A few sites of my own

Posted: November 1st, 2004 | Filed under: Uncategorized | No Comments »

Time for a little shameless self-promotion of mini-sites I run…

  • autobuild.org: home to Test-AutoBuild – the PERL framework for performing continuous, unattended, automated software builds,
  • tube-haiku.org: a collection of Haiku inspired from by life travelling on the London Underground.
  • autoant.org: the home-to-be of a project to provide a high level tool around ANT, as AutoMake is to Make.
  • beer-o-clock.org: a handful of drinking establishments around London that I’ve been known to frequent

Free your mind

Posted: November 1st, 2004 | Filed under: Uncategorized | No Comments »

Buy a Lomo! After a weekend scanning negatives, I’ve now uploaded my first set of shots from my trusty Lomo to my gallery. A handful of my favourites are also gracing my Lomo Home. Next to process are a handful from a day trip down to Brighton back at the end of the summer.

Free web services

Posted: October 31st, 2004 | Filed under: Uncategorized | 2 Comments »

Since the great Dot Com crash, there’s been a huge rationalization of ‘free web services’ and a corresponding commercialization of many others, covering themselves with a pile of adverts. Every now and then, however, I come across a site that has managed to maintain a functional clean design, free of advertizing, with a really useful service. Three that spring to mind are:

  • The Lomographic Society – the worldwide community built up around the Lomo Kompakt Automat camera, offering free photographic hosting for all their members.
  • Beer in the Evening – the ultimate A-Z of pubs in London, and the UK at large. If you’re looking to meet up with a bunch of friends, then don’t send around the Streetmap URL, go for the Beer in the Evening link instead.
  • Move Flat – Loot clearly hasn’t taken advantage of the opportunities offered by the web for enhancing its advertising services. Still restricting you to next to no lines of text for description, and crude search services. They’re probably afraid of impacting the sales of the dead tree version. Move Flat, however, has no such qualms, allowing incredibly detailed information about your flat to be entered, combined with fantastic search service. What’s more its all completely free!

At last the re-design is complete

Posted: October 31st, 2004 | Filed under: Uncategorized | No Comments »

It was many months ago now (back in November of last year no less), that I decided it was about time I re-designed this site to use purely semantic HTML and CSS for all the styling. After much experimentation with CSS, and several throw away designs, I came up with what we see now. Traditionally such a layout would require complex HTML tables, but after alot of reading around I gained a new level of understanding of CSS positioning, and managed to transform the very simple HTML into a layout which displays remarkably consistently across Mozilla, Internet Explorer, Opera and Konquerer. The beauty is that now I’ve got the HTML sussed, I can play around with the CSS at will specifying multiple Alternate Stylesheets for testing until deciding upon a new ‘live’ style. While I’ve not quite reached my original goal of working on a Next Cube with the original web browser, I’m orders of magnitude closer that I was this time a year ago.

Tribryd

Posted: October 31st, 2004 | Filed under: Uncategorized | No Comments »

A few months ago Tom, Jeremy & I paid a visit to a basement bar ‘The Comedy’ off Leicester Sq, where amongst others we heard Tribryd play. Fast forward a few months & I finally manage to get hold of a copy of their demo CD Jeremy picked up at the Gig. Its been the top player this past week, with an interesting sound reminiscent of JJ72, with the lead singer Ally sounding quite like Courtney Love at times. I think I might just have to swing by their next Gig in early December