October 2006 Archives

Singapore Second Life meetup

October 30, 2006 1:18 AM | Comments (2)

Singaporean SL Group photo

We had our first SL Singapore meetup at 9pm last night. We took a group photo. Then Ivan, Kevin, Preetam, Alvin and I started talking geek, and the younger members slipped away. We moved to Chilin's Yacht. Thanks to Chilin for being such a tolerant hostess as we messed up the place with furniture, booze and weapons!

It's morning - breakfast time! We talked through SL evening to dusk. Then I made breakfast, and watched Ivan and Kevin engage in a Star Wars lightsaber battle.

In other SL news, I decided to sign up for a premium account while the L$400 monthly allowance still holds. Now shopping around for land. Like a real Singaporean - looking for condominiums!

The Conceptual/Jazz Age

October 29, 2006 4:28 PM | Comments (3) | TrackBacks (0)

Stephen Baker, in a Businessweek Blogspotting article, asks if we are entering a new Jazz Age.

In the article, Bob Guccione, founder of Spin and now publisher of Discover Magazine, reportedly said that jazz is 'a pretty small niche in music' that preceded television. Those facts in themselves are true but he interpreted it too literally. Rishad Tobaccowala, the originator of this jazz concept, meant that today's workers should be more like jazz musicians and not expect to be given fixed, safe roles in large orchestras. He was speaking metaphorically.

I have quite a bit to say about this because of what I do at work and at play. At work, I am greatly involved with new media. At play, I am a jazz student and am the leader of an aspiring fusion jazz band. The two may not seem to have much in common, but that's only at the surface. I'll expand a little on this to tell you my story of learning classical music versus jazz music.

When I learnt classical piano, everything was fixed and pre-determined with little room for variation, if any at all. When I learnt my exam pieces, there were specific notes or bars where I had to play louder, softer, staccato and legato. And of course, at the end of each piece we usually had to slow down. Translated to the old-world working style, as long as you got your job done, you could clock in your hours, collect your pay and go home.

When I became a teenager, I started writing my own songs. I was heavily influenced by pop and contemporary jazz/soul acts and started figuring out the chords they used. They sounded nicer than the rigid arrangements in classical music. However, I learnt the hard way that we were not allowed to change the tune or style of classical pieces. This was emphasised very clearly to me when my piano teacher called in the vice principal of the music school, after I attempted another variation that was deemed unacceptable.

"If YOU were the composer, how would you like it if someone else came and played your music in a different way?" He asked, in an aggressive manner.

Being Singaporean, I knew what the model answer was. I muttered meekly that no, I would not like it myself.

"THEN PLAY IT THE WAY IT IS WRITTEN!!!" (He really did roar.)

That was the end of the story and I never tried to modify a classical piece again.

I was like a worker who tried to innovate, but broke the status quo and all societal norms. This was an affront to the company. In such situations, the worker gets duly reprimanded, and because he needs to keep his job (in my case, stay in music school!), he goes back to conforming with the big corporate plan.

After I completed Grade 8, I discharged myself from further 'duties' and switched to jazz piano.

I have never played in an orchestra before, so am not qualified to talk about the rigidity of finely-synchronised emsembles, which the Businessweek article mentions. However, I do play in jazz bands and jam sessions and can tell you what it feels like. When you read it, think in metaphors and see how it compares with the new world order.

When you play a jazz piece, you aren't expected to stick to the main tune, note for note. You play the main melody and chorus (variations are fine but the tune should be recognisable to the audience). Then you improvise. Ideally, you should work out with band members who gets to improvise and at which stage. Finally, someone gives a signal - drummers are usually good at doing this - then we know we're going back to the main theme and completing the song.

When I quit my "old world job" and joined this "new age company", I was at a loss. I could play the main theme of each jazz piece, as that was in the scoresheet. However, when it was my turn to improvise, I had no idea how to do it. My classical background was good at teaching me techniques and theories, but it taught me nothing about creativity and being spontaneous. (Does that sound like a certain education system?) Gradually I built up musical ideas and confidence, and am more confortable with improvising now.

So in a jazz band, there is flexibility without absolute chaos. We're given a basic framework (the "company mission statement") and are familiar with our main roles (the "organisational chart"). Everything else requires creativity, which is something you cannot memorise. The beautiful thing about jazz is that every performance has a unique tune. And chemistry is very important as each player has his/her own style, which can either complement or clash with others'.

Jazz musicians are better prepared for the unexpected. A change in key, tempo or rhythm doesn't upset the pro. He adapts to it and comes up with something new and mind-blowing. That is the whole point of improvising in music. Today's workers cannot expect to have an iron rice bowl (ie, permanent employment). Times and tunes are changing fast. We have to sing for our supper.

In the new world order, communication is especially important between team members. In jazz, there may be a band leader but different players can give signals to each other. In an orchestra, however, there tends to be a more obvious hierarchy ( or "organisational chart"). The conductor controls the orchestra in a top-down manner. A 'star performer' such as the solo violinist may get extra attention, with the rest of the members supporting him. But that's about it.

In jazz bands, there is also a bit of composer in every one of us. Each of my members can give feedback to change the way we play a certain piece. Try doing that in an orchestra - I couldn't even do that in my music school. [Off-tangent thought: Each time we play a piece it's like a blog post. My band members post comments on it. Then we revise the piece, and the cycle repeats.]

Jazz musicians who are in a good team and know their roles and timings can produce beautiful music. This can be compared to workers in the Conceptual Age - a term derived from Daniel Pink's book, A Whole New Mind. I've blogged about his book before but I'll repeat the main message: The IT age is over, in the sense that it is generally taken for granted in our world (as with stone, bronze and industry). Basic IT jobs can be outsourced cheaply and we must adapt or become redundant (Also see Thomas Friedman's The World Is Flat). The real value for today's workers, therefore, is the ability to conceptualise new ideas through various means such as play, design, empathy and story.

I hope I haven't offended classical music buffs because I am speaking mainly in metaphors. I warmly welcome comments and further discussions via trackback.

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I have been visiting various campuses in Second Life to learn how visitors can be engaged and learn new things using this medium.

Ais and I admire the planets - say a date and they move Worthy of mention is the Second Life Planetarium (Slurl:Second Life Planetarium) where you can view the constellations moving around you, with a guided voice tour. It felt like I was in an IMAX theatre all over again. Further up was the International Spaceflight Museum (Slurl: Spaceport Alpha), where I got up close and personal with a whole arsenal of rockets. Even cooler was the 3D moving planets. Just speak out a date (like your birthday) and the planets will move into position.

I experience first-hand what a schizophrenia patient goes throughAnother immersive but much creepier experience awaited me at Virtual Hallucinations (Slurl: Virtual Hallucinations) where you are treated exactly like a patient with schizophrenia. You hear voices which say nasty things to you, and you see things differently from normal people. After a while I had to turn off the virtual voices because it was just too unnerving, like watching the Sixth Sense all over again. It certainly is an eye-opener especially if you thought all along that schizophrenia simply means having 'split personalities'.

Reuters I visited Reuters (Slurl:Reuters Atrium). In real life, they have a Second Life News Center website and it is amusing to see how they keep track of the currency exchange rates between Linden Dollars and US Dollars. There is a goldmine of information on big businesses joining Second Life.

BTW, the links I've provided will only work if you have Second Life installed on your system.

What other Second Life places have you enjoyed visiting? Have you learnt anything new? Do share your experiences by posting a comment or trackback.

[Update: 5 Dec 2006 - The Sydney Morning Herald reviews Virtual Hallucinations]

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Early this morning while sitting in a cafe, chatting to Ramblinglibrarian and some new friends, a man appeared out of nowhere. He took out a gun and fired it in my directon.

I didn't realise what was happening until I saw sparks flying around me. I realised I might have been hit. Almost as quickly, one of the members of the cafe came to my defence and drove him off.

Fortunately, I wasn't hurt. This is because it all happened in Second Life. (no, not Half-Life, which is what that jerk should be playing if he really wants to shoot people)

As in the real world, rules or guidelines are drawn up to ensure public order, but they sometimes get broken. While experiencing my first ugly encounter in Second Life, I was glad to see some redemption through the kind and decisive acts of another Second Lifer who had the authority to boot the gunman off the island.

I'm not really scared, because you can't die in Second Life. Most people I've met so far are nice, or at least curious about this new world. I've met people from the US (of course), UK, Mexico, Greece and probably more I've lost track of. This normally doesn't happen on mainstream chat channels like MSN where you just stick to your regular list of friends and family. We Second Lifers are also bound together through interest groups.

There will be a Singapore meetup tomorrow evening. If you are already in Second Life, join the SL Singapore group! I'll try to make it for the meetup myself.

IE7 may bust millions of websites

October 28, 2006 3:21 PM | Comments (1)

Someone from usability company Etre wrote in to inform me they that conducted a study on many corporate websites to see how the new Internet Explorer 7 displayed them.

Turns out that many of these websites are busted. I haven't done enough research myself to determine if IE7's new rendering engine really adopts standards as their blog claims. To quote:

The CSS standard does not provide a way to target specific browser versions and as a result the Web developer community has developed CSS filters (also called "CSS hacks")... As we fix these bugs and improve CSS support, some CSS filters will stop working.

My hopes were raised when I read further that Microsoft is trying to strike a balance between adopting standards and also making sure that not too many websites break. Of course, ultimately every website should move towards standards.

For now, we have to make do with a partial adoption. I'll leave it to experts like Zeldman/Alistapart, Meyer and Tantek (yes, the box model hack needs to be updated for IE7). Big thanks to the Web Standards Project for facilitating the reporting of browser bugs to Microsoft.

We can expect to see new tutorials on CSS hacks for IE7 soon. And business will boom for web standards consultancies. Designers who code the old-fashioned way (that's a LOT of Singaporean designers IMHO) will have to upgrade or lose out. If everyone's IE on Windows PCs gets automatically updated in time, people will be scrambling to make sure their corporate websites look fine on IE7.

Good on ya, Microsoft.

Technorati Tags: IE7, internetexplorer, IE, Microsoft, webstandards

Update: Zeldman's post on IE7. Also see IE7 bugs and fixes, part 1.

Google Co-op search engine

October 26, 2006 4:02 AM | Comments (0)

Just added Google Co-op's customised search engine to my website. You can try it on the right nav bar (if you're viewing it from the home page, scroll down further).

Customised some of the layout but need to tweak it further. It's time to sleep...

Jam session

October 25, 2006 2:51 AM | Comments (0)

My new band, the Moonjumpers, kind of met up this Sunday. We were all playing at a student jam session. It went well. It's good to get out of 'soloist' mode every now and then, and work as a team. That's the fun part.

The students who don't communicate with others are the ones who usually don't click in a band. It's hard to get coordinated when the band doesn't know what's going to happen next. I played All The Things You Are, Black Orpheus and Don't Get Around Much Anymore and each time before we started, as the lead pianist I told the other members how I wanted the intro, improvisations and ending to fit in. It worked out fine.

I'm quite happy with the Moonjumpers. My 2nd keyboardist and bassist are heaven-sent. Finally got to see Richard on the double bass and he was handling it very well. Nicol and I have really hit it off musically - she knows I like to play it cool, and comes in to fill the spaces lightly. Mutual respect and cooperation is needed among members.

The other piece of good news is that we may have found a new drummer. Among the teachers, he's known as the student drummer with the most potential. However, he's already in 2 other bands which have been more happening. Let's say one made it to the finals of Battle of the Bands recently. So I'm praying he has the time to stay with us.

Kids these days are so busy... Hmm that sounds familiar.

My duet with cousin Sean. I'm wearing my nyonya kebaya.

Note: This is amateur video ... we haven't seen the ones taken by the pros yet.

Vanessa sings Girl From Ipanema

October 21, 2006 5:21 PM | Comments (5)

Finally, after several years of cajoling from friends, I have some music to show.


powered by ODEO

This is a recording of The Girl From Ipanema which I recorded while practising for my grandfather's 80th birthday bash.

In this recording, the guy's part is sung by me (because my cousin wasn't around during the recording session) but I added reverb to distinguish the two parts.

Lastly, in the words of William Hung, "I have no professional training." I'd like to make my pitch more accurate, widen my vocal range and learn vibrato properly.

A grand family affair

October 19, 2006 11:53 PM | Comments (2)

We survived.

The singing went well. When I went on stage to sing 'Girl from Ipanema', I took off my spectacles for aesthetic reasons. Turned out there was a practical use as well - because I couldn't see the audience clearly, I did not panic. I didn't forget my lyrics or sing the wrong note. My cousin and I kind of figured out the dance steps as we went along.

The family choir item went well too. We were all smiling and we even managed to coordinate ourselves to the letter. The photographs turned out better than I had hoped.

Later on we were congratulated by various people, some of whom I didn't know. Thank goodness I'm in Singapore, where an older stranger can safely be called Uncle or Auntie.

It was a massive family event and I think my grandparents enjoyed themselves, which is most important.

Infinite loop

October 18, 2006 2:05 AM

This dude did something awesome with his Second Life house.

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VanPod IV is in da house

October 16, 2006 10:42 PM | Comments (0)

Collected it today. Not bad... buy one iPod and get two free replacements. 

It's now sitting in its white dock, slurping 34GB of music files into its hard drive.

The tech support guy told me that if I want my iPod's hard drive to be readable on PC and Mac, I must first format it on a PC. So I did that. Let's see if his advice works. Then at least I can back up my files as well.

I got to see the difference between the old and new video iPods. The new model has a brighter screen. "Won't that suck up battery power?" I asked. No, the new model also has a more powerful battery that can be charged more quickly.

Very tempting, but I am going to hold out just in case that full-screen video iPod proves to be more than a rumour.

["Videos!" roar the protestors in Van-land. "We want videos!"]


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Second Life

October 15, 2006 11:37 PM | Comments (0)

Managed to sit on my bum after 2 hours of family choir rehearsals (I skipped the ballroom and salsa dance practice because of the swift movements required).

Yesterday I created my Second Life account and looked for Kevin and Ivan online. Met Alvin as well. Yay, our own little Singaporean community in Second Life.  Look out for my screen shots in Flickr. I already paid a visit to the library. It is cool, how you can search for millions of real books in here. There is a lot of potential for development here.

You can look out for me - I am Vantan Gray. Yeah, like I'm related to Jean.

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This is an inflammatory post

October 15, 2006 1:37 PM | Comments (7)

On Friday night I suffered from an inflammation of my lower intestinal tract. It started with a massive 'traffic jam' caused by a pileup the last few days (too busy, working, sleeping late preparing for family event etc etc, no time to care for my own health, the usual crap) which resulted in me trying too hard and making the 'road block' even worse.

The inflammation caused external and internal swelling, to the point where flow to my bladder was blocked. I was unable to pee despite drinking lots of water. My abdomen started to bloat. Altogether it was a disturbing feeling. I could barely get in and out of bed. I couldn't walk but hobbled back and forth from the bed to the toilet every hour or half hour on Saturday morning. The pain was so great I didn't feel sleepy.

Finally, I saw a doctor who put things back in where they should be. I've been on medication since. At the same time I was trying to respond to people's urgent text messages, emails and then I decided to ignore everything because I was in so much pain, everything else didn't matter.

Ironic, isn't it. I decided that many things I'm doing aren't worth sacrificing my OWN health and time. I feel like I've lost control. I've said NO a few times already but I should be saying NO even more, because:

  • I haven't had time to read all the books I've bought half a year ago.
  • I haven't had time to learn how to fully utilise all the music production software I've bought.
  • I haven't even had time to meet up with someone who could be a potential life partner (ha, how's that for perspective???)
  • I haven't re-organised my room.
  • I haven't resumed my gym sessions, two years after hurting my back.
  • I haven't had time to meet up to discuss a potential radio show.
  • I don't have time to continue griping on this blog ... so let's leave it for now. It's a long list.

So I say ...

October 13, 2006 5:51 PM | Comments (2)

Friend A (to pregnant friend B): You should eat bird's nest and Buddha Jumps Over The Wall*
Friend B: That's so expensive!!
Me: Why don't you get Buddha to jump over the wall, land on a tree and pluck the bird's nest?

* soups with expensive ingredients

Tagging ads the non-virtual way

October 11, 2006 7:09 PM | Comments (1)

Adverblog shows us a new way of voicing your opinions on good and bad ads (in the physical world). In Berlin and Seoul, stickers with a happy or puking emoticon are pasted on top of ad posters.

A new type of tagging folksonomy?

Google Reader - a great revamp

October 10, 2006 10:38 PM | Comments (1)

I relied on software like Feedreader (PC), Netnewswire Lite (Mac) and most recently, the powerful Omea (PC) for reading feeds on my computers.

On the move, I used Bloglines, which was comprehensive but just too slow. There haven't been any major improvements to the interface in quite some time. Kinja was pleasant to look at, but simply too lightweight for me. Rojo was my favourite, for reading news rated by other people. Then Six Apart bought it and things haven't been the same since - it's been confusing and buggy.

So what's a feed-crazy person like me going to do?

I heard Google Reader vastly improved its usability, so I took a look. It was really much more powerful than the previous, simplistic version. Yet it was fast and easy to use. It could contain all my feeds just like Bloglines could (except Google Reader still doesn't have search capabilties though that's probably just a matter of time).

See the Google Reader blog's latest post - they've tweaked it even more.

Maybe my OPML's here to stay ...

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... where else but in a Youtube video!

They seem delirious with joy. I'd be too, if I was in their shoes.

Update:

I like how Gizmodo calls it GooTube. (link via Boing Boing)

Before the announcement was made, Kevin noted plenty of blogs theorising that copyright owners could just be waiting for Youtube to be bought out by a bigger company, before 'suing their pants off'. Heh. You bet! Lawyers must be rubbing their hands in glee now. Let's wait and see.

B-U-S-Y

October 9, 2006 11:13 PM | Comments (3)

My most-used word of 2006 (and probably 2005) is "Busy."

Some Christian preachers call it "Being Under Satan's Yoke", which is quite plausible if you treat work or other commitments as an 'idol' (ie, worship it) and rank it higher in your priorities than God. Things get a little greyer when you feel you're doing a public service, or helping family members out, and have to give some God or church-related event a miss.

Previously, my abandoning family/social events, and forgoing concerts and courses just to attend regular bible study classes made me feel miserable. In the eyes of non-believers, they felt, "What religion is this, that it can be so inflexible?" I had plenty of explaining to do, and even more internalising within myself. I was a young Christian who was torn in between.

Alternatively, when we forgo God-related events, we may say, "But I had no choice! I was ordered by boss/family member/girlfriend/boyfriend" to do it!" In many cases, refusal means losing your job or pissing off other people who are important in your life. Or you actually feel that your presence is so needed that everything will fall apart if you aren't involved in it. Strictly speaking, you do have the choice but it is very difficult to reject people's requests because it will give you a load of trouble in future.

We have to strike a balance between the things of this world and God's things. I believe that sometimes God intends for you to spend time with others and not have to adhere so rigidly to a schedule that you lose all sense of relationships with other people. On the other extreme, there is also the danger of idolising the ACT of worshipping God. This can be a temptation especially when playing in a worship band, where you focus on the technicalities instead of focusing on God. Or when administrating a team of people, where you get lost in politics and forget the real reason why the team was formed in the first place.

This year, I've postponed numerous meetups with old friends, and missed at least three friends' baby showers (note: these are fairly good friends). For the first time, I missed a dinner appointment with a group of old friends, and it made me feel really crappy and irresponsible. That's not the end of it. I will not be able to help at my good friend's wedding later this month, because I have very heavy family commitments. The family commitment is even more important - it's my grandpa's 80th birthday and it will be one super bash, entertained by yours truly. Singing, dancing, slideshow... rehearsals... you get my drift.

Don't even get me started on my jazz band. My drummer quit. He didn't tell me formally or respond to emails or sms to confirm the fact, so I could at least stop waiting around and actively search for a new drummer. The band's my lowest priority now, sorry to say. My bassist and second keyboardist have been angels and they don't deserve to get stalled in this situation. We've found a talented drummer but he too is in a few other more happening bands so there's no guarantee he can stay for the long term. (Is it a trend among us younger Singaporeans to be perpetually busy?)

I've over-committed myself in my work and social life, and I'm not afraid to admit it now as that will help you understand my constraints. Because I've spread myself out so thin, little quality time is spent with people and that sucks. Performing acts of service for people feels like an obligation now, because there is so little time and so much to do. Quality time and acts of service are not my languages of love but I realise for some loved ones, they are. I'm not showing the love. I have to say NO to many things now. No, No and No. I'll look bad now but at least I won't pull out halfway or end up doing a shoddy job.

Also, I miss being free. Free to think. Free from the 'slavery' of obligations which strike dread and fear within me. It's when I'm free to think that my real ideas come out. Somehow out of nothing I have to carve out some quiet time with God; to read new books and reflect on everything.

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The history of the VanPod royal family has been a tumultuous one.

The first VanPod was established in 2004. Its reign lasted over a year until it died, of premature old age. A detailed autopsy was performed and captured in photographs.

Its successor VanPod II had the extra ability to display photographs. However, this didn't mean a thing after a scandal in the Hardware Ministry, which rendered the entire Administration useless. The perpetrators were unable to be identified, even after a thorough AppleCentre Orchard inquiry. VanPod II was duly returned to its Maker while a search for a new leader took place.

After a few weeks of political uncertainty, a replacement, VanPod III, was installed. It contained the same characteristics as its immediate predecessor. It performed its duties faithfully, until September 2006 when it started to display signs of mental instability - namely, an unhappy face.

As news broke in the kingdom, citizens questioned the ability of VanPod III to perform its duties. Members of the main opposition party proposed a new leader for election - a broader-minded model with the magical ability to display moving images with sound. Its supporters said it also had 'more drive' and thus had a greater capacity for ruling the kingdom.

The second largest opposition party nominated a more slight candidate who could appear in costumes of various colours, namely silver, pink, blue, green and black.

As debate raged hotly among Parliament members, VanPod III underwent medical treatment by the royal family doctor and was cured. Snap elections were held, and VanPod III was restored to power.

All was well until this October morning, when VanPod kept skipping tracks without producing any sounds. The unhappy demeanour was once again displayed, and this time the illness could not be cured by the royal family doctor, who declared that VanPod III was no longer tractable. Listening to VanPod III's heart, a small, regular thudding sound was heard. Its heart was alive, but its brain was dead.

VanPod III was rushed to AppleCentre Orchard for treatment this afternoon. Attempts to revive its unhappy body were futile. The diagnosis? Another failure in the Hardware Ministry.

However, as VanPod III was still covered by life insurance, the Centre was obliged to provide a replacement. As news broke, a bloodless coup took place as army generals stormed the VanPod family palace and dissolved Parliament. Citizens, already used to the frequent political instability, posed for photographs beside uniformed guards.

The two main opposition parties continued the clamour for a brand new leader which was not directly descended from the makes of VanPod II and III, as they seemed to display "genetic deficiencies".

The parties have been organising protest marches, chanting statements such as "Videos!" and "Colours!" respectively. Even with the arrival of VanPod III's direct successor, which is estimated in the next 2-3 weeks, there are questions as to whether the new King's reign will be short-lived as well.

Meanwhile, compact discs have returned to fashion in the kingdom of Van.

Meeting Theory and Thoughts

October 5, 2006 11:59 PM | Comments (2)

Yesterday I met up with Kevin, the man with the Theory, and Ivan, aka Ramblinglibrarian. Kevin has more to say about it on his blog, so go read it. See, I don't look so fierce in the photo...

[I nearly named this post "A doctor, a librarian and a lawyer walk into a bar". Well, Kevin's nearly got his doctorate but I'm definitely no qualified lawyer. Just couldn't resist thinking of a title that sounded like a corny joke. ]

Officially Gunner

October 5, 2006 11:47 PM | Comments (1)

I'm now an Arsenal red!

I'm now an Arsenal Red! Yeah.

My family is planning to watch an Arsenal home match, at the Emirates Stadium itself. Hopefully we can get tickets for the big, final derby against Chelsea in May. I know a few of you out there have gone to watch the live action, so do you have any tips for us?

Scalper's rates are 300 quid for each ticket, apparently. Surely there's a more affordable way of getting a few seats?

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Intuitive search and the demise of Flash

October 5, 2006 11:24 PM

A new search engine which claims to be 'more natural and intuitive', may pose a challenge to Google. Quoting Techcrunch,

I haven’t seen a demo of upcoming search engine Powerset yet, but reportedly many people who have are impressed, saying they’d never use Google again.
Sounds mighty powerful to me. I'll wait for the public launch. If it's any good, expect venture capital funding to come in.

Read/WriteWeb reports that AJAX will surpass Flash in 2007.

I remember in the late 90's and early 00's when Flash took centrestage. We all wanted to learn Flash. Yugo Nakamura, Joshua Davis and Gmunk were my heroes. Then Actionscript developed a powerful, object-oriented aura, and Director lingo became a forgotten language.

At the time, JavaScript, to me, was used minimally and for functional purposes. It was often associated with tickers, cheesy scrollers and annoying popup windows.

In time, people started writing about accessibility in Flash. Jakob Nielsen said Flash was 99% bad. Macromedia heard their views and hired Nielsen to improve things. After that was done, Nielsen said Flash was less bad but still not that great. Maybe he'll say something about AJAX soon. [Update: AJAX is discussed very briefly in a Q&A session. No strong objections so far.]

Around that time, a baby was conceived from the ashes of JavaScript. Jesse James-Garett gave it a name. AJAX is now a toddler and, being cute, everybody wants to play with it now.

My own comments:

  • I was comfortable with ActionScript up to an intermediate level, until it got more complicated. Being a law grad who taught herself HTML and CSS, moving into the realms of Java was tricky. Then I changed career path, and now no longer design in Flash.
  • I never quite understood what Flashpaper was all about. I don't like reading text-heavy documents in Flash. I'd rather use the software to convert my documents into PDF format.
  • For what little I now know of the creative web community, Flash and AJAX are used by slightly different groups of people. Designers use Flash for visual effects. Programmers probably prefer AJAX for functionality. Some people can handle both.
  • While AJAX allows the same drag-and-drop functions as Flash in many instances now, Flash is still the preferred medium for smooth multimedia animations, cartoons and audio playback.  However, there is a tendency for Flash movies to take a while to load, whereas AJAX-enabled websites I've seen so far, minimise the load time.
  • Whichever you choose, I'd appreciate it if important information isn't hidden away in some JavaScript code or a Flash movie with tiny font sizes with the right-click zoom function disabled. In short, use common sense and think of the user's needs first.
  • OK/Cancel has a parody - AJAX - 99% bad. Noooo... 
Look at who was surveyed, though. "Web developers" and organisations. Developers would obviously use a technology they're more comfortable with. Conduct the same survey with creative agencies whose focus is on more making visual impact and winning creative awards, and I'm sure Flash's popularity will be much greater than AJAX. Ask the Creative Director if his agency can do a website for you in Flash. "Sure," he'll probably say. Ask them if the website can sacrifice flair for functionality, and whether they can use AJAX instead.

There'll probably be more analysis coming in from other sites. I'll open this post up for trackback, if anyone wants to continue the discussion.

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SXSW 2007 - Pick your panels!

October 5, 2006 12:12 AM | Comments (0)

It's time to pick potential panel topics for SXSW 2007. One person, one vote. Might I add that the new SXSW site looks much better than the previous version and we can select our panels via a drag-and-drop technique. (AJAX!)

As requested, I've shortlisted 10 panels: looking at trends 10 years from now, mobile apps, managing communities, Web 2.0 for the enterprise, interactive media for children, the me-customer, geek politics.

Another panel I picked was something that I was discussing with Ivan and Kevin this afternoon - for instance, how do we move beyond the Technoratis of today, which rank by quantities (e.g. number of linkages), to make sense in a more human, qualitative way?

Context: The Next Layer of the Net

The Net has brought us more information. More text, more images, more audio and now video. And the future only promises to bring us more access to more of it in more places. How do we find things when we don't know specifically what we want? After "web 2.0" enables the average user to create even more stuff, the next layer of the Net needs to help it all make sense. This session combines experts on technologies and individual curators and communities that are already creating context and not just more stuff.

Most unusual suggested panel topic: Chocolate. Apparently it's for people tired of geek talk. Naturally, the panelist in charge is a lady ;-)

Technorati Tags: SXSW, SXSWi, SXSW2007, Austin

Meeting Teo Ser Luck

October 4, 2006 1:30 AM

Teo Ser Luck, Parliamentary Secretary of MCYS

I met "Ser Luck", as he introduced himself to us, yesterday evening at Villa Bali. It was pretty cool.

Blinkymummy has a more exciting story to tell. It is a rare privilege to be suanned by an MP. Will he be her new Beng?

Damien took incriminating photos of me with finger food. I reciprocated by taking photos of him.

Super Saturday and Sunday

October 2, 2006 1:04 AM | Comments (1)

My comments on three Premiership games played over the weekend.

My namesake does Arsenal proud

OK, cheap thrill. I'm referring to Robin VAN Persie and his amazing flying kick which scored a goal. And that was his second for the match. I was out with the girls that night and came home learning that Arsenal had won away at Charlton. Yay!

Famed Arsenal blog, Arseblog, titles its post "Supervan". I like that name too. You can also watch a multi-angle video replay of Van Persie's flying volley on that page.

BBC's feature on Arsene Wenger's 10 years is pretty riveting. Le Professeur definitely looks better now than when he first arrived!

Ole ole - the return of Super Sub!

Disclaimer: I am NOT a Manchester United fan. There are already enough of you in Singapore to make it boring. But I do admire individual players from many different teams.

One of them is Ole Gunnar Solskjær. I was glad to see him return to form, after being sidelined by injury for 2-3 years. Of course, I hope he never gets to turn his guns on the REAL Gunners.

Something's up with Wayne Rooney. He's never been so off-form for such a long period. I'm suspicious. Ronaldo on the other hand is trying his best, though he's missing something but I don't know what. Well, he's definitely not missing the goalpost! :-P

Korean scores for Reading in 90 seconds, winning match

The Sunday Times ran a feature on three Koreans playing in the Premiership and how Koreans generally are faring better than the Japanese. I noticed that too, after initial media interest over players like Nakata, Ono and Inamoto a few years ago.

With the article fresh in my mind, the news flashed that one of these Koreans just scored a goal against West Ham. I missed the powerful long-shot goal by Seol Ki-Hyeon but I'm sure Koreans will be reading and watching it on the news for the next few days.

Reading however ran out of steam and resorted to time-wasting tactics, which makes me not like them as much as I liked the more fiesty Wigan last season.

There may be problems listening to my radio interview on this page (the last I tried, it played someone else's interview instead). So, you can listen to the mp3 recording here.

Thanks to Joel from Radio Singapore International for the file! RSI did a great job putting everything together seamlessly.

Note to readers who haven't met me before: My voice doesn't usually sound so low. No, it's not because of the late night I kept before the interview, nor my singing. I was told that voices in recorded interviews tend to sound lower.

Finally, a new Vicar

October 1, 2006 11:06 PM

We've been waiting for over a year for a new, full-time Vicar. The day was today.

I was glad to see Rev Philip Sinden in person, because he wasn't the big burly Australian I imagined him to be, but tall but slender with a most humble demeanor. Even without knowing him, a strong feeling welled up within me to the point that I was actually moved to tears when our acting Vicar introduced him. Then they sang Amazing Love, one of my favourite songs, and John 3:16 was in the Scripture reading.

It all comes at a difficult time. Most of the people I knew in church, who brought me to God, have left. I have contemplated leaving on a number of occasions, but stayed back due to familiarity, proximity, family reasons and the fact that they still need me to provide support for the website and be a backup pianist for the worship team. Also, I have yet to find another church I'm comfortable with.

After the service, I shook hands with the new Vicar and told him I did the current website (which is long due for a revamp, structurally and code wise) and to let me know when he's ready to make any changes. At work, I no longer design big websites myself, but for God's work I am prepared to put in my time and skills for this.

Well I hope that good things come out of this new start. Pray...

Upgrading to MT3.33

October 1, 2006 3:00 PM | Comments (0)

I'm in the process of upgrading to MT3.33. If time and energy permits, I'll also be trying out a new plugin that makes MT more extensible. Bear with me...