Archive for the ‘dcinput daily’ Category

marksmith.tv videoblog #001

Sunday, January 13th, 2008


Yesterday’s trip down to see the 2007 NaVloPoMo screening inspired me to start cutting up video. So many unbelievable pieces of work were shown and it was really great meeting many people that I’d only ever seen online.

The audio is from the start of nyub episode #50, a fantastic alternative music podcast, the video was just two short videos I had taken in Heathrow airport last week testing out my new webcam. There is some really annoying guy listening to the Manic Street Preachers on his mobile phone loudspeaker just to the left of me.

This video has a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike license.

Mysterious Skype transactions on my Paypal account

Friday, August 17th, 2007

SkypeThere’s been lots of talk of the recent problems Skype has been having. It seems they had some serious downtime and had to restrict all user access.

I noticed last night that though I was signed into Skype it was impossible to make myself “online”. The person I was trying to call at the time had the same problem. We thought nothing of it and I went out for the evening.

Right after leaving the house I got two email sent to my Blackberry from PayPal saying that I had just made two payments of €28.75 for Skype credit. These payments sure weren’t initiated by me. I called my credit card company and sure enough they had been charged to my card. No extra credit on my Skype account either!

I’ve contacted Skype but no reply so far. Not quite sure what to do about it now, I hadn’t realised till I read Techmeme a few minutes ago that there was even a big Skype palava going on.

I haven’t heard of this happening to anyone else, but it certainly doesn’t inspire me with confidence. Needless to say I changed all relevant passwords.

dcinput daily for Sun 22nd Jul, 2007

Sunday, July 22nd, 2007

Turning dcinput to a Python weblog

I’ve found Worpress more than sufficient for all my blogging needs up until now. It was the obvious choice to make after my Blogger weblog since I wanted to host the site myself. The fantastic plugins and big community just made the choice easier. The plan had always been to start learning PHP and customise the site to my needs. The reality is that there never seems to be enough time to get anywhere useful with that idea.

GlueI’ve been programming in Python for around 4 years now. I had coded in C++ and Java back at university but when I started working at Jim Henson’s Creature Shop all the code that they used for scripting the pipeline was in Python and various shell languages. Of course a lot of the image processing code was in C but I was always much more interested in glueing things together.

That’s what I do now. I write code to glue lots of different technologies together. I look at people’s workflows, at the software they are using and I come up with ways to automate repetitive and error prone things in the media making pipeline. It can be pretty frustrating at times but with persistence I always get there in the end. It’s also a very creative role. I’m constantly thinking of new possiblities, new ways of combining things that weren’t meant to be combined. I’m told this is hacking.

While I do lots of back end scripting I really haven’t had a go at programming for the web. Unfortunately it just hasn’t been needed in my job. That’s a big downside. Anyway I’ve decided I want complete control over my blog, I want to be able to try things out at a moments notice. I also have a few other projects that are web based that I want to get going. Over the comming weeks I will be moving this weblog to a Python solution.

I’m tring to choose between Django and Turbogears.

Django and Turbogears reading

Erik Smartt on moving from Wordpress to a Django blogging solution.

Python blogging software links.

Gustavo Picón on why he chose Django over Turbogears and Ruby on Rails.

Thread from the Turbogears Google group in response to Gustavo.

I’m going to do the tutorial in both Django and Turbogears and see what I like best.

Django notes…

In about an hour I’ve managed to get a page up with Django, though most of the messing around was due to my dodgy mysql installation. Seems to be pretty straight forward so far. I will document my voyage.

MySQL installation instructions on OSX, came in handy.

Resetting your password on a MySQL installation. I had to use the insecure method. I should really write passwords down.

dcinput daily for Friday 20th July, 2007

Friday, July 20th, 2007

I’m a thoughtful blogger! That just made my day :).

dcinput daily for Wed 4th April, 2007

Wednesday, April 4th, 2007

David Lynch on product placement in films. Very funny.

dcinput daily for Mon 2nd April, 2007

Monday, April 2nd, 2007

Eric Nicoli CEO of EMI: “Our goal is to give consumers the best possible digital music experience. By providing DRM-free downloads, we aim to address the lack of interoperability which is frustrating for many music fans”.

This is very exciting. When I was at school and at university I used to spend many hours everyweek finding new music, reading about bands, going to gigs and more generally being part of the music scene at large. I found that when I started work, after a few years a significant part the free time I spent doing these activities was no longer there to spare.

Digital music was supposed to help me here, but until now I’ve been mostly dissapointed and frustrated. I don’t have time to waste anymore so I re-aligned my priorities and music took a back seat. I’m hoping DRM free music will allow me to get excited about music the way I used to be and guess what, I’m not a poor student anymore, I’ve got money to spend now.

Make my life easy.

dcinput daily for Wed 14th March, 2007

Wednesday, March 14th, 2007

Mark Cuban: “If Viacom wants to put up snippets, scenes, mashups, mockups, quarter, half or full episodes of anything they own, there is nothing to stop them […] Google may not know it, but they have already lost.”

dcinput daily for Tue 13th March, 2007

Tuesday, March 13th, 2007

BBC News: “Entertainment giant Viacom Media says it will sue web search engine Google and its video-sharing website YouTube for $1bn”. Hmm, betting against Google is kind of like betting against the Internet: in the end they always win, even if at first it might seem like you did.

What do evangelists do?

MinibarAt the last London MiniBar event I met quite a diverse group of people, saw some interesting presentations and had a beer or two. One of the people I met was Roo Reynolds who is a Metaverse Evangelist for IBM. It turns out that IBM have a pretty large portfolio with Linden Labs, owning something like 12 Islands in the online virtual world of Second Life. Roo explained that they have started to use Second Life to host meetings where real life IBM employees are geographically spread out worldwide. The dress code is strictly “no jeans, no wings”.

As well as wondering what work would be like if it were more like a video game, I’ve also been wondering what it is that this new breed of evangelists, you know the ones that work for companies, actually do. Whatever it is, with companies like Microsoft, Google, Amazon and IBM all boasting many evangelists on their books, you can bet they are doing something useful. Somehow the term has migrated into everyday business speak, it’s just I must have missed it happen.

One of the definitions of an ‘evangelist’ at dictionary.com is “A missionary preacher sent forth to prepare the way for a resident pastor; an itinerant missionary preacher”. Putting the religious bit to one side, I quite like the ‘preparing the way’ part, kind of like you’d be out there in unchartered territory, meeting new people with new ideas and viewpoints, figuring out how you could help them.

What do you think modern evangelists do? Let me know in the comments.

Technology Evangelist: “People who have one simple goal: Better Living Through Technology”.

Robert Scobble on evangelists: “Another reason for an evangelist never to tell a lie. Credibility. Who will listen to an evangelist who tells you something that you already know isn’t true.”

Guy Kawasaki on the Art of Evangelism.

The art of telling stories

More and more I’m realising how important it is to be able to tell stories. There’s something very fundamental about storytelling, it’s the tool us humans use both to learn and understand new concepts. Interestingly in the real world, in everyday life, storytelling is not one directional. A good storyteller is very aware of the audience, how they are reacting, constantly looking for new ways to engage them, to guide their thoughts.

Much like a stand up comedian, a storyteller must be able to ad-lib, to create things of the cuff, to see new parallels and to pluck relevant things from their story archive. A bad storyteller has it all planned out in advance. The problem is that it’s impossible to see in advance how to engage the audience, how they will react. If there is one skill you should practice it is the art of storytelling, it is a sign of experience.

Incidentally, I imagine that good evangelists are good storytellers.

dcinput daily for Mon 12th March, 2007

Tuesday, March 13th, 2007

daily paper1 year ago today: “The default title-then-post format of the Wordpress blog is starting to get me down. It just doesn’t fit in right to life when you’re busy with other stuff all the time.”

How funny it can be to look back at what you were doing and how you were feeling exactly one year ago.

Enough of the silence, from tomorrow I’ll be publishing words again.

dcinput daily for Wed 28th Feb, 2007

Wednesday, February 28th, 2007

CarrotDo carrots help you see in the dark? The conversation at work today turned to this important question. Snopes to the rescue and I learnt an interesting new fact:

“In World War II, Britain’s air ministry spread the word that a diet of these vegetables helped pilots see Nazi bombers attacking at night. That was a lie intended to cover the real matter of what was underpinning the Royal Air Force’s successes: Airborne Interception Radar, also known as AI. The secret new system pinpointed some enemy bombers before they reached the English Channel.”

Valleywag’s Hot Vlogs Nominees are

Valleywag on Google targeting IT deparments: “You may hate Microsoft, nerd lord, but their buggy products have kept you in cheese doodles and caffeine for the past 20 years. Best start looking into that phone support gig at Google”.

Dave Winer: “It seems the entertainment industry doesn’t recognize the power of its users. They’re accustomed to dealing with artists and other companies, esp really large ones, but they haven’t learned how to negotiate with the users, and that’s who they have to deal with, if they want a future”.