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Archive for 2006-06

Jamie Cullum at the Atlantic City House of Blues

Jamie Cullum standing on the piano.Had a wonderful time last night with some friends of ours, Dave and Jenn. We made a quick road trip to Atlantic City to see Jamie Cullum at the House of Blues. In a word, this concert was phenomenal. The musicianship on stage was awe-inspiring and the showmanship was infecting. After two solid hours, things seemed to be winding down. Then, the encore set took things to yet another level and ended the night with some incredible performances by every single musician on stage.

The U.S. tour is still on, so if Jamie Cullum and company are in your city (or within a few hours) you need to shell out a few bucks to see them. You won’t be disappointed.

Jamie Cullum (and at MySpace and Ticketmaster.)

House of Blues

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Act of Congress: Music for Your Heart

A few months back, I got a chance to jam with a few of my buddies—Chris Griffin, Adam Wright and Brad McConnell. Chris is one of my best friends and I’ve known Adam and Brad since college. They are all great guys and accomplished musicians. Brad is the singer/songwriter type. He’s always had an uncanny knack for writing songs with good hook. Just listen to them. Adam is also a singer/songwriter who has spent some serious time in the woodshed honing his mandolin and guitar skills. Chris is a virtuoso—a fretboard wizard. Not only is he multi-instrumental, he has serious expertise on every instrument he plays. He has a keen ear for great music and he excels at playing because of it. Chris and I have had some very serious jam sessions together. I always learn something from him.

So when I heard this trio of pals had actually orchesrated some semblance of a band, I was thrilled. Thrilled for them, because I know how much fun they’re having. Thrilled for us, because I know how much fun we get to have in listening to them create music. Still, with hectic schedules, it was tough for the guys to find the time to rehearse and it took an act of Congress to get them together. So goes the story behind the brand of Act of Congress.

In this brief write-up, I had planned on mentioning several genres that Act of Congress likely falls into. I thought about other bands that might sound like them, or at least influenced their sound in some way. But I keep falling short on accurately describing the Act of Congress experience. Yeah, yeah. I hear you. Doesn’t help me much. Well, sorry about that. But help yourself to a good dose of AoC and let me (and better yet them) know what you think. With Chris’ brauny guitar riffs, Adam’s good looks and Brad’s IQ, these guys have already made an impression in modern music. Plus, they have lots of peeps on MySpace. Surely that’s good for something.

Act of Congress

VIDEO: Song in F# (Live)

VIDEO: Home (Live)

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Backpack Calendar: Preview Video

With the recent deployment of Google Calendar, the web applications (dare I say web 2.0?) battle continues to heat up. I like Google’s app, but I’m patiently awaiting the calendar solution from one of my favorite development groups, 37signals.

Recently, the fellows at 37s released a preview video of their calendar application in action. Not only is the calendar slick-looking, but I’m stoked to see this because it means we’re close to seeing this tool released to the public. The calendar is about what I expected to see in a 37signals product. Simple, yet functional UI with just enough to get the job done. I can’t wait to get my hands keyboard on it.

37signals Calendar

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New Design: v3

Greetings. Check out the new digs. Technically, this marks the third design of davidblog.com. But wait. There is a new domain. (Well, not totally new, because I’ve owned it since 2003–but certainly new to you… most of you.) So, I decided to ditch davidblog.com. Okay, technically not ditching it, just letting it rest—and send traffic here instead. Not sure what to expect from this little change, except that more folks might now learn my last name or at least assume I started a foundation in my name. Enough with the small talk. Let’s open the hood.

Overall Design Inspiration

To be honest, I can’t say that the inspiration for this design came from one place, but rather a multitude of places that I often visit. The design is certainly trendy with its big midsection, rich typography, icons and contrast. Trendy just means I’ll be redesigning this in six months or so when this all goes out of style. I will say, I love designers like Steve Smith, Veerle, Bryan Veloso, Cederholm, Snook and Nathan Smith. I think they all have a keen eye for smart design and I can always take away something from them. Many of the elements in this design have no doubt been inspired by these folks in some form or fashion. In fact, there are lots of places—even beyond the aforementioned—that I find inspiration. If you see something here that you did first, go ahead—take credit for it.

Icons

I’ve never used icons very much. When I found the Silk icon set from FamFamFam a couple of months ago, it was the kick in the pants that I needed in order to see the light. I hope I didn’t over-do it, but I do hope that over time the icons will help guide you to information more rapidly. I’m certainly a visual person and would look for a symbol over a word any day. So I incorporated a little icon love. Other icons that you see here that aren’t in the silk set were either lovingly crafted by me or stolen from some other site whose owner is probably none the wiser. I felt bad at first, until I realized someone would probably steal mine as well. You might be stealing them right now. Just download Silk. They are better anyway.

Elements

Let’s see… There’s military time and British dates. Nope. It’s not very “accessible” or just plain. Just remember: this is my house. If I want 24hr format and funky dates, then that’s what we all shall have. At least here. :)

Unordered lists look nice now.

  • Check
  • this
  • out.

Yeah, it won’t save the world, but you’ll probably get more lists from me now.

Blockquotes have a nice feel as well. You might leave an incredible comment below which may find fame in one of these little boxes in a future blog entry. Maybe.

There is a little alert bar at the top. Today, it says Welcome to v3!, but it probably won’t say that all the time. For one, it’s a bit cheesy and, for two, I never really meant for you to see that anyway. It’s just left over from my design process. Apologies.

Plugins

Throughout the site, I’m using several plugins—

Gravatar
To manage gravatars in the comments section.
Ma.gnolia
For the recent Marks in Ma.gnolia list in the green belt. I had to revert to Barry’s older Javascript version because my hosting package is still on PHP4. Barry’s follow-up PHP-driven plugin is quite nice and worked well in my test environment.
Referrer Spam Bouncer
Big fan of stats. Not a big fan of referrer spam.
Feedburner Feed Replacement
Steve Smith likes stats, too. And this plugin keeps my Feedburner subscriber count up to speed by including those folks subscribing to the WP feed directly. Makes me feel better about myself.
EmailShroud
Obfuscates email addresses to prevent spambot harvesting.
SimpleTags
Posting Technorati tags is simple with this plugin.
Simple Recent Comments
Used in that green thing to show a handful of your recent comments. Unless you are a lurker, in which case your comment won’t appear due to the fact that you don’t comment—which is fine. No, really, it’s fine.
Search Pages
Searches pages as well as posts.
Spam Karma 2 - Reloaded
This thing is money. Comment spam is no match for the power of Karma.

Midsection

I always loved having the sidebar in the last design, but I never liked keeping information there. I felt like it changed the location of items that needed to stay put. So, I decided to place all the dynamic information in a nice, new green home. Personally, I like this approach because it gives me the freedom to be dynamic without upsetting the fabric of the site navigation. You might hate it. If so, feel free to express your distaste and vow to never visit again. We’ll miss you. (Kidding really—I’m open to criticism and you’re welcome to stay.) It also keeps less important information out of the way. There if you need it, but not if you don’t.

Tools

For the vast majority of testing, I used XAMPP for Windows and created/edited with Notepad++. I used SmartFTP for the live server interaction and opened Dreamweaver for some quick bug fixes once this design was live.

sIFR

In addition to the tools above, I decided to take the leap into rich web typography with sIFR, a font replacement tool driven by Javascript and Flash. Originally conceived by Shaun Inman and further developed by Mike Davidson and Mark Wubben, sIFR is a powerful tool that is very much welcome in my web design arsenal. While I’ve known about sIFR for some time, this is the first time I’ve released a live concept using it. I love the accessibility of sIFR. If you have a Flash-enabled browser, you are seeing the rich typography that sIFR is producing. But if you don’t have Flash (or Javascript) enabled, there’s nothing to worry about—you see good old regular web fonts, exactly the way I designed them to look.

CSS

For the CSS, I structured things a bit differently than normal. I decided to use an indention technique I discovered recently at BusinessLogs. It’s not rocket science, but I just had never thought about indenting CSS. So it was an experiment to see how I might like it and I think I do. There are a few things left to clean up in there and I’ll get to that soon.

Validation and Engine

This site validates to XHTML 1.0 Strict and CSS2 specifications. I love accessibility and I love web standards. This site is powered by WordPress.

Beta

Consider this design to be in the beta stage. There may be a few bugs here and there, and please let me know if you find one or even suspect. I certainly appreciate you looking deeply.

In Conclusion

Enjoy. :)

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OT: Cars I wish I hadn’t sold

MG MotorcarsI wish I hadn’t sold my very first car, a 1970 MGB GT. The MG wasn’t a stellar interstate traveler—no overdrive—but it was my in-town joy. And my British car show joy. 16-year-old kids really shouldn’t have whatever they want in a first car. But in my case, the car I really wanted was $1,500. I remember praying for this car one Sunday night prior to my sixteenth birthday. The next night, it was sitting in my backyard, a surprise from my parents and an answered prayer for a materialistic (and yet conservative-minded) teenager. Still, I always viewed the MG as a little “love from above.” Thanks again Mom and Dad. :) I just wish I hadn’t sold it.

Honda AutomotiveI wish I hadn’t sold that silver 1992 Honda Prelude Si. My first true sports, the Prelude was such a dream to drive. The manual gear shift was so smooth. I’ll never forget how great this car felt while driving. Sensitive enough to make it feel like a sports and smooth enough to make it feel luxurious. This was a car ahead of its time. And the 4th gen Prelude is still beautiful by design—even compared to the latest automotive design trends. I just wish I hadn’t sold it.

Toyota AutomotiveI wish I hadn’t sold my 1991 MR2 Turbo in steel grey mist. This car moved. And when it moved, it did so quickly. The T-top gave a whole new dimension to every season. A few engine mods kept life exciting, but probably contributed to the blown head gasket that led to the sale of the car. I repaired the gasket, but felt like a turbocharged car (with 10+ years of strong use) might create additional dents in my budget, so I sold it. Now, I just wish I hadn’t.

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WordPress Admin Redesign: Shuttle

For the WordPress admininstration on this site, I use Steve Smith’s excellent Tiger Admin plugin. I love it. Not that the default WordPress administration design is unusable, I simply prefer the look and feel of Tiger.

But for folks who do use the default WordPress administration, you can look forward to Shuttle, a nice upgrade to the admin that will be available in the next WordPress release. It’s still up in the air whether Steve will be able to continue building Tiger. (Each major release merits adjustment to the plugin, especially this one where the XHTML for the admin will probably change significantly.) I still prefer Tiger, even over what I’ve seen of Shuttle, so here’s hoping Steve will stay the course. I must say though, the team compiled to create Shuttle is quite an assembly of talent and it will be a welcome upgrade for WordPress.

Shuttle WordPress Administration Redesign

Tiger Admin at Ordered List

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