I will never, ever ever stop being a big geek.  Sometimes, when Nugget sleeps, I like to just sit and code web pages.  I love gadgets – we have big ideas that involve one of those awesome new touch-screen desktop computer monitors that look like something straight out of Minority Report.  And I never tire of finding new apps for my iPhone to play with.

My latest obsession is the Hipstamatic iPhone app, which appears to be all the rage right now – and rightly so.  Nothing will ever replace my fancy shmancy, beloved Digital SLR, but DAMN, this app comes close.  Behold:

[UNSET](11)iPhone 348iPhone 347iPhone 328iPhone 319[UNSET](16)[UNSET](14)iPhone 389iPhone 388iPhone 379iPhone 377iPhone 375iPhone 374iPhone 373iPhone 384iPhone 381iPhone 380



Oh, hey – hello there.  It’s been awhile.

Lot going on, including a big move to SEATTLE.  I’d had quite enough of the constant SoCal sunshine.  That’s not sarcasm.  I really did.  I need variety.

Big plans for all this – “this” being the site.  Yet another compulsive redesign, some new posts.  I just finished up another blog for a friend, and I may have another website gig coming up.


During my training, I occasionally get asked about accessibility in Adobe Presenter & Captivate.

This link was posted by RJacquez on Twitter, regarding Captivate4 Accessibility – and I highly recommend adding him to your list of people you follow.  I’ve gotten & passed along a lot of really valuable information (on Captivate) from him.


I love my Vaio FZ-series – much as I occasionally scream at it, it’s a serious workhorse.  Admittedly, maybe sometimes it should be screaming back or at least telling me to stop screaming, because I work it to death.

However.

What I really want is a mac.  I didn’t get one last time around because of the nature of my work (one of the software pieces I teach wasn’t available for mac – and I know, I know, I could get bootcamp, but anyway…)  So I decided that next time around, I’m getting a mac.

Except now, maybe, I’d really like to get this:  The Sony L-Series, WITH TOUCH SCREEN.  How very Minority Report. Alright, it’s not a laptop, so maybe I’ll just have to get both a mac AND the desktop.  Yeah?


From pumpkin-picking excursion at a farm in SoCal last year:


So speaking of cliche (were we?), it’s been a little while since I got the iPhone.  The initial novelty has worn off – I’m no longer content to sit and play with it for hours on end, in fact, I’ve gotten kind of bored with it.  Not that that’s a bad thing.  I like it.  I like it a lot and it was downright heavenly to fly back East the other week and NOT have to drag my laptop around, because I could just keep up with email on the iPhone.

Now I’m addicted to Bejeweled & Orbital – I think it’s impossible to break level 6 in the former.  I keep my eyes out for useful apps & I’ve bought more than a few useless ones (like Vinnie Jones wakeup call).

Most recently I found iRetro Phone:

“And iRetroPhone, the goofiest $2.99 I’ve spent so far, draws an old-fashioned rotary dial on the screen.”
- Saul Hansell (New York Times – Bits Blog)

File that one under “useless” (but fun.)

Filed under “not useless” is the Adobe Photoshop App.  Admittedly, I have not used it and I’m kinda loathe to use my phone for photo-type things because I’m a “real” camera loyalist, but I’m sure I’ll break sooner or later.  And I’ll definitely use this app when I do.


Digital Paintings of Marcin Jakubowski

Digital Paintings of Marcin Jakubowski

Click here for his website.


I caved and bought an iPhone today.

I feel so dirty and cliched and so… so titillated.  Within the first hour, I bounced back and forth between I love it/I hate it/I’m going to return it because will I really use this to it’s full extent and get my money’s worth? more times than I can count.

Truly, the reason I’d held off and tried to be above all this iPhone business is that it feels like one big cliche.  Here in Los Angeles, everyone has an iPhone and a Prius.  (Don’t even get me started on the Prius.)  True to my form, I try desperately to avoid what everyone else is doing.  Though, of course, I’m also aware that purposefully avoiding the status quo is it’s own kind of cliche.

But I digress.

Another of the reasons that I’ve tried to NOT buy an iPhone is that, while I am a lover of macs, there is much about Apple that I loathe.  I resent their advertising and this idea that I’m not just buying an iPod/iPhone/macbook pro, I’m buying a lifestyle and a cooler image.

Anyway.  I swallowed my pride and bought one.  I confess, part of me just wanted it – I’m a geek, and I love gadgets that I can play with.  (I especially love gadgets that let me return to my Tetris addiction.)

Yes, partially… I like gadgets. I just want one.  But another part of me came up with some valid reasons – some personal, some work-related.   Plus, the idea of being able to keep up with email when I visit family on the East Coast, without having to lug my laptop around, fills me with elation.  Much as I love my laptop, I am SO SICK of carrying it around on every single trip.

My valid work reasons, for wanting an iPhone, have to do with all these programming classes I’m taking.  Let’s face it.  Hand-helds are the future.  I want to explore the apps, learn how to create apps, see what’s involved in developing for this delivery medium, and I’d also like to offer the service of creating plain old regular static websites to clients in a “hand-held” format.  Meaning, I’d like to say to my clients, “I can set your website up to be viewable traditionally, and in an easy to read format for the iPhone.”  Having the iPhone in front of me now, I’ve already taken a look at some of my sites & seen what kind of tweaks I can make and I have to say… I’m enjoying the idea of this project immensely.

Right now, however, I’m quieting the music beast within.  I love anything involving my tunes & have been known to while away entire weeks making just one playlist.  I’ve just blown 2 hours going through my music library and making custom ringtones (did you know you can do that??)  Oh, my.  A girl could get used to this.

So, iPhone, you can stay.  For now.


I took a class, over summer semester, called “Internet Programming.”  Though I’ve been doing this web thing for over a decade and I’ve worked with a million different technologies & codes, I still feel that there are a lot of holes in my skill set.  It’s not enough, to me, to “have worked with” or to “know” php, javascript, etc.  I want to know them from the ground up and code them, from scratch, as well as I do XHTML.

In any case, I was skeptical of the class at first – particularly of the book chosen by the professor – Deitel’s Internet & World Wide Web: How to Program.  However, in the last week of this course (with 100% straight across the board, I might add), I have to give this book a hearty recommendation.  It’s a nice overview of all the different parts of today’s web – from understanding web 2.0 to AJAX to SQL & databases.  There’s a few chapters we didn’t cover during the summer course, and I’ll certainly hold on to this book as reference, as well as to go over the chapters that weren’t covered, on my own time.