Nearly there…

Wow I can’t wait until this time tomor­row. So much stuff to get done now this whole uni gig is over. Inci­den­tally, one whole year out of the way, eh?

This next cou­ple of weeks will be fun… shoot­ing a short film Sat­ur­day, Katy’s birth­day that evening, some­how bid­ding in an eBay auc­tion on Sun­day morn­ing whilst at TACKLES (might need to del­e­gate that one!) to pick up some cheap light­ing bars, con­tin­u­ing shoot Sun­day after­noon, then I’ll be at work all week to catch up on the time I’ve been out of action because of exams/assessments, etc., and chase up all kinds of excit­ing things that have been on hold (includ­ing SMS stuff, yay!) for a con­fer­ence in early December.

Then, next Sat­ur­day, there’s the FEVA Pro­mot­ing the Word through Text and Image con­fer­ence, which is plenty excit­ing and all the cool kids will be there, so get along to it if you can (it’s cheap for a media con­fer­ence or about aver­age for a Chris­t­ian con­fer­ence — worth it either way!)

Wednes­day week there’s a per­for­mance on at Matthias by the drama kids (it’s a thing we do for net­work­ing with kids and par­ents in the local area more than any­thing, but it’s run by the kids min­istry peo­ple at our church.) that shouldn’t be too high stress (at least for me) but I’ll be off work for a day for, then the next evening web-blast06 is being put on by the fine folks from WIPA (I’m going cour­tesy of hear­ing about it through WSG, not part of the elite that forms that organ­i­sa­tion at present ;-)) at the Old Fitzroy, which is a fun lit­tle pub (and the­atre) in Wool­loomooloo. Which is all fun and games but weirdly sus­pended between high-priced real estate and the dodge-the-syringes bits of Syd­ney… shrug.

After that, I’ll hope­fully cruise steadily towards the end of the year (Decem­ber 14 for me, pretty much, coz I’m away til Christ­mas and it’s basi­cally the New Year after that), find­ing a pro­gram­mer and ham­mer­ing out a bit more stuff for the early early parts of 2007 when devel­op­ment will (God will­ing) kick off in earnest. Last web thing for the year for me is going to be Web­jam on Decem­ber 12 at Hotel CBD (right down the road from where I used to work, actu­ally) which should be a great deal of fun. I was tempted to try and present some­thing but fig­ure I’m in such a state of per­ma­nent ver­bosity I’d find it hard to do any­thing use­ful with three min­utes. So I’ll be there heck­ling in the crowd :-) Should be great fun. If you’re keen to come along to either web thing drop a com­ment after you’ve RSVP’d (web-blast is full already, but Web­jam appears to be open still) and we can arrange to meet up before­hand or something.

But I can’t get any work done until this exam is over because it makes me feel too guilty about not study­ing. Sigh. Inci­den­tally, read­ing a great book on Ten­nyson and Mad­ness (if only it were Mad­ness and Mod­ernism, but per­haps they’re occa­sion­ally syn­ony­mous!) by Ann Colley.

Col­ley, Ann C. Ten­nyson and Mad­ness. The Uni­ver­sity of Geor­gia Press. 1983. if you’re inter­ested — got some great stuff on his Maud mon­odrama which is the rea­son it got bor­rowed in the first place!

Jeyo SMS for Outlook

Screenshot: Jeyo Mobile Extender in Outlook 2002 receiving an SMS

A very use­ful pro­gramme for when you just can’t be stuffed reach­ing across to the phone sit­ting a few cen­time­ters away from you on the desk ;-) Or, for those of us who man­age to not notice a phone going off less than a meter away from their head, but will be instantly bugged beyond belief by a popup alert on their screen into respond­ing. My SMS response rate has got nearly as bad as my email fol­lowups this last cou­ple of weeks, so it’s prob­a­bly helpful.

Oh, and it’s also use­ful for ‘back­ing up’ (yeah yeah, onsite = bad, etc.) /copying/pasting URLs, etc. in SMS. Jeyo doesn’t do MMS/PXT at all which is a bit of a bum­mer but it’s quite cool apart from that. I’m still decid­ing if it’s worth twenty bucks (Australian).

It oper­ates through ActiveSync so you’ve got to have that going as well… which you prob­a­bly would any­way if you own a PDA in any way asso­ci­ated with a desk­top PC (weird *nix/mac types excepted — but as if Mac users would use any­thing other than a Palm! Well, maybe Black­berry have a foot in there, but it’s prob­a­bly too cor­po­rate for them hip­pies — tongue firmly in cheek). It kinda bugs me that this func­tion­al­ity isn’t avail­able for free from some­one, actu­ally, but whatever.

I can now send SMS for ~15¢ Aus­tralian through Skype, for ~5½¢ (real cost) using my mobile through Out­look 2002, or wait til peo­ple are on MSN and then send them what­ever for free. Clearly, we pay for con­ve­nience. And don’t really value sub-gold-coin amounts of money.

# by Josh on October 10th, 2006 Tags: , ,
| 2 Comments »

SingTel Annual Report 2006

It uses the term SMS exactly once. MMS doesn’t get a men­tion, and, just to make sure it’s not a parochial thing, I checked for PXT as well… also no men­tion. If any­one has any good stats on mes­sen­g­ing by Aus­tralian mobile SPs please leave a com­ment. Tel­stra are great, Optus/SGT are not so great. Clearly as an annual report it should be more than fluff fol­lowed by some finan­cial bor­ing­ness. Com­pet­i­tive analy­sis, etc., would surely be not a bad thing to have in there. Mind you, weigh­ing in at 192 pages, there’s a lot of fluff already.

*growls at cor­po­rate types*

# by Josh on October 6th, 2006 Tags: ,
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Got stock video?

If you’ve got stock video (ran­dom karaoke crap use­less for any­thing else but mixed ambi­ent visu­als — OR — peo­ple footage from video­clips that are miss­ing plots. Which basi­cally means rap videos I’d say.) and wouldn’t mind lend­ing me the CDs/DVDs for a day (prefer­ably in Quicktime/MOV for­mat, com­pressed as lit­tle as pos­si­ble, no crazy codec vari­ants) AND would be free for me to grab them tomor­row after­noon, send me an SMS/get in touch leav­ing a comment/whatever.

I can have plenty of fun with real­time vis from video inputs, but depend­ing on how much light there is in the room it’d be nice to have stock to fall back on.

The occa­sion is noth­ing too seri­ous… it’s an end-of-studycamp party for a Cru­saders camp, so my ambi­tions are entirely my own and hardly out of any great need to impress… toy lights do a good enough job of that with­out video’s help. Just push­ing myself a bit for kicks. I picked up a vision mixer a few weeks back for cheap that doesn’t have inbuilt TBC but can fade one source and has a posi­tioner on black (well, posi­tioner on another layer if you’ve got gen­locked sources) which will hope­fully per­form okay. Despite it not hav­ing TBC it will say when sources are in sync, which is kinda nifty. I’ll even­tu­ally invest in a decent vision mixer but at the minute they’re still a lit­tle out of my range. If it’s not a hor­ren­dous fail­ure, I’ll report how it works out :-)

Light­ing will be lame party gear that I’ll hope­fully mount sig­nif­i­cantly off the ground (there are four places in the room I can use) at least in part and then prob­a­bly have one or two larger fix­tures in corners/on a T-stand. Light­ing, as always, will be largely for­given by copi­ous quan­ti­ties of fog. Pro­jec­tion should improve mat­ters in the room some­what (in terms of visual qual­ity) BUT will prob­a­bly be ren­dered inef­fec­tive by the fog. If it’s too bad then I’ll just switch to visu­al­i­sa­tions, which is totally not a big deal at all… I just don’t get to be quite as cre­ative *dreams of a plasma in every cor­ner instead of a sole projector*.

So yeah, I am mildly excited. Will be stay­ing up there overnight unless I’m feel­ing par­tic­u­larly ener­getic and in a driving-mood late that evening… the camp is at Gal­ston which is slightly north of Hornsby. Doesn’t have to be a par­tic­u­larly long drive, and it’d undoubt­edly be less sus­cep­ti­ble to peak-hour traf­fic if I went back that night instead of Fri­day morn­ing, but still… it’d be late. We’ll see.

# by Josh on June 28th, 2006 Tags: ,
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Perplexingly Pithy

I’ve never really got­ten away with one-liners on this blog. It’s weird. A large part of that is because I’m an old wind­bag that doesn’t know how to write a sen­tence with­out a ridicu­lous num­ber of clauses, but… the proof is in the pud­ding; they should all lead some­where and make more sense more clearly than shorter sen­tences would. It’s about me not trust­ing you, dear reader, to have half a brain for your­self and under­stand what I am say­ing. I imag­ine that, by speak­ing (that is what char­ac­terises this medium of blog­ging more than any­thing else — as with instant mes­sen­g­ing, it is more about an ongo­ing con­ver­sa­tion than a pro­tracted series of epis­tles) more, I leave less to chance, less chance of mis­un­der­stand­ing, misinterpretation.

And I find this to be true of most other blogs I have perused in the past, with the obvi­ous excep­tion of com­pletely sim­ple statements/one-line com­men­taries to be found on posts that con­sist solely of a link to another site, and a sum­mary comment/quip. Those aren’t blogs, though, they’re link-logs. Or what­ever you’re going to call them.

Finally, I’m engag­ing with LJ peo­ple and am increas­ing per­plexed as to how one is expected to inter­act in such an envi­ron­ment. All is nor­mal, mun­dane, draw­ing a-heck-of-a-lot-of-comments; then there is a peb­ble (it is only a peb­ble) dropped onto the placid sur­face of a tightly strung mem­brane, pulled taut by dozens of inter­ac­tors (com­menters) who play a role in the blog con­text. It bounces.

Crack.

I pic­ture it like ice, because that’s a dra­matic image that appeals to me… shards, stress-fractures, mov­ing across its sur­face at incred­i­ble speed. It’s not really like that, how­ever. The sur­face is sim­ply released from the edges. It’s like those para­chute games you’d play as a kid… imag­ine peo­ple let­ting go of the edges — the peb­ble, or author (actu­ally in my orig­i­nal metaphor it was the author’s pithy-one-liner post: either ana­log will suf­fice), is left in the mid­dle beneath sheets of canvas.

Per­haps I mis­con­strue the response. Even beneath that can­vas there is, per­haps (again), a sub­ter­ranean response that goes unseen — that is, email, phone calls, SMS, IM con­ver­sa­tions… I speak of an elec­tronic com­mun­ci­a­tions ecosys­tem only, for it per­plexes me to think that any­one could or would use a let­ter to deal with such things: this, how­ever, betrays my per­sonal con­text: I am male and no longer at an age where I encounter my clos­est friends at school everyday.

But, it appears, this peb­ble bounces and causes those who were active to fall silent. Respectful.

That’s how I feel about it. That’s how I excuse it in myself.

As an alien, it is not my duty to respond… it would be inap­pro­pri­ate, engag­ing too much, likely to attract dis­dain, scorn. So afraid we are of being seen to reach out.

And I can’t help but won­der what would hap­pen if I were to start post­ing the same kinds of one-liners I see all over those kinds of very-age-specific social net­works, here. Would some­thing explode, scar­ing all com­menters away? I like to think I mix it up enough here that I scare every­one away equally… or rather, there are occa­sion­ally things that will inter­est all, but I have some­how man­aged to free myself from the con­straints of writ­ing for an audi­ence. This is post 966, by the way. That’s devel­oped writ­ing… not good writ­ing, just devel­oped. Hope­fully as I do so more I’ll under­stand the medium bet­ter… for me, yeah, there is a medium. Blog­ging is not use­less (anymore).

Even Live­Jour­nal is use­ful in its own (dif­fer­ent to this) way… it’s chiefly social. That’s the thing about hosted ser­vices over DIY jobs. DIY jobs are the best. Yeah, Word­Press counts as DIY. The point is, there’s no social facil­i­ta­tor in place. This isn’t Face­book or MySpace or Live­Jour­nal. It doesn’t have any hooks into them (excep­tion: LJ’s awe­some OpenID is del­e­gated to from this page), there’s no way to build links. I’m still an out­sider tech­ni­cally, if not oth­er­wise… LJ blow-in that I am and have been. But they’re out­siders, too. They’re out­side every other social net­work on the planet. It’s that which I find most strik­ing about social net­works… they con­tinue to facil­i­tate frag­men­ta­tion! Each cries out, “join our clique!” … and they often do.

Some are using Blog­ger, or even (MSN) Spaces. There are no social net­work­ing hooks between ser­vices. None of that group of friends uses RSS: they’re still man­u­ally check­ing (if, indeed, they do) these blogs. No con­ve­nient index-login-screen to say friends have posted new things. No attention-drawn to pithy one-liners to be ignored (or responded to in some hid­den way?) The whole sit­u­a­tion is utterly per­plex­ing. And now I feel how I imag­ine a soci­ol­ogy stu­dent must.

Something exciting in the Australian search space?

Well, they still haven’t cot­toned onto the sematic web thing (per­haps because they’re not try­ing to get indexed by any­one else!), but Aus­tralian engines keep pop­ping up. Of late, we’ve seen an aggres­sive mar­ket­ing cam­paign from Telstra-owned Sen­sis Group, both for their own gen­eral pur­pose search engine, Sensis.com.au, and for their sub­sidiary Yel­low Pages directory.

In fact, so pro­lific is this cam­paign that the two often col­lide in spec­tac­u­lar style, as I dis­cov­ered on my (pro­longed, cour­tesy of the Cross City Tun­nel stu­pid­ity that gripped Syd­ney today) bus trip into the city this morning.

An ad for Sensis on a bus...
...and an ad for the Yellow Pages on the same bus.

It wouldn’t have been so tragic if their cam­paigns weren’t so sim­i­lar… but they are. The only dif­fer­ence, appar­ently, is the strength of exe­cu­tion: note the SMS com­po­nents of each cam­paign vary slightly, with Sen­sis using a reg­u­lar num­ber (pre­sum­ably to add unsus­pect­ing com­muters email addresses and phone num­bers to a data­base for on-selling) whilst the Yel­low Pages have at least gone to the trou­ble of acquir­ing a ded­i­cated pro­mo­tional number.

As a side note, their index is heav­ily com­mer­cially geared, and seems to lever­age “Aus­tralian” results purely on the basis of domain name­space (that is, .au). As a devel­oper, I’m not ter­ri­bly impressed with it, but, unlike Ansearch, this is a force that may have to be taken seri­ously into con­sid­er­a­tion in the months and years to come.