Archive for April, 2008

Moved to Wordpress

Saturday, April 26th, 2008

Decided to take the plunge and move my blog over onto Wordpress. I’m really impressed with how much it’s improved since I last used it.

Compared to writing my own blogging software, which is what I’d done previously using Rails, everything is easier. The admin interface is superb, with the post, media and plugin management all top notch. Check this evaluation of the Wordpress 2.5 interface (which was designed by Happy Cog no less).

Still using the default theme at the moment but I’ll create a custom one soon, if only just to get rid of the horrible justified text!

 

All I want to be…

Friday, April 25th, 2008

All I want to be is someone that makes new things and thinks about them

Haiku by John Maeda. Arrangement by Public Design Centre.

The Jesus and Mary Chain — Roundhouse, London

Sunday, April 20th, 2008

The Jesus and Mary Chain are one of those bands that I missed out on first time around thanks to my age (they were massive in the ’80s) that I absolutely love now.

Loud, dark, drenched in feedback and at times complete bastards, their legacy was not just for their music, but also their live shows - tales of near-riots, playing with their backs to the audience, on-stage fights between members of the band and even walking off half-way through a set all contribute to a fearsome reputation.

I’d already seen them once before at last year’s Meltdown festival which was curated by Jarvis Cocker of Pulp (this year it’s Massive Attack at the helm, but the line-up seems a bit shit) and as good as it was, the Royal Festival Hall wasn’t the ideal venue. It was basically like a theatre, with high ceilings and all-seated, so I was pleased when we turned up to the Roundhouse with it’s stripped-back an more authentic feeling space.

Something I didn’t pick up on at the Meltdown gig but which was more noticeable in this smaller venue was that William (Reid, guitarist and brother of singer Jim) was being helped out by another guitarist. It didn’t take anything away from it, but I must admit I was surprised he needed it, as he sounded as good as ever to me.

Opening with Never Understand and The Hardest Walk from Psychocandy, the ringing feedback which is their hallmark makes a welcome and sustained appearance, the atmosphere is great, I think most of the crowd lull into nostalgia and believe it’s 1987 or thereabouts and so begins a great gig.

I don’t have a complete setlist but Some Candy Talking, Taste of Cindy, Just Like Honey, Sidewalking, Far Gone and Out and the once-banned Reverence were all played, with only Far Gone and Out sticking in my mind as sounding a bit rough around the edges.

A cover of Pink Floyd’s Vegetable Man made a rare appearance, along with a mumbled comment from Jim about it killing Syd Barret if he hadn’t already been dead. That’s what the Mary Chain consider humour.

More importantly though two new songs, All Things Must Pass and Dead End Kids, sound surprisingly good for a band who’ve been apart for so long. Let’s just hope it’s a sign the long-rumoured new Mary Chain album will actually happen.

This was a good, highly enjoyable, gig. Sure, some of those who were there first time around may not agree, and who knows, had I been there then I might have thought that too. As it stands, I’m loving their gigs and hope they’re around for years to come.

Long live the Mary Chain!

Moved to ThirdEye!

Sunday, April 20th, 2008

After two good years at tictoc, I decided it was time for a change and have started a new job with ThirdEye. I could list plenty of reasons for the move, but ThirdEye’s reputation and international setup (they have offices in Glasgow, London and New York) and the chance to work on more visual and user experience driven projects clinched it.

I’m really excited and optimistic about the move, and my first two weeks have flown past. I’m working in their digital department, run by the renowned Flash developer Hoss Gifford. Already well under way with my first project, a viral game using the excellent Box2DFlash engine, so hopefully I’ll be able to post more on that soon!

Installing PHP on 64-bit systems

Saturday, April 19th, 2008

I was trying to install PHP 5.2.5 using Litespeed’s handy admin interface (saves ssh’ing into the server), but kept being met with the following error when it was trying to compile;

configure: error: libpng.(a|so) not found.

Turns out it’s related to my system being 64-bit (I’m using CentOS 5 on Slicehost) and where libpng is installed and so on. Found the answer in this PHP bug report where we specifically tell configure where to look;

./configure --with-libdir=lib64 …

Sorted!