Monthly Archives: November 2010

Anthill Magazine – 30under30 – Top 10 Emerging Digital Doyens – Adam Fitzgerald

Posted in Australian Web Industry Association, Inside TFG

30under30 is an Anthill initiative that was launched in early 2008 to encourage and promote entrepreneurship among young Australians. Each year, Anthill invites readers to nominate young Australian entrepreneurs deserving of recognition for their outstanding entrepreneurial endeavours.

In November 2010 I was named in Anthill’s inaugural Top 10 Emerging Digital Doyens for my work at The Frontier Group, the Achieve More Online project and being a committee member at the Australian Web Industry Association.

Thanks to Anthill!

This Week On The Web #7

Posted in This week on the web

Hooray! Railscamp is here!

We’re all crazy excited for this weekend, we get to hang out with some really smart, creative, rails developers from all over the world.

We haven’t forgotten about you though. Here’s some railscamp-worthy links for you all. I wouldn’t be suprised if theres some discussion going on about these this weekend.

Got some links to share? Drop em in the comments or let us know on Twitter

Highlighting the selected navigation item in Serve

Posted in Inside TFG

We’re using Serve at work for a static public facing website and needed to highlight the currently displayed navigation item.

After some experimenting we got this:

  - page = request.path.split('/').last || 'index-page'

You grab everything in the path after the last slash. If there’s no path set (so for the index page) it will use whatever we set, above i’ve just used ‘index-page’ as an example.

You can now attach that variable anywhere you’d like, I usually attach it to the body like so

%body{:class => page}

Then make sure the navigation has matching classes. So for example if my pages hare URL’s of /about and /home/contact, the navigation list would like like:

<ul>
    <li class="about"><a href="/about"></li>
    <li class="contact"><a href="/home/contact"></li>
</ul>

We can use those two classes to set styles when they match up:

body.about li.about a, body.contact li.contact a {
    // set style here!
}

Entry to Graduate Medicine : The GAMSAT Day

Posted in Inside TFG

The Frontier Group is a collection of rag tag men, brought together from every corner, nook and cranny of the globe with the one common, purposeful consciousness. Usually this force is brought to bear on developing software that makes people cry less, and generally smile a lot more. Sometimes it’s just to win boat races at bucks parties. It’s a pretty well rounded and multi skilled force.

In any case, Frontiersmen (a term coined by one of our newest Frontiersmen) come from varied walks of life and experience and so besides working at The Frontier Group we also have outside interests. We place a high importance on learning and research and currently have a number of our staff undertaking post graduate and undergraduate studies. We have people donating their time to develop for charities and not for profits and those that act, DJ and all manner of other activities. We don’t just hire great people, we hire great people that are interested in being better tomorrow than they are right now.

So I decided that I wanted to be a doctor.

Last year I decided that instead of saying I’d like to be a doctor, I’d take the necessary steps to make it happen. I’d undergone something of a seachange in my life about six years ago and was starting to question if computing and IT was really what I wanted to do for the rest of my life. With that in mind and realising that for as long as I could remember I’d always wanted to help people, I started researching what I’d need to do to make it happen.

It turned out that with my engineering degree in hand I could actually sit a special test called the GAMSAT (Graduate Australian Medical School Admission Test) and after jumping through another half dozen hoops wearing a tutu, reciting some old english nursery rhymes, I could be a doctor four (short) years later. Slick!

GAMSAT Day

I sat the GAMSAT part way through March, and I thought I’d recount what it was like for the benefit of others. There isn’t a lot of information out there for people that want to know what how the GAMSAT day actually goes. Maybe it’s different from venue to venue, but I’ll just recount what happened to me.

The venue opened at about 8:15am for registrations. I’d heard this component could be a bit of a nightmare and upon rocking up and seeing about 400 people there I thought it was going to be terrible. However everyone there is nervous and wanting the same things you are. I think everyone was just in the zone and wanted to get in, and get settled. Registration was quick.

I stood in line for a while and shuffled through. I moved to the signup desk for my last name, handed over my admission ticket and some ID. The woman checked me off and gave me a card that said my desk number and room number on it. I then went and found a space to sit and just tried to relax. Mentally I felt relaxed, but physically I was in full stress mode.

I probably waited about 20 minutes before we moved into the room. You put your bags at the front of the room and keep your ID on you (you’ll need this a few times during the day) and get your pencils, pens and so on ready. I took a mechanical pencil, two pens an eraser and a 17 year old calculator; Many of the people sitting the test were about four to five years older.

You get a booklet of questions and an answer sheet you have to fill in with your name and some other details. Everything is very strict and they read a blurb about something and what you can and cannot do. Next thing you know you have 110 minutes to answer 75 questions about cartoons, pieces of text, poems, and so on. This stuff is hard. Like hair splitting hard. You really have to read the nuances of sometimes a couple of words used in a paragraph to choose between two very similar possibilities in the multiple choice options available.

In any case I finished the first section with about 15 minutes spare. It gave me time to change a couple of answers and just generally chill out a bit.

There were many times I could actually feel my heart pounding. Your head is so engrossed in just doing the test you don’t have time to feel the emotion of stress but your body definitely has all the time in the world to make it happen.

Straight after the first section is the essay component. I thought this would be my weakest area as you have limited time and space to get your writing done and I like to waffle a bit. I actually finished with about 20 minutes spare. The first part (it’s a two part section) was on censorship, the second was on self esteem and it’s relation to happiness and health. They were both right up my alley and I felt I did pretty well.

At this point you’ve been at it for just over three hours, so they give you a one hour lunch break. I went to my car, ate my lunch and relaxed for a bit. Lots of people had books out they were studying from but I just sat in the sun and tried to think about nothing. I figured an hour of study was less important than relaxing my mind. I was pretty drained already.

My suggestion though, bring your own food, drink and everything. The cafe still had a massive line by the end of the lunch break. The last thing you want is the stress of wondering whether you’re going to get anything to eat, or to go into the second part of the day without eating anything.

After lunch you sign in again and go back to your desk. The last part is three hours of multiple choice chemistry, physics and biology. By the end of this my mind was absolutely numbed.

In any case like I said most of the questions give you the back story, so for an organic chemistry process they’ll describe and show what happens and then ask you to extrapolate this to other reactions, or explain what might happen for longer chains and other reactions. You need some back knowledge and to know about most of the functional groups from first year chemistry but I found these questions to be absolutely fine.

The biology stuff relied on a tiny bit of anatomy knowledge and mostly understanding processes. You have to interpret a lot of graphics, figures and tables and sometimes also relate multiple figures to develop an outcome. You need to be able to store a lot of context about a situation. However I found the biology questions to be pretty easy and involved a mix of stats, logical interpretation and understanding the relationships between multiple diagrams or graphs.

The physics is really basic stuff, usually lenses or kinematic stuff. I felt like it was about as complex as some of the basic physics in upper high school so it wasn’t a challenge. I hadn’t studied any physics really except to familiarise myself with basic formulae and this was probably a wise choice.

I walked out feeling that this second science section was my weaker section because of the chemistry but I still thought I’d done okay. I just finished it in time and probably left with a few questions not complete.

At the end it’s actually quite anti-climactic. I’d studied a lot for the past couple of months, culminating in this day and now, after eight hours of stress it was all over, but I think I was just mentally exhausted. I went home, rang a friend, talked for an hour, did some shopping at the local grocer, ate dinner and went to bed.

So there it is, the GAMSAT. Results come in about six to eight weeks, but it was worth it for the experience. I think it’s like marathons for me, I’ve prepared for one and I’ve lined up for one but I’m not interested in doing any of the prep or event again if it doesn’t work out.

Results and Application
My results came in and the exam seemed to go better than I’d expected. My score put me in around the top 10% of people sitting the test which was surprising but cool. It’s a good start for gaining entrance into a medicine degree but it’s not the be all and end all, they take into account your previous university scores as well. Most courses now have a minimum university grade and a minimum GAMSAT score before they combine them to come up with your rank from the applicant pool.

Although my score in the exam was more than adequate, my previous Uni scores definitely weren’t. I applied to Notre Dame and UWA which both have minimum score requirements from your previous studies and I didn’t expect to get accepted to either programme. I got my results from applications some time in September and I was turned down for the courses I’d applied to. It was less of a let down than I’d assumed it would be, I think primarily because my job isn’t a bad one. I wasn’t running away from my job to study medicine, I was just being pulled towards the idea of being a doctor and taking care of people.

So that’s the journey of the GAMSAT. The study coming up to it is a whole other story, but that’s covered quite well elsewhere, I just thought some people may run across this post at some point and it would help them prep for the day itself.

How to Get Firebug, Capybara and Selenium Working Together

Posted in Inside TFG

I had an issue whereby a label I thought was fine wasn’t being picked up on my Cucumber tests. It turned out that the test environment was of course running our compiled javascript and I hadn’t compiled it since my change. The labels didn’t have the ‘for’ attribute specified so Selenium was whinging it couldn’t find the element I wanted to find.

In any case I couldn’t find an explanation of how to get Firebug working with Selenium and Capybara but after some doc reading I got my solution working so I thought I’d post it here.

In my env.rb file I have :

Capybara.register_driver :selenium do |app|
  Capybara::Driver::Selenium
  profile = Selenium::WebDriver::Firefox::Profile.new
  profile.add_extension(File.expand_path("features/support/firebug.xpi"))

  Capybara::Driver::Selenium.new(app, { :browser => :firefox, :profile => profile })
end

Twitter

One of our older blog posts has sparked some interest again today. A case for quality content. http://t.co/3aGHCKgH

@frontiergroup about 3 days ago #

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