim D. Doris, Debbie, Brett, >Charlotte, Ken, Mark, John B., Stuart, William, Rocky, Jim L., Jim H., >Andy, Randy, and Tom, > >Thank you all very much for your responses. Our glorious leader, Mr. >Bartow, has asked me to write an article for the newsletter based on >the responses you've given. So I'm asking if any of you have any >objections to letting me abridge your responses for that purpose? It >would also be helpful if those of you who already gave an "abridged" >version for the survey could flesh out your responses a bit, if you >have the time. I would appreciate it. Everyone has an interesting >story to tell about his or her own growth in the computer field. > >I'm so glad that 21 of you have responded so far. Any others? > > > Ok, My dive into access came when I was in the Peace Corps right out of collage. I did a lot of volunteer work in school, more than I studied, and really liked it. Besides I did not want to put on a suit and tie and do the 9 to 5 thing (I have an accounting degree and almost everyone else went to work for an accounting firm, not me I went to work for good old uncle sam). A quick aside if anyone is thinking or knows someone who is thinking about the Peace Corps tell them to do it, best thing you can do. You get to help people. My helping was working with local savings and loan cooperative in Honduras, Central America. The first 3 months after 3 months of training (learning Spanish, local customs, etc.) I spent just observing the work in the cooperative I was assigned to. They did everything by hand, posting and calculating interest by hand. It was so bad that they only calculated it when a member came in. They did however have a computer and a complete accounting program from a USAID program. To give you an idea of how bad things where I sent I picture to my parents and mom saw the computer in the background and asked why the thing was taken apart. After observing for the 3 months I put together a plan and presented it to the Board of Directors for the cooperative. I convinced them to spend the cooperatives money to buy a whole LAN (server and 6 pc plus 3 printers.) It was more money than they paid in 6 months of salaries. However the savings realized after fulling implementing the system was made up by the reduced overtime (people no longer worked 60 hours a week but 40) because I was able to setup little access dbs and other applications to save time. I had no experience with Access before this, but knew that a database was needed to make the work manageable. To top it all off, one of my recomendations was to purchase all of the software in Spanish, so the locals could actually use it, so I learned my first VBA programming in Spanish. I still have hard copies of the code. After the Peace Corps I stayed in Honduras because I had met my wife and we were married. I operated my own consulting business for 6 months before we decided to move back to the States. During this time I would work about 1 week a month so we could enjoy the rest of the month. I would build custom apps for the cooperatives in Honduras, make recommendations on how to improve their networks if they had one, etc. After we came back (wife was pregenat with our daughter), I spent 3 months looking for a job while we lived at my parents. My daughter was born during the time of hurricane Mitch and my wife because of problems with the delivery would have died in Honduras. Things happen for a reason and three months before I was finally hired by my current employer because of my work that I had done it the Peace Corps and especially using Access. I have continued to develop my Access skills, this list is my number one resource, as well as starting to work with SQL Server. But it all started because I used Access in Spanish to help improve someone else's life, but in the end I think I am the one who comes out ahead. Jeffrey Demulling -- No virus found in this outgoing message. Checked by AVG Anti-Virus. Version: 7.0.300 / Virus Database: 266.3.0 - Release Date: 2/21/2005 -- AccessD mailing list AccessD at databaseadvisors.com http://databaseadvisors.com/mailman/listinfo/accessd Website: http://www.databaseadvisors.com