Tim’s Album of the Month - “Sound of Madness”

Music, Music Reviews 2 Comments »

I know Liz is the music maestro on here, but I have so many good picks myself that I couldn’t hold it in any longer, hope you don’t mind Liz!

Sound of Madness is Shinedown’s latest release, and has catapulted the Jacksonville, Florida band back in the limelight that they quietly slid from a few years ago.

Every now and then an album comes along with an almost perfect list of tracks; and of course, for everyone, these albums are different…for me, it’s Metallica’s black album in 1991 or AC/DC’s Back in Black in the 80’s.  Shinedown’s Sound of Madness is, in short, that good.

With several singles already released and getting airplay such as the title track “Sound of Madness”, “Breaking Inside”, “If You Only Knew” and “Devour”, Shinedown is back in a big way; check out the album here and enjoy!

Facebook and Privacy

Social Media, Tech 1 Comment »

A great article I found (albeit from last year) that goes into detail about managing Facebook’s plethora of privacy settings. With privacy on Facebook topping many news sites such as CNN and CNET, I thought this was fairly relevant :)

http://www.allfacebook.com/2009/02/facebook-privacy/

Cold Fusion Hosting

Domains and Hosting, Web No Comments »

Just a quick plug here people, anyone looking for quality Cold Fusion hosting (or any web hosting for that matter), take a look at Crystal Tech.  These are guys I’ve used for myself and my clients for years, and have never had a reason to be dissappointed.  They are an Adobe partner for the Cold Fusion server product, which is impressive, as the list of those that Adobe trust with this title is EXTREMELY short.  Their support is top notch, and they are a U.S. based company.  In addition, they have their own internal merchant component, providing you directly with SSL and e-commerce services without going through a 3rd party provider.

Head over to www.crystaltech.com and check out the packages they offer.

Cold Fusion RSS/XML Processing

Development and Programming, Web 1 Comment »

Having created a Cold Fusion-based RSS feed via XML before, I figured my most recent project needing this functionality would be a copy and paste job with some variable edits…wrong.

I’ve spent 2 days trying to figure out why the exact same code for a feed works differently on two identical Cold Fusion 8 servers.  The only difference was the database outputting the data, different database and different table.

After remembering that ALL good developers validate EVERYTHING they do before they start complaining of broken applications, I headed over to a RSS Validator and saw immediately that my file wasn’t valid in the first place.  My lovely Cold Fusion XML output functions have somehow put in 96 lines of blank space in the top of my code (this didn’t happen on the other server, mind you).

For future reference, encasing the ENTIRE set of code in processing tags like below and tightening up the code so that no blank spaces are present fix the problem:

<cfprocessingdirective suppresswhitespace=”yes”></cfprocessingdirective>

You Keep Twitter, I’ll Keep Facebook

Social Media, Tech 4 Comments »

Social media is THE internet buzzword nowadays, especially if you’re in the Web Development business as I am; user-generated, dynamic web content is truly the wave of the present, as well as the future.  At the top of the pile of trendy Web 2.0 application names such as Digg, Del.ic.iou.us, and MySpace, are the two current kings of social media; Twitter and Facebook.

Being a long-time user of MySpace, I already knew what to expect with Facebook, as they fall in the same category; personal spaces on the web that allow you to share news, photos and more with friends and family around the country or around the world.  A novel idea, the founders of both MySpace AND Facebook made it big when they released these sites to the world.  The growth spurt of Facebook users alone surpasses any other media in history to date, including radio and TV.

Facebook grew on me, and grew on me quick.  Although I was a power-user of MySpace, it was getting to be too much, as far as how much it throws at you.  Users are allowed to style their pages however they like, which is the downfall of the site as much as it is a perk.  It’s common to see pages so heavy in graphics and music that they take forever to load; one family member of mine in particlar had a profile that I couldn’t even visit due to the amount of media on his page.

Then, enter Facebook……accomplishing the same goals as set out by MySpace, but in a much cleaner and faster-loading format.  I consider Facebook an “adult” version of MySpace.  The site doesn’t allow modifying the look and feel of the site, but all of the other customization options are there.  I ditched MySpace and became a Facebook fanboy.

Finally, Twitter enters the equation.  If there’s one up-and-coming technology that rivals Facebook, it’s Twitter.  This small, fast-loading application allows you to update friends, family, or anyone else for that matter as to your current status, or any news you feel is important enough to share.  The beauty of Twitter is that you’re only allowed a certain number of characters (180 if I’m not mistaken) to post, so noone is bogged down with long, drawn out explanations or statuses.  Celebrities use Twitter too, and this gives stalking your favorite star a little easier and a more personal touch  (Obviously I’m joking, don’t stalk celebrities on Twitter, they won’t appreciate it as much as you think).

As neat as Twitter is, it won’t replace my Facebook anytime soon, as it doesn’t accomplish a tenth of what I can do with Facebook.  Twitter does have an image component (a separate application though, it seems), but nothing beats opening Facebook and having video, audio, and text capabilities out of the box.  And, those celebrities we talked about earlier?  Although they ARE there, they’re hard to find….only a handful have been proven to be real, apparently a favorite pastime of Twitterers (this is a real word, believe it or not) is to emulate a celebrity and put up a faux Twitter profile.  This doesn’t fool many people anymore, and there are even sites that outline which celebrities have real Twitter accounts, and which ones have been deemed to be imposters.

So, while Twitter is nice, I’ll just keep Facebook.  I’m not doing both, since I tried that before, and that’s why I dropped MySpace to begin with!

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