http://www.adobe.com/products/creativesuite/main.html Hello Creative Suite 2.0 and friends!
Author: Nick Hodge
RIP Paul Hester
RIP Paul Hester, former Crowded House (and last Split Enz) drummer.
Saturday, 26th March 2005
A travelog in the making: Journeys in 2005
A travelog from history: Two Weeks in India
Alan Rosenfeld in da house!
Presently in Shanghai, China. Alan Rosenfeld, late of the Adobe Pacific team – now in Adobe UK is here. Good to catch up with old friends in new places.
Lost in Translation 2
It’s official. What do you do when you have a spare 100,000 Qantas Freaky Flier points, a holiday window in May and a love for Lost in Translation? That’s right. This year the Hodge family is off to Tokyo for a week. Look out, Akihabara and Yodobashi Camera!
Wow
Newsgator to Mungenetengine via Metaweblog API
To explain the previous post. As I “live” in Outlook 2003, and finding less and less time to browse web sites, I’ve invested in Newsgator. Version 2.0 has this useful “blog” posting feature that was too good to leave alone. There is a plugin mechanism to Newsgator; and I’ve installed one that has a Metaweblog API interface. Writing a PHP and XMLRPC stub on the server, I can now easily post from within Outlook 2003.
Dan Brown plagerises Dan Brown
This week: Sydney / Lake Maquarie / Sydney / Auckland / Sydney.
Finished my third Dan Brown book, Deception Point. What is the Dan Brown Code? Simple:
- Slighly off-centre, strange yet handsome/beautiful primary character gets thrown into a “situation”.
- The “situation” has an echo in modern culture conspiracy theories or edge-case science fact
- The antagonist is the person closest to the primary character, or primary character’s new love-interest
- Cut chapters just short and leave the characters hanging. Forces the reader to “read on” and not put the book down
- Weave in some science fiction or myth as the central theme
- Obviously, the story ends with the primary character “winning” (happy ending) and scoring with their love-interest on the last page.
As a reader of Ludlum, Clancy and other thrillers, Dan Brown is missing some their “meat”. Maybe this is the nature of modern, post cold-war thrillers where the Soviets/China are no longer the central enemy?
Mike Seyfang Logs Off
Chairman Bill and CEO Steve have lost a valuable member of staff in Uncle Mike. I have a distinct feeling that product teams in Seattle will miss him more, if history tells us anything. Nearly 9 years at Microsoft is an achievement in these high velocity career times.
Times like these trigger throughts and feelings requiring articulation:
- According to Beth Worrall, Mike’s turn of phrase and gift of alliteration hasn’t left him. “process is the colostomy bag of innovation” illustrates both his off-centre (slightly black) but stark and illustrative phrase making skills. The Munge Brothers is distinctly an Uncle Mike term, borrowed by mungenet. These phrases have the ability to perfectly describe a situation and circumstance that defies alternate characterisation. Naming your clapped-out, 1970’s era and rusted surf-boarding carrier Holden station wagon DOSBOX replete with the personalised number plates sums up his sly sense of humour.
- Ad-hocery, or the lack of over-formalism and a fear of too-much process and methodology is an anathema to Mike. Throwing “stuff” together to solve a difficult problem is one of his strengths. “End user computing” and putting power into the hands of end users was his mantra before he joined the small band at Random Access. Strict methodologists, or god-forbid, those how invent methodologies and Mike probably wouldn’t get along that well. Watch out if you are in IT and don’t have a deep passion for IT.
- Over ten years ago as a consultant, Mike’s phrase “a laptop and a mobile phone” clearly foretold of today. One can work and be in touch virtually anywhere, and with a laptop be productive. There was a famous piece of video made by the Munge Brothers that captures this Fellini-like mood.
- A clear vision of what is important and what works. Some of the original “turning data into information” work the Munge Brothers presented in 1991/2 and ad-hoc data retrieval metamorphed into data-warehousing. This is an industry technology that I use daily in my current, non-highly-technical management job. I have no idea how I could do my job without this level of information.
- A love of art: be it music, video or still; that is off-kilter. It is difficult to describe the imagery I’ve seen; and I think that Mike’s blog has a splattering of these images. Sadly, it seems that its genetic as his son is now playing guitar at school.
- Friendship and loyalty that spans many careers. Uncle Mike was my referee for the job that lifted me from Adelaidian obscurity to Apple incubus. His loyalty to his family in the midst of a turbulent work environment is legendary – and he strike a harmony that is unmatchable. I’ve personally only seen this in one other person in my worklife; his name is also Michael.
Where next for the Fang? We might find him in the recording studio as the micro-music media mogul of Adelaide or a gadget heavy jackaroo in outback Australia. The further away he gets from this increasingly fractured IT industry the better. For those of us stuck on the inside, we are deadly envious.
Munge Brothers
I am up for it, Uncle Mike. Seems like the other Munge Brothers (Who are the Munge Brothers?) are up for it to. Only question is, when are you getting your ego-domain?
Interestingly enough, Mike’s son goes to Immanuel College — my old school. And plays in band, too. The world is an extremely small place these days.
Change the Regal Regime
Prince Charles, Australia’s next King is coming to lord over part of his future realm this week. Meanwhile former Australian, Princess Mary and her new husband Price Frederik of Denmark are in Sydney (Princess Mary on Sydney Harbour). Royalty seems to be a major event for Australia, but the Danish royal couple are scooping the newspaper column centimetres and grabs on TV.
Why don’t we trade in the old, rusted Battenburg-Windsor hegemony for the young Danes? Being an Anglo-saxon country, many of our ancestors came from Danish soil in the 5th and 6th centuries. Surely we get a vote in this? Oh, that’s right – our feudal overlords are not chosen in a democratic way. Shame.