Since study camp,

I have been to New Zealand; learnt to snow­board; entered a coun­try alone for the first time; updated Face­book as a mat­ter of first pri­or­ity — sur­pris­ing Clau­dia by turn­ing up a day early was sec­ond, I should have reversed the two!; pre­sented CYIADA (the name is chang­ing, I haven’t shared it here just yet) to a large num­ber of inter­nal stake­hold­ers, with whom the idea went down fairly well; started to feel on top of work; decided I’ll be doing less uni this semes­ter (and prob­a­bly will be on my own in the course, which is sad); started research into a project I’ve been want­ing to get off the ground for some time now, with mod­er­ate degrees of suc­cess; and not spend­ing nearly enough time on free­lance com­mit­ments, but know­ing it will pro­vide good expe­ri­ence for CYIADA’s immi­nent imple­men­ta­tion of sim­i­lar things (yes, the free­lance clients in ques­tion are aware of this motivation!).

I’ve also hit a bit of a slump in bible read­ing which isn’t mag­i­cally solv­ing itself… I put it down to play­ing too much catchup when I got back and not pri­ori­tis­ing God’s word any­where near as highly as I should have done. But now it’s a mat­ter of actu­ally resolv­ing that before all of a sud­den I’ve been back a month and still haven’t! Prayer is wel­comed, of course.

I have also been sleep­ing well (if anti-socially?) — New Zealand does good things to you like that. I think I could quite hap­pily live there, though a few more warm clothes would need acqui­si­tion first. That said, I have no plans to run away. Quite enough is keep­ing me here for the next 2 years or so, methinks. This is the lat­est I’ve been up in nearly a month methinks, so I’d best be off. More reg­u­lar updates may be forth­com­ing at some point in the future. Life gets in the way of blog­ging some­times — it’s not all bad!

p.s. yes, Harry Pot­ter comes out in about seven hours. No, that does not qual­ify as ‘life’. (Close, though)

# by Josh Street on July 21st, 2007 Tags: ,
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Why no, vector artwork is not universally superior for lines

I’m cook­ing up a book­let for a study camp at the minute that has a sim­ple grid-lines (ruled maths paper) back­ground and ini­tially traced it with Illus­tra­tor because it looked, err, lin­ear enough to be a fair can­di­date for such work.

The trace had to be a lit­tle eclec­tic for realism’s sake, so I didn’t just do the redraw with Ctrl + D trans­form ninja skills, but let the soft­ware trace it. Big mistake.

It was one of those things that InDe­sign got a lit­tle upset about the com­plex­ity of — which is okay — and had to import as encap­su­lated post­script instead of as native vec­tor data — which is also okay. Trou­ble was, it wasn’t just bor­der­line too-complex, it was stu­pidly over the edge. I stuck it on the A-Master (which keeps me sane and the .indd file­size down) and got to work for about a week on the rest of the con­tent and so forth. As we get closer to press (I was aim­ing for today… oth­ers appar­netly have dif­fer­ent ideas) I’ve started doing the Indd->PDF shuf­fle and dis­cov­ered the absolute pain of wait­ing for it to “ren­der” (basi­cally that’s what it’s doing) the EPS onto every page as it cre­ates the PDF file.

I endured this for about two days and then finally snapped this morn­ing, went back to Pho­to­shop with the source image and processed it to make it look sim­i­lar enough before past­ing the raster scan into the A-Master in the traced thing’s place.

As if by magic, the gen­er­ated PDF size dropped from 55MB to under 4MB.

Raster images are your friend.

p.s. hope­fully I’m back here now. Am away next week with GPRS Inter­net only, then in New Zealand (with Inter­net, albeit with uncer­tainty about hav­ing a com­puter in the accom­mo­da­tion). Yes, busy as ever. On Face­book quite a lot, because sta­tus updates are more man­agable than full blog posts!

# by Josh Street on June 18th, 2007 Tags: , , , ,
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The Arden Shakespeare series, the next month, CYIADA update

Offi­cially what I’ll be try­ing to acquire when I buy Shake­speare from now on. I have their The Winter’s Tale title, and it is noth­ing less than spec­tac­u­lar. It even includes as an Appen­dix the com­plete text of Pan­dosto. The Tri­umph of Time. (the pri­mary source text for Shakespeare’s play). Pages 181 – 225 are devoted to this text alone… very cool. I do won­der if they do the same with texts such as Ros­alynde as appro­pri­ate, or if this par­tic­u­lar edition’s edi­tor was feel­ing par­tic­u­larly benevolent!

Either way… highly rec­om­mended editions.

Also to acquire when next book shop­ping: Alice in Won­der­land, for some opium-fuelled hol­i­day read­ing. And per­haps Hitchhiker’s Guide to see if I can endure it nine years from when I last tried… less likely fuelled by opium, but from all reports it sounds bizarre enough to war­rant sus­pi­cion of the involve­ment of some other mind-altering substances!

Hol­i­day read­ing = after June 22nd, where­upon my last exam occurs. Then, off to lead on a study camp (per­haps time for read­ing? I can jus­tify Alice as being in sup­port of the HSC Eng­lish ‘jour­neys’ core!) for a week, three days back home in Syd­ney (undoubt­edly to be insanely busy) before going away to New Zealand from the 4th to 16th of July. My how time flies. I may or may not be at uni­ver­sity in an equal capac­ity next semes­ter due to a whole bunch of things, pri­mar­ily related to its per­ceived impor­tance and myr­iad other oppor­tu­ni­ties that are crop­ping up all over the place. It would be, for exam­ple, nice to have some money in exchange for funny hours in the form of more work (which I think I pre­fer to reg­u­lar and bor­ing hours) and not have to pur­sue use­less assess­ments (I speak of one par­tic­u­lar sub­ject that has copped flak on this blog over the past few months) around this.

The CYIADA thing is pro­gress­ing nicely. Michael came on board about a month ago as chief code mon­key, which has been nice coz I’ve been spend­ing a bit more guilt-free time in Pho­to­shop. There is a two-fold rea­son for that, first of which being I don’t feel like I need to try and pro­to­type any­thing on my own, and the other is that now he’s devel­op­ing stuff, there’s an immi­nent need for front-end to make this thing saleable! We’re close to land­ing on a new name that doesn’t sound like some­thing you’d use to gas peo­ple with.

There’s a meet­ing tomor­row arvo wherein we will speak of many things (except per­haps for shoes and ships and ceil­ing wax and cab­bages and kings), involv­ing a progress update, an exten­sive argu­ment about names and inclu­sive­ness, prayer, another argu­ment about launch dates and where/how it’s going to be hosted, who’s pro­vid­ing SMS, how much money we’re plan­ning on los­ing and for how long, how we’re going to pro­mote it, open sourc­ing things we write, and lots lots more.

I should really update the CYIADA project blog, too, but we haven’t got stag­ger­ingly good read­er­ship over there any­way (well, not com­pared to here, though per­haps more after South­ern Cross’ cov­er­age — at the end of that arti­cle, which is effec­tively buried online, though less so in print… iron­i­cally we need online read­ers far more than print ones!) so hope­fully that will wait until we set­tle on a new name (and asso­ci­ated domain name acqui­si­tions take place).

Oh and in unre­lated news, my cam­era turned up. It wasn’t in Selo’s car. This is a good and a bad thing… good because I have no money to spend on a still cam­era right now, bad because I have no rea­son to buy a new one even if I did :P It’s still got another six months of life left in it I think, though it’s look­ing pretty abused. Still takes decent pic­tures. I’m so happy with its per­for­mance over the last two and a half years (link goes to first pho­tos I took with it), seri­ously. I will strug­gle to make up my mind when it dies about what kind of cam­era to get… a larger SLR would be more use­ful for pro­duc­tion stuff and night time things, but this is so portable… I don’t know.

And there is a decent sized blog update.

Now, I should stop pro­cras­ti­nat­ing and pre­pare to kick off some fairly press­ing free­lance work when I get back from uni tonight! Uni assess­ments, also, are prov­ing to be rather wor­thy of pro­cras­ti­na­tion. Ahhhh… I keep remem­ber­ing “one more thing” to write about: 28 Weeks Later proved to be a seri­ously scary zom­bie flick. Saw it with Ben and Tori last night. Was ulti­mate year 10 flash­backs, only with added alco­hol and late nights with­out con­cerned parentals! We went to Pizza Hut all you can eat after­wards… its so dis­gust­ing but such good fun :P

As for the movie… it’s quite messy. But it was spec­tac­u­larly pro­duced… I need to re-watch the first one, but I’m pretty sure it was much more in-your-face sus­pense­ful. It sets up for a third film at the end, which vaguely irri­tates me, but… well, rumours have it that it’ll be capped at a tril­ogy only. And this was a really good sequel, so I don’t think it’ll mat­ter too much. Wikipedia has full spoiler detail for 28 Weeks Later… See the film first instead if you can nor­mally han­dle that sort of thing.

# by Josh Street on May 24th, 2007 Tags: , , , , , ,
| 2 Comments »

Four things

It’s Matthom’s fault.

Four jobs I have had

  1. IT support/troubleshooting guy
  2. West­field Christ­mas dec­o­ra­tions assem­bler at some sig­nage place
  3. Web… some­thing. Designer/markup guru/accessibility consultant/CSS wizard/JavaScript man­gler extra­or­di­naire. That’s really a job title.
  4. I’m all out, I think. Can I do “Three things” instead?

Four movies I can watch over and over again

  1. The Matrix (and ONLY the Matrix, not :Reloaded or :Rev­o­lu­tions, because they sucked bigtime)
  2. Eter­nal Sun­shine of the Spot­less Mind
  3. Under­world :D If any­one (in Syd­ney) wants to go see the sequel some­time let me know…
  4. Ice Age

Four places I have lived

  1. Lat: 33:54:24S (-33.9067) Lon: 151:13:01E (151.2169)
  2. Lat: 33:54:44S (-33.9122) Lon: 151:12:50E (151.2139)
  3. Lat: 33:54:23S (-33.9063) Lon: 151:13:30E (151.2249)
  4. Lat: 33:55:09S (-33.9190) Lon: 151:14:14E (151.2373)

Four TV shows I love

  1. Um. Wrong per­son. I’m going to tag Steve at the end of this post, which should be most amus­ing. Hope­fully he’ll name a pod­cast instead!

Four places I’ve vacationed

  1. New Zealand
  2. A boat. A big boat.
  3. Mans­field, VIC
  4. Tea Gardens/Hawks Nest, NSW :)

Four of my favorite dishes

  1. I hate this question.
  2. I can’t even choose food in a restau­rant, from a menu.
  3. Let alone with out any guid­ance in some forever-bounced-around-the-blogosphere meme.
  4. This is my answer. My favourite dish is indecision.

Four sites I visit daily

  1. Google. Duh.
  2. Quirksmode, but rarely not-through Google.
  3. My comment-spam mod­er­a­tion page :-/
  4. whisper.joahua.com, for music play­back. I’ll post about this sometime.

Four places I would rather be right now

This isn’t really a valid ques­tion see­ing I’m doing this on a week­end. Not fair.

  1. Bed.
  2. Float­ing in a pool some­where. Not nor­mally me, but for some rea­son that has enor­mous appeal right now.
  3. On a couch, read­ing a book (with­out think­ing “I’ve got so much other stuff to do! I haven’t got time to read!”)
  4. Mak­ing engag­ing rich media for the web. Sched­uled for later today. One of sev­eral excit­ing things com­ing soon!

Four blog­gers I’m tagging

  1. Steve
  2. Ben
  3. LTTD, mostly because I want to see how a col­lec­tive weblog would deal with this whole… blog­ging equiv­a­lent of chain-mail thing.
  4. I can’t think of any­one else (who hasn’t already been tagged/done it) I’d want to inflict this on :P

This is inter­est­ing, because I once com­pletely shunned that whole ‘e-mail sur­vey’ thing, but now recog­nise it as a not-entirely-neccessary not-entirely-evil nec­ces­sary evil. Hav­ing said that, still not a huge fan :P

Something unpredictable…

[Or, mak­ing up for a dis­tinct absence of post­ing for var­i­ous rea­sons not to be dis­cussed but hope­fully rec­ti­fied — the con­tent absence, that is — by this post.]

Until about three weeks ago, I was con­vinced I was going to take a year off between fin­ish­ing school and start­ing uni to work full time. I’d roundly insulted a small web firm a cou­ple of weeks before leav­ing for New Zealand, re-building their site with CSS in about three hours (it wasn’t per­fect, but it was a decent effort) and going into their office to tell them their ver­sion sucked and mine was bet­ter. To date, the web­site in ques­tion hasn’t been ‘fixed’, as it were, but I got a call the day after I returned from New Zealand ask­ing if I was inter­ested in com­ing in for an inter­view. I’ve been work­ing four days a week there since.

Tori came back. We spent some time together, and I kind of realised that putting off Uni­ver­sity for another year wasn’t a bril­liant move, con­trary to what more than a hand­ful of… older peo­ple… had said. The main rea­son is prob­a­bly social (which I don’t ever talk about too much on here, I guess), but finan­cially it’s not… com­pelling… to stay any fur­ther away from the other side of Uni any longer than is nec­ces­sary, because “that side” means a job/career I’m inter­ested in as a longer-term option, hence finan­cial sta­bil­ity more so than in an indus­try I’m per­fectly inter­ested in pro­vided I get to do the things I like — and where I am presently for­tu­nate enough to be in a posi­tion where that’s pretty close to what I’m doing — and indif­fer­ent about it (the indus­try) oth­er­wise. Social/political infor­ma­tion the­ory notwith­stand­ing, because that’s an entirely sep­a­rate ket­tle of fish that relates both to my pre– and post– uni direc­tions. Which are, inci­den­tally, IT/connectivity/accessibility now, and edu­ca­tion later. Some­where in the mid­dle there’ll be (is?) a fusion of the two, which has been bandied about a lit­tle over the last 12 months. I had a very inter­est­ing con­ver­sa­tion RE: some­thing along these lines last night, which will hope­fully evolve into some­thing in the not-too dis­tant future!

So yes, as of Mon­day I’m offi­cially an Arts stu­dent at the Uni­ver­sity of Syd­ney. In a way I feel bad about this because I’d said to work that I was plan­ning on stick­ing around in a near-F/T capac­ity for a year (and at the time I had been), but at the same time this feels so much more… sen­si­ble? Plus every­one was mind-blowingly nice about it, even though I called on Sat­ur­day to say I’d be in late Mon­day because I had to enrol (because of when the offer had come in, and because I’d been putting off say­ing it the week before).

Any­way, in sum­mary: I’m work­ing nearly full time doing web devel­op­ment in an awe­some role where I get to do lots of CSS, semantic-web junk, usabil­ity work, and some occa­sional JavaScript (though mer­ci­fully not too much! Still learn­ing. If any­one else in Aus is inter­ested in get­ting a copy of Jeremy Keith’s allegedly-excellent “DOM Script­ing” book, let me know so we can order a few copies from Ama­zon and get cheaper ship­ping, because no-one in Aus­tralia is stock­ing copies for another month or three!). And as much or as lit­tle server-side work as I want. At the minute I’m unequiv­o­cally say­ing “lit­tle”, but that might change at some point, maybe. I’m going to uni, too. That doesn’t start until March, so I’m going to be work­ing ‘nor­mally’ up until then, and after that feel­ing my way accord­ing to timeta­bles, how much of a life I have, how broke I am, etcetera!

Tied into the whole work thing, my first to-be-promoted-on-TV web­site is going live some­time in the wee hours of Sun­day Mon­day, which is auda­ciously excit­ing. Not in the least because it will hope­fully attract insane amounts of traf­fic, and the CSS-is-good-for-your-bandwidth-costs argu­ment car­ries weight here!! It also fea­tures AJAX, chiefly for usability/bandwidth-saving rea­sons… but also because it’s just damn cool! Any­way, there will be posts, screen­shots, etcetera (prob­a­bly say­ing the same kind of thing I just said, only nam­ing names and with pretty pic­tures!) sched­uled for release here to co-incide with the site’s launch, so… watch this space.

As for Uni? Eng­lish, Phi­los­o­phy, Clas­sics and (Ancient) Greek are cur­rently on the menu. Greek… may be swapped out, pos­si­bly. For Lin­guis­tics or maybe Latin if any­thing, but pos­si­bly not. The rea­son­ing behind it — because I’ve attracted many strange looks as I tell peo­ple I’m plan­ning on study­ing Ancient Greek — is essentially:

  1. Learn­ing another lan­guage (any other lan­guage) helps me under­stand Eng­lish bet­ter. Doing Eng­lish, no-one will ever explain gram­mar and struc­ture of lan­guage to me. It sucks. Admit­tedly, Lin­guis­tics could prove to be use­ful in this depart­ment, too.
  2. Ancient Greek ties in with the Clas­sics courses I’m tak­ing. Don’t ask me to remem­ber what they are, or even look them up, because I don’t have a copy of my pref­er­ences (they took it, because their stu­pid com­put­ers were stu­pidly bro­ken. I’m so glad I’m not study­ing IT!) and it’s not avail­able online yet and I’m just lazy. And try­ing to get this mas­sive post fin­ished so I can get back to hav­ing a life, or something.
  3. The New Tes­ta­ment is writ­ten in Greek. As Kris­ten so elo­quently expressed it last night:

    You can be one of those peo­ple at Bible stud­ies who go “Well, the greek word for that actu­ally means ‘this is ambiguous…’”

    Heh. Marcelo coughed some­thing that sounded sus­pi­ciously like “Moore Col­lege” (a Syd­ney Bible col­lege) when he found out, but that’s not really what I had in mind choos­ing it… maybe, though!

Any­way. The blog has nearly caught up to me. Almost. There’s a bunch of other stuff hap­pen­ing, but this is the glut of stuff I needed to write at some point and had been putting off!

My HSC has ended

If you’re read­ing this (e.g. the world didn’t end before it was posted or what­ever…), I’m prob­a­bly on the Other Side of the HSC. For var­i­ous rea­sons, this might be the last post before I go to New Zealand, in which case don’t expect another post for three weeks. I’m going to delete every­thing in my mod­er­a­tion queue when I get back, because I don’t have enough time to go through all the spam that will prob­a­bly accu­mu­late (or, am not plan­ning on hav­ing enough time… I might, if the spam­mers are nice for three weeks.) — this won’t impact most reg­u­lars, though, whose posts should get through just fine. Ah, I love soft­ware that just works. I can see it’s not likely to, though!

Tori is leav­ing for Europe tomor­row (tomor­row when this post goes live), and she’s not get­ting back til Jan­u­ary :-( Hence the improb­a­bilty of my post­ing at least in the next 48 hours, and pos­si­bly before I leave if it takes me longer than expected to pack/get organised.

I also may or may not have a heap of pho­tos to post when I get back. We leave in… a hand­ful of days now, and I still haven’t decided which/how many cam­eras I’m tak­ing, nor have I bought film. Bleh!

# by Josh Street on November 9th, 2005 Tags: ,
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GPS Running and a trip to New Zealand

I haven’t been run­ning much lately, because… I’m lazy. And there are exams on. And I’d much rather pro­cras­ti­nate pas­sively. Or some­thing. I don’t know, I don’t really have any good excuses.

There is, how­ever, some­thing that would prob­a­bly make me want to run more. This ridicu­lously cool GPS train­ing device! It’s like… hey… you’re a geek. And you want to run. With gim­micks that are arguably use­ful. Buy me, buy me!

Some­how, though, at $US330ish plus ship­ping, I don’t think it’s going to hap­pen. The solu­tion? Start jog­ging with a back­pack and take a car GPS unit (already have one)!

Yeah, not ter­ri­bly likely, either. Ah well. Hope­fully The Trip to New Zealand com­ing up (have I men­tioned that online yet? Geez… maybe not… how bad) will serve to kinda rem­edy the whole lack-of-exercise sit­u­a­tion and cre­ate a habit for when I get back. If I haven’t men­tioned that on this site before (I don’t remem­ber doing that, I don’t think I have), then… con­sider this notice. I’m going to NZ from Sat­ur­day the 12th of Novem­ber until Mon­day the 5th of Decem­ber. Tori leaves to go to Eng­land on Novem­ber 10, so that’ll be dis­trac­tion enough after fin­ish­ing the exams and just before pack­ing… and hope­fully NZ will be enough of a dis­trac­tion for me to not realise she’s on the other side of the planet for a while (and vice versa, I imagine…)

I’m plan­ning on tak­ing lots of pho­tos, but haven’t decided which cam­era to take yet. Or, more accu­rately, how many I will take. I’m def­i­nitely plan­ning on tak­ing my Pen­tax SP500 w/ 28-70mm lens, but don’t know whether my lit­tle Pen­tax qual­i­fies. I can see it either get­ting bro­ken or full very quickly. Con­tem­plat­ing get­ting a harddrive-based reader thingo (some­thing like this HD-DM40 from Any­ware, about $215 from a retailer), but quite uncer­tain. It’s just more stuff to carry in a back­pack that’s already going to be sub­stan­tially full.

Plus, as I’ve told some peo­ple before, I like film grain. It looks nice. Far nicer than dig­i­tal com­pres­sion arti­facts or the sen­sor crap­ping out in low light con­di­tions. One of Hayley’s pho­tos on year12.joahua.com demon­strates this nicely, because it’s not a good photo, but it’s very nice and char­ac­ter­ful… mostly, I think, because it was shot on film not digital.

So, I can live with my own inabil­ity to use a cam­era per­fectly mean­ing I get a hand­ful of blurry shots, and it cost­ing a lit­tle more to get pho­tos developed/make mis­takes. The ques­tion is, should I have a sec­ondary cam­era for quick pho­tos that I can check the qual­ity of imme­di­ately, just in case? I could prob­a­bly drop my SP500 in water and it’d sur­vive after a [prob­a­bly quite expen­sive] ser­vice… I can’t say the same thing for the dig­i­tal. Fun­nily enough, the tiny dig­i­tal would ulti­mately take up nearly as much space as the chunky SLR, because it would mean I’d be car­ry­ing a charger for its bat­ter­ies, a hard drive, and a charger for the hard drive, as well as the cam­era itself. I could just not use the hard drive and try to find a net cafe, but that’s some­thing I’d rather not rely on. I could also buy another SD card or two before we leave… which is a dis­tinct pos­si­bil­ity, given how cheap those things are get­ting (I saw a 256MB card for under $30 yes­ter­day, and wasn’t even look­ing. 512MB cards can be had for under $50). Prob­lem­at­i­cally, they’re absolutely tiny and I can just see myself los­ing one.

Sug­ges­tions, anyone?

# by Josh Street on October 26th, 2005 Tags: , , ,
| 4 Comments »