Spending Time in the Office

I’ve visited a number of customers in the last few years who require most people to work in the office. Recently, I had the chance to go to Epic Systems, just outside Madison, WI, USA. They are a medical records software provider that was very reminiscent of Microsoft in some ways, and quite different in others. I published a blog with some pictures, so you can see how cool this office is in person.

Epic has all their employees coming into the main office every day. They are flexible if you have needs, but the expectation is that employees go in every day. I believe this is also their policy, and culture, in various offices around the world.

This is somewhat rare these days, but not unique. I’ve worked with one other (10,000 people) large company and a few small ones that have similar policies and expectations. Their offices aren’t as fun, but they are still neat. I love working at home, but I miss the camaraderie of being in an office. JD Edwards was probably my favorite place to work, and I enjoyed going into the office with friends, having lunch, going to movies together, and especially our Friday afternoon Nerf battles.

I’m lucky in that I get to split my time. I’m at home much of the time, but I do go to the Redgate offices 4-5 weeks a year. Usually, I visit Cambridge, but I have visited the offices in Austin, Pasadena, Brisbane, and Amsterdam. I’ve yet to get to the Berlin office, but I’m hoping to fix that later this year or next.

I know many tech professionals, and even those in other areas, prefer to work at home and can do their jobs effectively. We saw this during the pandemic, but I also think that many of us are missing something by not being in the same room with others. I find I build better bonds, better understand the way others communicate, and we can go back and forth with brainstorming, debate, discussions, and other collaborative actions more effectively. This can work remotely, but for many organizations that didn’t start this way, I feel like something is missing. We’re struggling to communicate and work as smoothly together.

I don’t want to give up my ability to work at home, but I’d also hate to never visit an office either. I think I have a great balance, I enjoy both environments, and I appreciate the ability to change my location on a regular basis. However, if I got another job and had to go into the office every day, I’d be happy to do so (provided the commute is reasonable).

Steve Jones

Listen to the podcast at Libsyn, Spotify, or iTunes.

Note, podcasts are only available for a limited time online.

Posted in Editorial | Tagged | Leave a comment

Fun at Epic Systems

Epic is a software developer that focuses on medical records and information. They were founded in 1979 and have grown since then to be a dominant company in their space. They remain privately held, and have a campus outside Madison, WI.

I recently went there to discuss Redgate partnering with them and while there got to tour part of the campus. This is a bit of a dump of a number of photos, because it’s a cool campus.

When we walked up to the first building, it was reminiscent of Falling Water. I visited that house years ago, and our host confirmed that was the inspiration for this building.

2026-06_line0055

Connecting to that building was one that had quite a bit of a wilderness/safari/African theme. Art on the walls

2026-06_line0054

Images around elevators.

2026-06_line0053

Some fun spaces to sit and work or chat.

2026-06_line0052

Walking from that building to the next, since most are connected, we came upon a mini recreation of Raiders of the Lost Ark. When I pulled on the idol, we got a soundtrack of the boulder rolling playing in the background. Very fun.

2026-06_line0051

The basement of the next building had a recreation of a New York city deli and subway. I caught a shot of the space, where people can hang out with lunch.

2026-06_line0050

I loved this piece of art overlaid on the iconic skyscraper worker photo.

2026-06_line0049

In another building, there was a Hobbit theme. The entrance to one conference room looks like the Shire.

2026-06_line0048

Inside there’s fake grass around the table.

2026-06_line0047

And a space where you can get refreshments or sit outside of the main room,

2026-06_line0046

Even the place where catering or refreshments might be set out continues the theme.

2026-06_line0045

Walking further, this space has a outdoor feeling around the staircase from one floor to the next.

2026-06_line0044

Just past that, there’s a few walls with the handprints of employees who have been there ten years. How cool is that?

2026-06_line0043

We left the outdoors, heading for space. This was a very cool hallway.

2026-06_line0042

And between two buildings, there was a Heaven theme, and a Hell one. If you press the buttons, the elevator doesn’t work, but it does remind me of Dante with some lights and sound.

2026-06_line0041

Our presentation was in the Mos Eisley cantina.

2026-06_line0040

With some statues and reproductions at one end of the room,

2026-06_line0038

Around the conference room, there were various window spaces in the rock, each showing a different galaxy and the distance from Earth.

2026-06_line0037

There was even an audience for my presentation.

2026-06_line0036

Outside, it looked like the spacers were hanging out.

2026-06_line0035

With plenty of art everywhere.

2026-06_line0034

One thing I love is that Epic has maintained a lot of values over the years, and these are posted in every bathroom. I assume elsewhere, but I’d heard this and I saw these three items: commandments, principles, and principles of community.

2026-06_line0033

2026-06_line0032

2026-06_line0031

Our meeting was protected with a notice, and a guard.

2026-06_line0030

Epic has one of the largest, or maybe largest, underground event facilities. It was build into the ground on a former farm.

2026-06_line0029

The elevator and stairs take you down.

2026-06_line0028

Hallways have themes

2026-06_line0027

And there are 11,000 seats. I’ve spoken in a few large venues, but never this large.

2026-06_line0026

Different sides of the facility have different themes.

2026-06_line0025

Do you recognize this?

2026-06_line0024

Or this? In the entrance from above ground, this is near one of the escalators.

2026-06_line0023

This was a fabulous visit, and I wish we had more time to tour other spaces. They have a new Star Wars and (I think) Harry Potter building under construction. Hopefully I’ll get to go back.

If you want to just go and visit, you can.

Posted in Blog | Tagged , | 2 Comments

Prime Day Recommendations

It’s Prime Day. A few of my recommendations, since I want to do some shopping myself (yes, these are commissioned referrals). These are things I’ve ordered and used this year. It’s a random list, but maybe you’ll have fun with something here.

Reshuffle https://amzn.to/44qe1xz

A great book to get you to think about things changing in the AI world. I’m about 70% through and keep stopping to think.

Trademaster work gloveshttps://amzn.to/4uUIU8h

I keep losing the right ones (or the dog takes them), but I’ve gotten 4-5 pairs over the years.

Cuppa muchroom coffeehttps://amzn.to/44r1Hx2

Tastes a little funny to me, but my wife loves it and says it gives her energy. I’m skeptical, but I’ve used it.

Magsafe Phone holder for travelhttps://amzn.to/4ezAe0Q

I got this on a lark, but I’ve really enjoyed this on planes and even places where I can clip it to a table. It holds really well with a magnetic case.

Charmast power bank with cableshttps://amzn.to/4fWzsxk

We have 3 of these. I’ve tried a few others, but this has been a bargain and reliable. Charges quickly, don’t have to hunt for cables, and it’s survived many trips. I have 2 because I leave one in my personal carry on and one in the work bag. My wife grabbed one as well.

We Are Legion https://amzn.to/4aRJNHp

I grabbed this for free on Kindle Unlimited to try and loved it. I read all 5 (2, 3, 4, 5). It’s a software guy killed in a hit and run, awakened in the future as he’s uploaded into hardware to be the “AI” for a probe searching the galaxy for places to populate. It’s a fun, wild ride.

Wrangler Jeans – https://amzn.to/4oGXIpk

With a flex waistband, which is nice as I age and travel, but I’ve liked these and my wife likes the way they look. I’ll get another pair today.

Posted in Blog | Tagged , | 4 Comments

What is the Cloud?

Last week we had a training session at Redgate Software on the Cloud. One of the first slides from John Q Martin asked the question, “what is the cloud?” The next slide had the answer: it’s just someone else’s computer.

I mean that’s true, but it’s not Grant’s computer. He’s got a creaky, 4 year old HP that I don’t want running my workload.

The cloud is many things, it’s hard to define, it does so much, and at the same time, can do so little for you. Except cost a lot. We certainly find no shortage of people spending a lot of money in the cloud and not necessarily happy about it.

John was trying to educate others on the IaaS v PaaS, the challenges of cloud migration, giving them a perspective on what the cloud changes, and how customers think about the cloud. Apart from the basic details of what the cloud entails, he said an interesting thing (I’m paraphrasing here): the cloud does things that 95% of organizations couldn’t do themselves.

It’s not just someone else’s computer. It’s a whole bunch of computers someone else owns and has put a lot of security, infrastructure, planning, tooling, and more to enable you to flexibly create systems at a pace you would struggle to match inside your organization.

For most people.

The cloud is amazing. It’s is someone else’s (large rack of) computers that you can rent. They will charge you for the flexibility, and they’re not doing all your work for you, but they give you the ability to configure things the way you want them. Or you can ask one of your buddies, Claude or Copilot, to set up the configuration for you.

The cloud is a set of Lego bricks, some pre-built Lego models, a surface on which to place them, and a few rules to keep you from going too crazy, but you still have to do some work.

The cloud is a great enabler for many things. Not all, and not always for those things, but it’s up to you to find where it works, where it doesn’t, and where it’s worth the money.

That’s the cloud.

Steve Jones

Listen to the podcast at Libsyn, Spotify, or iTunes.

Note, podcasts are only available for a limited time online.

Posted in Editorial | Tagged | Leave a comment