Archive for the 'Work' Category

Chatsum Public Beta Launched!

May 30th, 2006 at 6:17 pm

Well it’s been a while since I last posted, but there is good reason, aside from all the freelance work I’ve been doing which I’ll go into in another post soon, I’ve also been busy working on Chatsum. So it is with great pleasure that I can now announce that Chatsum has launched, is live, and open to new users!

Get Chatsum

In case you don’t already know, Chatsum is a FREE add-on for your web browser that lets you chat with all the other Chatsum users that are looking at the same website as you. But that’s not all, Chatsum also acts as a way of looking more closely at your browsing history, allowing you to see what you’ve looked at the most in the last week and in total since you first joined Chatsum. You can even share this information and make use of it in your own site via the integrated RSS features. For an example take a look at my member page.

We’ve got heaps more features planned both in the immediate future and long-term, including support for Safari in addition to the existing Firefox extension, so why not take a look and sign up for a free account and start Chatsumming today.



Carson Workshops - The Future Of Web Apps Summit

February 9th, 2006 at 2:56 am

Well today George and I went to The Future Of Web Apps Summit in the Kensington Town Hall conference centre. I actually had a really fun day, and some of the talks were really quite interesting, a couple of points might even prove useful.

The speakers included such luminaries of the Web 2.0 world as Joshua Schachter the founder of Delicious, Tom Coates of BBC, Yahoo and Plastic Bag fame, and Shaun Inman. I think the awards for the best talks go to Tom Coates, Joshua Schachter and Ryan Carson. Each of these guys covered some different territory, from Tom’s more esoteric conceptual musings on the direction of the ‘atomic’ web, through helpful technical details from Delicious, to an interesting case study of the economics of starting a web services based business on a budget from Ryan Carson.

Coates also included a slide of the Chatsum homepage in his presentation, and while I’m not totally sure he meant it as a complete compliment, it was still good to get a shout-out and we got some good feedback from people as a result.

The two presentations I enjoyed the least (barring the advert from Adobe) were Shaun Inman and David Heinemeier Hansson. Shauns’s talk was a little on the short side. He was supposed to be talking about APIs, but to be honest the other guys had already covered it, and in more depth. I think it’s a shame he didn’t focus on how visual interface design can contribute to a web 2.0 app as I think that’s his real strength. Hansson’s presentation was a pep-rally for Ruby On Rails, and although I could see a certain elegance in what he was evangelising, it did strike me as the sort of technology only someone with OCD could really love, and he came off a bit prescriptive for my tastes.

All in all it was a very enjoyable day, and our first outing as Team Chatsum! Oh, and check out the photo of Ryan looking a bit like action man. How does he get his skin to be so perfect and shiny?!



Playing Away With Carson

February 8th, 2006 at 1:34 am

In case you’ve been clicking around the site you may of noticed that the portfolio section has seen a few updates today. It’s still not quite finished which you’ll know if you’ve read much of the text, but hopefully I’ll get it sorted over the next few days.

Also I’m having a fun day out tomorrow with the rest of Team Chatsum (a.k.a. George) at Carson Workshops’ “The Future Of Web Apps Summit” in Kensington.

Carson Workshops

If you’re going along then do seek me out and say hi. In addition to hearing some interesting talks I’ll be whoring myself around in the hopes of being offered millions of pounds to work on earth shatteringly exciting projects. Alternatively I may just wind up talking to the plants and crying into my soulless frappuccino. You decide!



Let’s Chatsum Time

January 10th, 2006 at 2:12 pm

Happy New Year! For my first post of the year I’d like to tell you all about a little project I’ve been working on. It’s called Chatsum, and it’s the brainchild of my old friend George Grinsted. For years now George has wanted to create a way to let people who are visiting the same website communicate with each other, and contribute to the content itself.

Recently users have been given new ways to interact with websites through commenting, trackbacks and wikis. However all of these forms of interaction require that the website itself chooses to implement them. So although the opportunity for the reader to become the author has increased, it’s still pretty limited and is only really ‘the norm’ on blogs like this, or on more technically orientated sites. There are of course many notable exceptions such as Wikipedia, but I think you get the point. Well we’re hoping that Chatsum will change that, let me tell you a little more about it…

Firefox Chatsum Sidebar Screenshot

Chatsum is a free service that allows you to chat with other users who are looking at the same website as you. There are two interfaces currently in development, the first takes the form of a sidebar extension for Mozilla Firefox. Firefox is the worlds most popular open source web browser and is widely regarded as the best browser available for Windows and Linux users. The Chatsum sidebar lives in the side of your browser (big surprise) and houses a fully-fledged chatroom. The clever bit is that the chatroom is specific to the page you’re looking at, and all the other users in the room are also viewing the same web page. When you navigate to a different page the Chatsum room changes too, automagically! Open a page in a new tab? No problem, Chatsum will keep pace with whatever you’re currently viewing, no matter how many tabs you’ve got open. There is the option to switch between a page level room and a site level room, and you can also see what rooms/pages are popular with other Chatsum users.

And I did mention that we also have a Dashboard Widget for Mac OS X 10.4 in development…

Chatsum Dashboard Widget Screenshot

We’re currently inviting people to join our beta test and hope to release the Firefox sidebar within the next couple of weeks, with the Widget soon after. We have lots of exciting features planned and intend to take a pretty aggressive approach to adding them. I’m particularly excited by all the extra community stuff we’ll be doing on the site and by some new possibilities that are emerging in relation to bringing Chatsum to an even wider audience. If you want to keep up-to-date with the development then check out the development blog, and also please do sign-up to the beta test, we really need your help, and the sooner we can get going with the beta test the sooner we can start implementing all the new stuff!

Chatsum Site
http://www.chatsum.com

Chatsum Development Blog
http://www.chatsum.com/blog



Go WOMAD

July 28th, 2005 at 2:10 pm

So it’s that time of year again, it’s WOMAD Rivermead 2005! I’m off tommorrow for what will be my last time attending as an employee of the Real World, WOMAD & Peter Gabriel trinity. Highlights will hopefully include a performance by Pina, one of my favourite artists on our labels. It will also be the first time that I’ve gone to WOMAD and not camped there. This time I’m going to be staying in a hotel! Hooray!

The dowside is that the weather forecast is not fantastic, my weather widget tells the story…

WOMAD Reading 2005 Weather Forecast



A Beginning To The Fond Farewells

July 27th, 2005 at 3:50 pm

Tonight I’m going to be enjoying a Thai meal with some wonderful company. It’s a goodbye dinner for two people who are leaving the design department here at Real World, Derek Edwards and Clare Yates. It’s a sad occassion as Del and Clare are two of the loveliest people to work with. However I’m confident they will both go on to great things, so I’m excited for them too.

Oh, and as of today it’s less than 1 month till my final day here at Real World Multimedia!



The Big Gulp

July 18th, 2005 at 11:30 am

Well I’ve finally gone and done it. This morning I had a quick meeting with my boss York to tell him that I’m handing in my notice with my final day of employment being August 26th. I was absolutely terrified. I’ve been employed here at Real World as a Multimedia Designer for 6 years. It’s been a great time for me and I’ve learned more than I could of imagined. I’ve worked on online stores, digital music download services, fan forums, festival sites, album microsites, DVDs, E-CDs, video and animation, etc, etc.

I’ll come back to this post and add more soon as I can’t do this news justice right now. The long and the short of it is that I’ll be moving to london in the last week of August to begin a new life as a freelancer. Wish me luck!



Nice Badge!

March 14th, 2005 at 12:42 pm

So you may be wondering what that exceptionally pretty and colourful circle is doing down on the left hand side of the page, well that there badge is representing my pindex. What’s a pindex you say? In short it’s my personal political index, and, well why not click that juicy little badge and find out more. You can even set up your own, for free! Now you can’t say fairer than that can you.

Oh, and I suppose I should mention that I did all the visual design for pindices, including the candy drop buttons. I’m particularly keen on the info balloon that pops up when you hover over a badge on the main site. It took a fair amount of work to get it working on all the platforms required, but I learned some fun new code, and got to push pixels! It was also great to work with my old friend George Grinsted who did all the back end php and mysql trickery. His code was a joy to work with and made my job 10 times easier. Thanks G!

Visit the main pindices site

And just in case you didn’t see it, here it is again in all it’s glory. Wonder what I’ll be this week?



Go Mad For…

July 17th, 2004 at 8:27 pm

Screenshots of WOMAD.org

Well I’ve just finished the first revision of the new official site of WOMAD (World of Music, Arts & Dance) who organise festivals, events and educational projects around the world, you can find the new site at http://www.womad.org.

Overall I’m quite pleased with it so far. There are still a few bugs, features to add, and performance optimisations to be done, but all in all it’s a massive improvement over the old site and provides a much better structure in terms of design and code to be able to build upon in the future.

As usual any and all comments are very welcome, good bad or indifferent.



Hello Stranger

May 29th, 2004 at 10:36 pm

Oh dear, it’s been a while hasn’t it? I’ve been neglecting this little online diary of mine over the last few weeks so today I’ve decided to bite the bullet, get back on the horse, use several other cliches that I can’t quite draw to mind and get writing again. Not much has been happening of late, I’m reaching the end of an ongoing project at work, one which I’ll be very glad to finally get out the door. I can’t really show it to you yet, but as soon as it’s public I’ll post a link.

Some exciting news, I’m off to WWDC in San Francisco at the end of June. Crazily the cost of the flight drops to under half in I fly out two days early and spend the weekend there, so it’s cheaper to just get two more nights at the hotel. If I stay in the hotel I want to I’ll have decent internet access so I’ll be uploading photos and reports of my first trip to the USA. I’m not quite sure what I’ll do with myself, all alone in San Francisco for a whole week, so if anyone has any suggestions of things to do then they’d be gratefully received.