Archive for October, 2006

The Strangest Things Happen

// October 28th, 2006 // No Comments » // Blog

So I am in the hotel using my free wi-fi minutes and doing some web design stuff before we got out again (the mac-expo was great by the way) and a bloke sat opposite me loads up a huge dell laptop with the customary ding on a windows machine booting up, my though another windows faithful user.

But the guy packs up the windows machine walks over to me and we have a 5minute conversation about what so good about macs' in the end, he left me saying "I think a May invest in one"

incidentally the guy mentioned video editing which surprised me because I always thought that market was the foundation of the mac platform along with photoshop.

Weekend In London

// October 26th, 2006 // No Comments » // Apple, Blog

The time has come the mac-expo shame I couldn't get to the rest of the event but Saturday should still be good. I will be posting some more stuff related to the Expo over the weekend. You have to love the free BT Openzone account I have.

What of Web 2.0?

// October 24th, 2006 // No Comments » // Blog

It seems the web is becoming more and more obsessed with the new terms that pop-up everywhere 'web 2.0' , 'AJAX' , 'Rails'. Sometimes with little thought to what they actually mean to what is going on. Its all well and good providing a nice looking site to sit on but unless you have the content to work with it you may struggle getting the site off the ground.

What about web standard and accessibility, I know this site isn't perfect but I am always working on making it better for everybody to access (whether they will or not is neither here not there). Simple things like putting alt tags in images(at this moment only two images are missing this on the entire site) and titles in links can make a lot of difference, and if you design websites for a living it should be second nature. For me I have to work at although the developing side of things is getting a lot easier (so practice really does make perfect)

So I was talking about web 2.0, so back on topic. I think on the whole far too much on how people judge sites is now based on where are the fancy effects and wheres the 2.0 features (I have fallen pray to this with jacktams.co.uk) but it would be quite easy to go way overboard and just make it horrible to use, which leads nicely onto MySpace.

If you read deeper into my archives you will probably see my dislike for MySpace and it isn't because of what its for, but the way its done, everything seems to be half baked and saturated with ads (another pet hate) and instead of focusing on what they are good at and making that even better and easier to grasp (then reducing the ads) they diversify. We should have already learned from the likes of Sony that going out and trying to become everything to everybody doesn't work specializing on what you have got and your good at wins in the end.

Technologies are rapidly converging and creating new forms of media podcasting for example, the iPod is only 5years old, and video blogging even blogging, then you have blogging from a phone, PDA, just ringing a number and posting, but mistakes made the first time around (i.e. web 1.0) could happen all over again, if we don't start including the fixes now.

AJAX and web 2.0 aren't the be all and end all, good specialized and accessible content will always win, and a good design may come second to that and AJAX etc are just the icing on the cake.

Note To Self: Crucial Things When Updating theme

// October 23rd, 2006 // No Comments » // Blog, Web

Don't forget to put the google analytics code into the footer part of the new theme, else you think your site has had no hits for a week (might not be far wrong)

Music Labels Cannot Make up lost Ground.

// October 21st, 2006 // No Comments » // Blog

Techcrunch » Blog Archive » MusicNation: Major Labels Try to Buy Friends

Boing Boing: Boy Scouts of America Concerned About Copyright

The Corps are at it again, and so am I.

It seems now that the Labels can make up for the ground they have lost in the 'war against P2P' (I use the term loosely) By raising awareness and brainwashing they can make sure they do have a consumer base in the future, the only problem is the audience they are trying to pitch to have already had enough and are set in there ways, and the general feeling is that the labels stop creativity; Just look in the charts and find something that is drastically different to the one before it -done? Its damn hard isn't it.

I aren't going to ramble and rant -much- but the Labels and associated Corps must not be able to see there consumers on the pile of money the legitimately steal everyday. They also can't see that the people who are heavy downloads also buy more Music and DVDs etc from them. Its quite ironic that the money the labels to sue people is partly paid for the person being sued.

I aren't saying piracy isn't a problem it is, but the reason isn't being tackled. By trying to sway consumers to their way of thinking it is further gluing in the it cheaper to download and such ideology. The simple way to tackle it is make it easy and cheap to download and also stop suing because not all press is good press.