Generative music with Nodal

August 14th, 2008

That, believe it or not, is a piece of music. A series of notes linked together in a graph fashion. Each node can link off to other notes with differing delays, durations and pitch. You can build up some impressive cascading arrangements with this system. Nodal is one seriously strange yet interesting piece of software. Some of the example music pieces look like circuit boards while others remind me of a social graph.

(Nodal doesn’t produce any sound on its own. You need to get the free SimpleSynth midi application to hear anything.)

Chandler goes bing

August 14th, 2008

Chandler is to PIM software what Duke Nukem 3D Forever is to games; hyped, drawn out, long overdue, possibly-vaporware but still fascinating folks around the world.

Unlike Duke Nukem 3D however, Chandler, five years and $8 million in the making, has hit 1.0 and you can download it now. Mac, Windows and Linux are supported.

The idea is that everything is a note. Your emails are simply notes with addresses attached, calendar items are notes with dates and times attached, to-dos are notes with priorities attached. Notes can shift between states and be organised as you want. No longer will your email client force you to copy and paste an email into your calendar client.

That is the idea anyway and I like it. However the year is 2008 and Chandler looks decidedly dated. It is also rather slow, taking noticeable time to shift between notes (and I only have 4 of them so far!) Even longer to switch between the three main views; All, Starred and Calendar.

I’ll spend some more time with it but first impressions are not great. I haven’t found an online web version yet either, something I require for email, calendar and to-dos. I found the Hub which is a decent looking web version of Chandler. It syncs with your desktop software though there are one too many dialog boxes popping up when you do sync.

Search engine traffic

August 12th, 2008

Two screenshots showing the power of search engines when it comes to driving traffic to your site.

Awhile back my Wordpress 2.0.2 powered blog was hacked and filled with spam links. Google, Yahoo! etc. all quickly dumped my blog from their results. Wherebefore I was getting 2,000 hits a month I was now getting 100. Small numbers but the difference is apparent. I was hacked on the 26th/28th of March and you can see in the top graph the resulting drop.

The other day I upgraded to Wordpress 2.6 and lo and behold the search engines noticed and started showing me in their results again. Traffic is up (though still small.)

Toddle is a doddle

August 12th, 2008

The last website I’d think of reviewing would be a newsletter system but Toddle is just too good an example of good website design to pass on by. It is also part of the Tuesday Push series.

Registration is simple; enter your email address. It takes you straight into the system. No passwords, no confirmation emails or age, gender, favourite movie and colour boxes to tick. Toddle does not really need a password, it works by sending the entered email the newsletter which you then forward on. So anyone “hacking” in would only send an email to themselves or to one other person.

Once in you can start creating your newsletter straight away. There is no save button or listings of previous newsletters to choose from (though you can have that if you want). From beginning to end you are working on one newsletter and it is all done from one page. Each template has a few sections with an image, header and body text. Fabulously simple and eminently usable.

Toddle isn’t for power users; it doesn’t have an address book (you send the newsletter from your email client), the templates are set and there is no scheduled sender mechanism. Toddle doesn’t need any of these nor should it ever complicate itself with further features.

For someone like me Toddle does everything I could want in a newsletter system. Beyond being a newsletter system Toddle is an excellent lesson in good website design.

Good work lads.

WordPress upgraded

August 7th, 2008

I have finally upgraded this blog from WordPress 2.0.2 to 2.6. Over the next week or so I hope to move the hosting over to my Slicehost server and sort out the DNS. TextDrive have been good to me but I want more control and flexibility.

The ALA web-design survey

July 29th, 2008

ALA

Head on over to ALA and take their 2008 “people who make websites” survey.

The first night home

July 21st, 2008


Attention from Paul Watson on Vimeo.

Leah and Fi came home from hospital yesterday and we spent our first night at home together. The night didn’t go too well at first. If you had been at the 24h Tescos in Waterford around 3am you would have seen a red Volvo wandering around the parking lot and a sleepy dad looking for Aptamil infant milk. Fi had been breast feeding since birth and Leah seemed to be doing well but last night she just wasn’t getting what she wanted. After two hours or so of fretting and crying we brought in the bottle. Leah nearly inhaled the 90ml and promptly fell fast asleep at 4am. She woke again at 7am for another good feed and passed out till 10am for another feed. Hopefully this means a 3 hour cycle which isn’t too bad. She is sleeping now and by 1am should be good for her lunch.

Baby Watson in action

July 19th, 2008


Baby Watson Day 1 from Paul Watson on Vimeo.

A couple hours after birth.

Welcome to Earth

July 18th, 2008

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At 13:58 today the 18th of July 2008 I became a father. Fiona gave birth to a perfect baby girl weighing all of 6 pounds and 6 ounces. Ten fingers, ten toes, all good.

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MUZU.tv

July 17th, 2008

Well done to the MUZU.tv lads for getting on RTE news last night. The MUZU dev. team lives and works on the floor beneath me and I can testify to the long hours they have put in.