Archive for the 'the web' Category

New Portfolio

Zach Inglis: Portfolio - Version 2. Version 2 is very little as I always relied on company portfolio’s until about a year ago when I started up the portfolio sub-domain.

I’m having one issue with absolutely positioned anchors, but apart from that my portfolio is looking spiffy.

Head on over to see it.

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My Absenteeism, My Discomfort

Writing this is putting my respect on the line, it may even affect my business. I hope instead that this will prompt people to speak out about what they believe in.

There has been a reason that I have not blogged for a while. One part laziness, but about 4 parts being fed up with the whole web industry scene.

When I first joined, I saw the industry as a place where an artist could have fun, discover their talents and enjoy the close knit social community. 10 years later, I now feel completely different. Although I have felt this many times before, never have I been so close to giving up all the social aspects and keeping my head down. The web industry has taken a lot out of me. I have literally served my adolescence years behind the web and I feel that as this was a big character development period, I have a bigger link to the web compared to some, as it defined who I became.

Now what is annoying me the most is the social ladder of the web industry. Not necessarily the social ranking ladder. There are some people out there who have been working on the web for a while and who do a lot for the greater good of the internet, rather than for themselves. On the opposite side, you have a slew of people who work for the greater good of themselves, for their bank and for the internet fame. You are allowed to do both, but the amount of fake people on the internet. What is worse than that, is people look upto them and thus causing an undying cycle. These people will do anything for the internet-fame, which in reality, is meaningless. It is close to the social ladder of a High School.

Hell, there was a while where I would of done anything for the fame too, it would be wrong of me not to admit that, but my eyes have opened. I have seen people who have spent 4 years training to be a designer, but at the first chance of a big company talking with them, jump over to coding. I’ve seen people with no coding experience, write books on coding, and become internet famous because they do. The industry does not mean much when a well selling book is written by someone in the field, who a few month’s earlier had no knowledge of the topic. I was helping such a person out, a year before they wrote a book.

I have had a few offers to write books, ranging various topics, however just because you have the opportunity doesn’t mean you should and I realised that. I felt the topics that was offered were already talked about too much and I didn’t want to take anyone else’s money thinking they were getting something new or taking an already published author’s money from them when they had the brains to get there first. People should write competing books, it causes the quality to go up but Amazon has a catalog of over 26,000 books through the search ‘CSS’. Granted a lot of these books are not related to the subject, but definitely a large amount.

One subject that always gets raised when talking about this industry is how we need to evolve and what we should do to do that. But when you get the basic facts, how far have we come in the last 2 years? Honestly, we have seen a thousands pro-CSS workgroups formed, thousands of conferences with large amounts of panels talking about CSS or how we should embrace it, thousands posts saying saying the same as the conferences, thousands of books and of course, a couple of hundred ego’s have been stroked. In reality, we haven’t come that far at all, we are just repeating the same things we did years ago. If anything, it’s time to take action and stop focusing on ourselves. If you believe in the web, prove it. Don’t write a book, don’t tell us we should embrace web standards and uninstall Internet Explorer. We know we should, we say the same things too. Reach out to your local businesses, write a newspaper article, tell someone who wouldn’t hear about this at a conference.

I have had a hand in organising a conference for representatives of companies, offering them a free conference on WHY their site should follow our suggested standards, we got people speaking there and we made a difference. You could also help students at schools and colleges learn what they should be doing and why. That is what we need in the web.

We are literally peeing in our own pool. I know many people who do not want to attend web conferences because of the whole social ladder scene. These people are sometimes the ones that we want to change too. It is not doing the industry any good whatsoever.

I will not be quitting as I first thought I would when I wrote this post, I think I could still make a difference if I carried on. I think the web industry as a whole, needs to shape up and start focusing on the real goals rather than personal goals. Our industry is one of the few that focus on the evolution in the unique way we do. Participating in boosting your name is fine, but there are more than a few people in this industry now that are doing it in an egocentric manner, and that number of people is growing.

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Camino 1.5 Released

Usually, I wouldn’t post about releases here, unless I’ve had a part in them. Which I now have.

Web browsers never stick with me, One month you’ll catch me using Safari, the next Firefox and the next Camino in a circle of trying to outweigh the better with the best.

I was about to goto sleep last night when a friend asked if anyone could give Camino a few hours of their time. I contacted them and within minutes I was helping them.

I have a lot of respect for Camino and so the chance to work with them was amazing. I was very tired, but they have been one of my favourite people to work with, even if for a short time.

See Samuel’s blog post about it here and get your copy of Camino here.

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Moving from MediaTemple

Last March I decided that Dreamhost weren’t reliable enough for me, and all my good friends pimped (mt) mediatemple like there was no tomorrow. Mediatemple, although slightly more expensive are known for their support. You get what you pay for.

I have been playing around with Rails for a year and a half, some have called me an ‘early adopter’ due to it. But I never wrote any serious code that I wanted to share. My first application was due to be released back last November but I couldn’t release it, Rails on MediaTemple was playing up and I was having issues. I left the application as it wasn’t important as it was only for learning purposes.

My fiancé came to me last week, asking if I would write her a Rails poll for her Psychology experiment. I worked on it and uploaded it, after a sleuth of problems I finally get it working on the web server. Happy with my success, I head to bed. For what I didn’t know was I’d be woken up the next day by a “The poll is not working.”, it fell over somehow in the middle of the night. It had only been used by 20 people and the application is one page. Throughout the time that the poll was alive, this happened constantly, making me ssh in and restart the poll.

Since then, I’ve had SVN troubles, for some reason it won’t recognize my password. The answer I got:

Subversion is installed and ready to use on the Grid. Please see our KnowledgeBase for complete instructions regarding how to set up and connect to a repository: http://kb.mediatemple.net/article.php?id=143

Any other configuration falls outside our scope of support. (mt) Media Temple supports the basic operation and uptime.We also ensure that the environment we provide you with can install all of the components needed.

If you do not speak “Support tech”, this roughly translates to “Not our problem, son”. Constantly do I get a RTFM when I ask for support, in fact I expect it so much I wince when I first send it off as I know I have to wait for such a response.

MediaTemple support has gone very downhill since their new move.

“The not our problem” part is true. I am going to be moving to Slicehost in 2 weeks, although a VPS it should actually work. I was going to go with Engine Yard but hey are too expensive for what I need at this moment.

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A Short: Web 2.0 Design Is A Step In The Right Direction

This post has been in the works since Jakob Nielson’s latest BBC article. I have noticed certain people got upset about. Don’t be. It’s very good to question the web. Most people seem to take what’s going on at face value and as solid truth, especially when it’s written on a well-regarded website.

Jakob questions the new league in design, Web 2.0. “Tonka toy” size inputs and buttons are not necessarily a bad thing. It has better accessibility for partially sighted people, and it’s easier for people with poorer and average sight alike. Buttons are easier to press, data and information easier to read and write.

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Introducing LT3media

Well, I finally have the LT3media site up. It’s been a lot of trouble but I’m glad it’s finally up.

I’d like to thank everyone who’s helped me throughout but most importantly Antonio Lulic for his XHTML/CSS skills.

LT3media started out as a collaborative group between myself and 4 other good friends. It quickly fell apart due to uninterest. Loving the name and the branding that Faruk and I had made, I kept the name for a new company.

There is still a bit more to do, including porting it to Mouth once I get that in a reasonable state.

Anyway, it’s 7:30am, and I have been working on the content and fiddling with it all night. So I am going to goto sleep now.

I also had planned on a slight ‘realign’ of my portfolio, but ExpressionEngine is playing up so you’ll have to make-do with a screenshot.

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Woah, We’re nakie!

Well, I decided to do the naked thing. Originally I was like “Why?” but, if it does help the web accessibility community (though I think we’re flogging that subject over and over and over again), why not.

So here I am, nakie!

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Lighthouse + Quicksilver = Even quicker ticketing

If you’re a Ruby person, or you keep an eye out on web applications you probally have heard of Lighthouse by the talented chaps at Active Reload (How cool is that ei? Named after Gears Of War).

They’ve recently released (or it was a feature at the beginning and I hadn’t noticed it), that you can email tickets in. I’m currently using Lighthouse for my latest open–source application and using the tickets to resolve features, and feature–sets. I have made my life even easier by using Quicksilver’s Mail functions.

Do this:

  1. Open Address Book and add a contact, with the email (it can be found in the Tickets section) and a name that you’ll use to call to add a ticket. I use ‘Lighthouse MySuperCoolWebApp’.
  2. Now, type the name (Lighthouse MySuperCoolWebApp) and then start typing “Compose Email”, Hit Return.
  3. Type your ticket’s title into the subject like ‘Feature: New theme

If you need help, find it here.

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Lots of SXSW Fun

Unlike last year, I won’t update every day nor live blog. As I am here with Esther, this SXSW is more relaxed.

I finally arrived in Austin on Friday at 10.30. The flights were hell, stuck next to big American’s who found a love to jab me in the ribs with their elbows. I booked way too late and only just managed to find a hotel 6 miles away. Due to the distance, we can’t go back to our rooms as easily as I could last year being a few blocks away from the Convention Center though.

This year, the people count has doubled. Usually I can goto a panel and see someone I know, however this year so far has been quite the opposite. I have gone to atleast 2 panels where I didn’t know anybody.

I met everyone I was planning to meet that I hadn’t (Lea. Colin and Jina) and people I wasn’t expecting to see (Tim and Brain Benzinger).

A lot of the information has been reaffirmation of what I already know but I have also learnt a lot of stuff. One of my favourite panels, Influence of Art In Design mentions music changing the way you design. I knew this already but it has inspired me to listen to some techno next time I break out Photoshop.

A lot of the panels feel to be targeted more to people just starting out this year.

There’s still 2 days left and I plan on having a lot of fun.

If you’re about and want to meet up, email me.

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Heading to SXSW!

I have finally managed to book SXSW. I am going to be staying 4 miles from the Convention Centre, a bit longer than the 2 blocks that I had when staying in the Hampton last year but will be great fun all the same.

I’m really looking forward to it, SXSW is by far the best geek event known to man.

This year, although not booked yet, I should be taking my girlfriend with me too.

See you there!

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