Archive for February, 2010
Whistle while you work
Thursday, February 4th, 2010
One of the perks of working from home is that if for whatever reason (and, let’s face it, if you’re in a procrastinative mood, any reason is good enough) you feel like a break you can take one. I don’t mean playing facebook scrabble, or checking the definition of a drupe on wikipedia, all the while trying to look busy and keeping a watchful eye out for your manager; I mean a proper break, maybe away from your desk or doing something not usually allowed in an office.
I’ve recently turned to the latter. Long-term readers (all 8 of you) will know that I have been accompanying an Irish fiddler on the guitar for about a year. Just before Christmas I got the urge to have a go at an instrument more traditionally associated with carrying the melody, so I got a tin whistle.
I can’t stress enough how important it is for every parent to campaign for their schools to teach the tin whistle instead of the recorder.
- It has a much nicer sound, particularly when placed in unskilled sounds
- It’s got a much more fun, unstuffy repertoire
- Last, but definitely not least, a tin whistle has no wrong notes on it! It has all the notes of the D or C scale on it (typically) and though you still have to hit the right ones to play a tune it’s much harder to sound as disastrously wrong as you can on a chromatic instrument.
But back to the point. My current preferred displacement activity from work is playing the tin whistle, and I reccommend any home-workers who read this to try it out. Just get yourself a whistle for a tenner or so, read brother steve’s website to understand tin whistle technique, listen to some tunes on youtube (Planxty are a good place to start as a lot of the pipe songs are in the same key as a standard whistle and not too fast to hear the notes), and try and copy them (or if you read music find the score on the session).
As a warning though, it does become addictive. For instance, during the writing of this post I’ve played two reels and a hornpipe.
And I’m about to have a crack at a jig.
jQuery listSplitter plugin
Monday, February 1st, 2010
A very short post to announce my third jQuery plugin: listSplitter, which takes a long list of categorised items (where the categories can overlap) and creates a tabbed interface to show only one category at once. I haven’t done a demo yet (well, I have, buthaving teh same old problem transferring to the server as the server runs on UNIX while my laptop is Windows. I recently found out why this causes a problem, but no easy fix has presented itself) so you’ll just half to take my word for it, though before too many months have gone by I will use it as the basis for a new portfolio.
*edit: Here is a demo
And it can be used with jQuery themeroller, i.e. use the tool at jqueryui.com/themeroller, to design how it shoudl look, then after clicking “download theme” make sure you have ‘tabs’ ticked underneath widgets.
I wrote this: