Wednesday, August 23, 2006

Anniversary and a Wedding

Wedding Wall Dance
Today is our Wedding Anniversary! Yep, it was three years ago at the ranch in Napa, with everyone and the Hot Club playing the song I wrote for Mer.

In the nuptial spirit, this weekend we'll be attending the wedding of the dude who introduced us: the one and only Nick Peters (featured in the video below). Nick and Rachel in their infinite wisdom have set their ceremony on the island of Kauai.

So, Mer and I will be celebrating all week long! First, lots of surfing and beaching it. Next I'll be playing our tune alongside a passel of excellent pickers at the rehearsal luau.

Then - and I'm really honored by this - I'll be playing alongside Tony Khalife at the ceremony. As a sneak preview, here is a clip that Mer took of Nick and me playing The Picnic Rag at Phil and Jane's wedding:



Finally, we top it off with a 2-day, 22-mile hike along Na Pali Trail. Oh yes, it is going to be quite an adventure. As is life, and marriage.

Happy Anniversary, Mer - and here's to many more!

10 Steps to a Videoblog

Thanks to all who subscribed to or commented on my blog yesterday - Blogs of Note has quite an audience! In response to those who asked how I made that last video, here are the 10 steps I take to videoblog quickly:

0. Practice. The best system in the world won't help you if you aren't ready to perform. Focus on the content. This will save you when it comes to Step 4.

Apple iSight 1. Record. Make a few rough takes and just keep the camera rolling. I prefer the Apple iSight with its built in mic and I don't get hung up on the quality (e.g. the Vote John Kerry song).

2. Review. Go back over your takes and choose the one that makes you cringe the least.

3. Refine. Keep the best take, but do one more, just in case you've learned something during review.

4. Edit. Take the best part of the best take and cut it down to a manageable size. Avoid putting multiple videos in one post. If neccessary, spend some time in iMovie splicing together some clips.

5. Compress. I use an old copy of Sorenson Squeeze that I got while working on the Flash Video Kit for Dreamweaver. Pay close attention to your settings so that you get a high quality MP3 encoding as well as fair quality video encoding. Some services like Google Video or YouTube will do this for you, but I prefer a little quality control so I do my own compression. If neccessary, shrink the aspect ratio (generally no smaller than 320x240).

6. Preview. I usually check it out on my local disk before publishing, cause putting can take a while and no one wants to wait twice for an upload.

DreamHost Rules 7. Put. I use WebDAV via DreamHost to drag and drop my video files to a standard location, and OS X rewards me with a sweet little "ding" when I'm done. This way, I can reuse all of the player code from another post, changing only the name of the file.

8. Blog. Add relevant links and remember that Bloglines and some other readers won't pick up the fact that you've got Flash video in there.

9. Iterate. Check out what you've published on various browsers, make little tweaks, and generally iterate on the blog post. I regularly add or remove links to make it more readable / viewable over time.

Now some of you might say, "Flash video does not a videoblog make." Yes, it's true that if you publish in Quicktime you have a chance of showing up on iTunes as a videoblog. The tradeoff there is that not everyone can view Quicktime, and let's face it, Flash is so hot right now!

One day, a standard for Flash "vlogging" will emerge, and yours truly will be all over it. Meantime, enjoy the plethora of great content out there for the 98% of the world with Flash installed.

Wednesday, August 16, 2006

How to Play Death Cab

The other day, I heard I'll Follow You Into the Dark by Death Cab for Cutie on the radio. I said, "Oh well, sounds like I'll have to learn that one, too."

Then, I found it on Odeo and listened to it a bunch of times. I thought about the chord pattern and how familiar it sounded, and then the whole structure of the song just popped into my head!

So here is a video of the first and last verses, guitar only.

You know, for practice.

In case you wanted to learn it.

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The New Sagolla.net

Sagolla.net More fun with Blogger Beta:


Sagolla.net 2.0!


Now, with fresh love.

Tuesday, August 15, 2006

Blogspot.Dom.net

Blogspot.Dom.net It took me under an hour to duplicate the content aggregation at Dom.net using the new Blogger Beta.


So. Easy.


So, I launched it: Blogspot.Dom.net!

Monday, August 14, 2006

Revelator - PhilPhest



Nick bent it juuuuust right during PhilPhest this weekend.

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Friday, August 11, 2006

Odeo.app - an Odeo client

In order to have something to play with at the Apple WWDC, I hacked up a little WebKit-based Mac client to house my favorite audio experiment: Odeo/Play. That way, no matter what's going on with my Firefox, I can always enjoy my tunes / podcasts / what-have-yous in a separate "player" via the Web as a Universal Binary (requiring OS X 10.4).

I call it "Odeo.app" and it's free. You can even check out the source code. In fact, I built this from the source for Gcal.app by Chip Cuccio (who was very responsive and helpful in the process).

So, thanks Chip, thanks Biz (for the icon), thanks The MIT License, and thanks to the Apple Developer Support dudes for answering my questions this week!

Monday, August 07, 2006

The D in "WWDC"

WWDC Another nice thing is that Adobe is sending me to the Apple Developers Conference again this year.

So, I'll be blogging twttring Twittering from the Moscone Center all week.


Party!

Comin' Home

Odeo It's been almost a year since I met with Noah and Ev to talk about joining Odeo as their Head of Quality. Since then, we've shipped the Create tools, including Web and phone recording, audio comments, audio link, Send Me A Message, public uploads, and Odeo: Listen.

A few months ago, Odeo decided to make a shift in focus, resulting in twttr. This release, and Odeo/Play and Hellodeo, make it clear to me that Odeo has learned the Way of QA. Odeo is releasing stuff faster, and with a higher degree of quality than ever.

So, as with Rabble, I take my leave of Odeo, in order to pursue new opportunities.

Adobe I've accepted a job with Adobe Systems. I'll be developing an automated testing framework for the Dreamweaver API. It's a real step forward on my engineering path, and something that keeps me South of Market in the company of good peeps.

I'll stay tuned in to all things Odeo. I'll still be working on small Web Development projects (like Invent Music and the mustn't grumble) because I'm addicted to building things.

You and me? We'll always have Odeo. Next month, I'm comin' home, back to Baker & Hamilton.

Apple D, back in effect!

Sunday, August 06, 2006

Happy 30th Mer!



Everyone came over for Mer's 30th Birthday party last night. We played "Let's Make a Deal" in which there were pinatas instead of doors from which to choose.

The last of three pinatas was in the shape of the infamous Zinedine Zidane. After Jeff eggs her on, Mer takes a few vicious swings and does away with the frenchman, dispite Jason's best marionette manipulation.

Go Mer!

[Update] Check out Aaron's excellent photos of the occasion.

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Friday, August 04, 2006

The Mustn't Grumble

The Mustn't Grumble design
Now launching:
theMustn'tGrumble.com.

The Mustn't Grumble is Ben's band from Cambridge, MA.
They describe themselves as an
"avant garde folk swing band."

I call it groovy.

Built by me, Blogger,
Flickr, Odeo,
and del.icio.us.

Basecamp project management and collaboration

Thursday, August 03, 2006

Del.icio.us Network



Hey, I have fans! Who knew?

Go Basecamp

Basecamp project management and collaboration

It's free for one project.

I just upgraded to the Personal plan (3 projects), and now I'm getting three times as much done!

Seriously simple. Gets the job done. Basecamp.

Tuesday, August 01, 2006

The More You Play


the more you want to play.