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Archive for February, 2010

Maybe

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

I wrote this:

http://www.newsbiscuit.com/2010/02/01/giant-james-may-terrorises-kent-after-being-given-wrong-kind-of-growth-hormones/

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.

  1. It has a much nicer sound, particularly when placed in unskilled sounds
  2. It’s got a much more fun, unstuffy repertoire
  3. 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.