No Pattern

Chuck Anderson launched a new No Pattern, complete with a highly customized osCommerce cart. I've tackled that gangly beast. Wish it could've been for those types of products.

Sep 5 2006 Permalink

Steve Irwin

Horrible news to start out Labor Day: Steve Irwin was killed while filming on the Great Barrier Reef. I'll miss the Crocodile Hunter.

Sep 4 2006 Permalink

Instant Comedy

Next time you watch a video with speech or dialogue through Windows Media Player, press Ctrl+Shift+S and prepare to laugh. If you can't use the shortcuts, right-click the progress bar and go to Play Speed > Slow.

Sep 1 2006 Permalink

Get Shorty

If you feel the need to shorten long URLs, but would like to have the tool installed and hosted on your own server, then get Shorty from Khoi Vinh of Subtraction.

Aug 29 2006 Permalink

The 4400, Season 4

Another summer drawing to a close, another season of The 4400 over.

I've heard this show called many things: sci-fi lite, vanilla, unwatchable. I'm kind of puzzled to hear these reviews, but the show does ride the line; too mainstream for the uber-nerds, too strange for the casual viewer.

I'm not writing this to sell you the show. I've been with it since the pilot and I'll watch it until it's cancelled. Luckily, that won't be soon, since USA just ordered 13 more episodes for Season 4. To all the detractors, you know where to stick it.

Aug 29 2006 Permalink

Sneak Peek

Found this page on the Clear Channel site, offering a lot of Top 40 full album streams. If you can get past the "Sneak Peek: Hear It Here First" every minute or so, you can preview a bunch of albums. Nothing special, just another resource. I imagine it's updated rather frequently.

Aug 28 2006 Permalink

jQuery, Web Forms 2.0

jQuery hit version 1.0 on Friday last week. I guess it's about time I work it into my repertoire.

Relatedly, a Web Forms 2.0 spec made into a W3C draft last week, too. Maybe we'll finally get some new additions to HTML forms.

Aug 28 2006 Permalink

Tideland

I came across a link to this photo album from Jeff Bridges on the set of the new Terry Gilliam movie Tideland. Bridges has a good eye. For some context, head over to the bizarre movie website.

Aug 15 2006 Permalink

DHH on TWiT

Today I was listening to the Inside the Net interview with David Heinemeier Hansson, the creator of Ruby on Rails. During the interview, Hansson got into "man hours" on a project versus actual working hours per day. By his definition, a "man hour" is 8 hours of work, which he stated is virtually impossible to accomplish in a 8-hour work day. Now, this is work focused on a specific task, not just time spent at work.

On any given day, it's nearly impossible to spend the total working hours toward one task without interruption. Therefore, he said any project manager that dictated deadlines by 8-hour days was "delusional." I tend to agree with most of this argument; most developers/designers don't get 100% of a working day on a project.

My question for the people out there who work project-based jobs is: how many actual hours of work toward a goal do you average per day? Hansson said about 4-5 hours in an 8-hour day was average. Sound about right?

Aug 14 2006 Permalink

Livin' Strong

Why I still read Golden Fiddle daily.

Aug 14 2006 Permalink

Roll Rampant and Free

The Roll Rampant and Free project from Maya Hayuk is rad. It's a huge painted skate track in Pittsburgh, PA completed back in June of 2005. The other noteworthy piece from her portfolio is the packaging for the last Prefuse 73 album, Security Screenings.

Aug 14 2006 Permalink

Alive In Joburg

I don't get too excited by Halo news, but the short film Alive In Joburg, from the recently announced, unknown director Neill Blomkamp, has a nice sense of eerie realism.

Aug 13 2006 Permalink

Happy Birthday, Mr. Whitley

Happy 30th birthday to Reggie! How's work, buddy?

Aug 10 2006 Permalink

Jakob Says

Jakob Nielsen says it's time to design for 1024x768. I love this quote: "anyone who makes at least $50,000 per year ought to have at least 1600x1200 screen resolution."

Aug 1 2006 Permalink

Hebrew National

If you haven't had Hebrew National Beef Franks, then you need to pick some up for your next cookout. They are by far my favorite hotdogs now. All from the power of a good TV commerical.

Jul 30 2006 Permalink

Trent Reznor has no neck

It's true, Trent Reznor no longer has a neck.

Jul 29 2006 Permalink

Photosynth

Photosynth from Microsoft Live Labs seems pretty amazing. It technology takes a large collection of photos of a place or object, analyzes them for similarities, and displays them in a reconstructed 3-Dimensional space.

Jul 29 2006 Permalink

Aesthetic Apparatus

Aesthetic Apparatus put together a hilarious video documenting their process on YouTube. Here's the resulting print.

Jul 25 2006 Permalink

Tablet Hotels

Looks like I need to check out Tablet Hotels next time I get out of North Carolina on vacation.

Jul 19 2006 Permalink

Last.fm Update

Looks like Last.fm just updated. Unfortunately, looks like they're moving away from the "less is more" ideal. I was at least glad to see they gave me the option of remove the artwork from my charts. Overall, I will give them kudos for cleanly laying out all of the information on the profile pages.

Jul 16 2006 Permalink

Step On It

I should be packing and tying up loose ends before I leave, but instead I just spent 15 minutes watching this Orchid Footwear BMX film Step On It. I'll leave half to watch next Sunday, but the gap attempted around 6:50-7:00 is insane. I'm not surprised he couldn't land it.

Jul 7 2006 Permalink

It's always better on holiday

I'm off to Holden Beach until next Sunday! I'm glad to get away from comptuers, work, Charlotte, and the internet to hang out with my family on the beach for a week. My Ta-da list keeps getting longer and longer, but we'll worry about that when I get back.

Jul 7 2006 Permalink

W3Counter Global Web Stats

I know this is only pulled from sites feeding into the W3Counter, but having Global Web Stats is pretty handy. Interesting to see that they put Firefox at around 24% of total browser usage.

Jul 6 2006 Permalink

BumpTop

Two guys at the University of Toronto developed a new desktop interface called BumpTop. The prototype requires a TabletPC, but I could see this working for folk that go the desktop PC and stylus route.

Jun 23 2006 Permalink

Google Notebook

You've probably already heard about Google Notebook, but the best part about this new service is the Google Notebook Firefox Extension. Google and Firefox are getting to be quite the dynamic duo.

Might as well throw out Google Browser Sync, too. Use it to sync multiple installations of Firefox.

Jun 12 2006 Permalink

The House Always Wins

The House rejected Net neutrality.

Jun 9 2006 Permalink

Eric Schmidt Weighs In

Eric Schmidt published a note to Google users regarding the impending Net Neutrality bill in the House and Senate. It seems it's now down to the people calling Congress and telling them to shape up.

Jun 8 2006 Permalink

HTML Email

This article on the woes of constructing HTML email over at Vitamin reminded me to mention Campaign Monitor's a great blog solely on this subject. They hype themselves, but that's expected.

Jun 6 2006 Permalink

Impossible Team

Adidas went all out for this bridge-sized billboard of German keeper Oliver Kahn for their Impossible Team World Cup 2006 advertising. I usually hate billboards, but that is just amazing.

Jun 4 2006 Permalink

The Screen Savers

For any fans of TechTV's The Screen Savers out there, here's a YouTube playlist of 33 episodes from 2004. It was fun while it lasted.

Jun 3 2006 Permalink

The Proposition

Apparently Nick Cave wrote a screenplay and it was made into The Proposition. The movie looks violent. I want to see it.

May 19 2006 Permalink

Net Neutrality Act

The New York Times and Massachusetts representative Ed Markey are doing their part to help the Net Neutrality effort. In case you're interested, here's a checklist of ways you can contribute.

May 3 2006 Permalink

Colbert at White House Dinner

AP invited Stephen Colbert to speak at the recent White House Correspondents' Association dinner. It seems the President and some others weren't that thrilled about some of his comments. Here's the full video and there's a wrap-up at The Huffington Post with a slew of related links.

May 1 2006 Permalink

Spanish Anthem

I'm all for everyone getting a fair shot in this country, but writing a spanish-language "Star-Spangled Banner" is going a little too far. It was written by a British music producer, nonetheless.

Apr 28 2006 Permalink

Net Neutrality

I've watched this fiasco build for a couple months and now it seems it's do-or-die time. For those of you who don't know, the massive telecommunication companies in the US are pushing for Congress to allow them greater control over the internet. Basically, bad news for the internet.

The term Net Neutrality is being thrown around a lot lately. The idea of neutrality guarantees the end user fair and equal access to any corner of the web, any time. It's essentially the internet's First Amendment.

Many fear this new power will allow the telcos to begin shaping and filtering internet traffic in such a way that many companies will have to pay premiums, on top of their current fees, for access to the "fast lane." If companies choose not to pay these premiums, then the internet provider can choose to slow or block their services. Not to mention, this helps open the doors for a host of other censorship and extortion issues.

There are plenty of points to go back and forth on, but the central issue is that the internet is a currently a level playing field; everyone is essentially given the same opportunity on the web. However, these impending decisions could change all of that. So, if you think the internet is pretty awesome now, then take your pick between Don't Mess With The Internet or Save The Internet and let your voice be heard.

For those who might just chalk this rant up as liberal, idealistic hogwash, there are plenty of people lining up to support Net Neutrality. Among the companies are Google, Yahoo!, Microsoft, Intel, Ebay and Amazon.

For the sake of being fair and balanced, here's a CNET article that features a rebuttal from the AT&T CEO and FCC chair.

Apr 27 2006 Permalink

Wii

Nintendo dropped codename "Revolution" and announced Wii as the official name for the upcoming console. The jury's still out for me, but doesn't change the fact that I'm going to get one the day it comes out.

Apr 27 2006 Permalink

The Morning News

Question: do you have hipsters?

Apr 26 2006 Permalink

CSS Vertical Align

Aligning things vertically in CSS seems to befuddle most. I still need a refresher course from time to time to remember what actually works. Vertical-Align Misue over at iBloom Studios clears it up.

Apr 26 2006 Permalink

Find All Instances

This may be common knowledge to some of you, but up until today I didn't know how to find all instances within a movie clip with Actionscript. After emailing Mason, he sent back exactly what I needed to know. Of course, once I learned that it's called a "for-in" loop, I found references to it all over the place. The example in the movie clip chapter over on the O'Reilly site is essentially that same idea. Thanks again, Mr. Poe!

Apr 19 2006 Permalink

In This World

I pulled a Scott this weekend and watched five movies: The Squid and the Whale, Bubble, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, The Island and Everything Is Illuminated. Of them all, Everything Is Illuminated was my favorite. I will also say that Michael Bay sure knows how to do a car chase.

Bubble had a similar feel to Gus Van Sant' Elephant, but wasn't satisfying. However, the commentary track from Steven Soderberg and Mark Romanek was. Romanek was a pleasant surprise. Definitely more of a technical conversation about the film making process, but cool to sit in and listen to those two talk about film for an hour or so.

During the commentary, Soderberg mentioned In This World by Michael Winterbottom. That recommendation and the 90% rating at Rotten Tomatoes definitely piqued my interest.

Apr 17 2006 Permalink

Google Calendar

Looks like Google launched their calendar on us and it's awesome: calendar sharing, iCal publishing, integration with Gmail, cell phone reminders. Here's the official word from Google on the calendar launch.

Apr 13 2006 Permalink

Flash Object

In my search for a cleaner solution to the upcoming IE ActiveX update, I stumbled onto Flash Object over at deconcept.com. I need to test it out with our sites at work, but looks as if that's what I'm switching to for Flash detection and embedding.

Apr 5 2006 Permalink

CNN Redesign

Looks like CNN rolled out a new home page over the weekend.

Mar 27 2006 Permalink

White Powder

In addition to a pretty eventful weekend hanging out with Amy, Jeremy and my brother, I managed to squeeze in four movies: V For Vendetta, The Aristocrats, Serenity and Jarhead. In that order, here are my one-word reviews: Excellent, tedious, superb, satisfactory.

Mar 20 2006 Permalink

Nintendo DS Lite

Great video review of the Nintendo DS Lite by Cabel Sasser.

Mar 8 2006 Permalink

Joshua Davis

There's an interview with Joshua Davis over at Wired.

Mar 3 2006 Permalink

Reggie Fils-Aime

Here's the integral question from a recent Engadget interview with Reggie Fils-Aime of Nintendo and why I will always love that company.

I know we don't have a ton of time left, so one of the last things I wanted to ask you about was about how Sony and Microsoft are positioning their new consoles as multimedia digital entertainment devices in addition to gaming devices, something which Nintendo has not emphasized. Sony talks about the PSP and how it can play music and video, and while the DS can have those capabilities, it's not something Nintendo talks about very much. What is Nintendo's philosophy about all this stuff going forward? Do you see multimedia as a distraction from gaming?

Our philosophy is that consumers want great gaming experiences and our passion is delivering great gaming experiences. In the home console space, we believe that the best way to do that is with a dedicated machine. In the handheld space, as you've said, the DS does have other capabilities in the multimedia area, but we believe it's important to first establish its credentials as a superb game playing device.

To be perfectly clear, the Microsoft and Sony strategies are based on overall corporate objectives versus what's right for the consumer. That's a reality. Microsoft is essentially trying to get you to put a PC in your living room because they are fundamentally a PC software company. Sony is trying to get you to put an entertainment hub that has Blu-ray technology because that's important to their movie business and the rest of their entire electronics business.

We are a gaming company. We are gamers at heart. We love creating great, innovative content and superbly designed hardware, that's what we do. And with that passion comes a laser like focus to do things that are right for the consumer and right for the business. That's the fundamental difference in our strategy versus our competition.

Feb 23 2006 Permalink

Nacho Libre

Jared Hess + Jack Black = Nacho Libre.

Feb 4 2006 Permalink

Western State

The Western State series over at Coudal is pretty nice. They've been up there for a while it seems, but they are great shorts.

Feb 4 2006 Permalink

Gameboy Micro

The Gameboy Micro mini-site from 2Advanced is probably the first tasteful thing I've seen from those guys in a long time.

Feb 4 2006 Permalink