Archive for March, 2008

SoundData: Facilitating Audio Visualization Experiments

Monday, March 31st, 2008

UPDATE: I’ve discovered a serious flaw in this class… I plan to refactor things soon – stay tuned.

In an effort to simplify audio visualization experiments with ActionScript 3.0, I’ve developed a SoundData class. The class’s main attraction is centered around the flash.media.SoundMixer.computeSpectrum() method, but it also provides additional control over playback, including startSound(), stopSound() and toggle() methods. The class also allows manipulation over volume and panning.

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Fields of Purple – experiments with Papervision3D

Saturday, March 29th, 2008

I realize it’s been a while since my last flash experiment covering Audio Visualization with ActionScript… but fear not – I haven’t been taking a break. Very much the contrary :)

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Audio Books & The Breakthrough Company

Tuesday, March 18th, 2008

I listen to a lot of audio books. I have had a subscription audible.com for over four years and have amassed a personal audio book library of over 150 books. For $21.95 per month I can download any two books in the audible.com collection – usually the retail value of each book is in the $30 – $50 range, so I figure it’s a pretty good deal.

I typically use my phone for the listening, which is nice because you always have it with you and it enables you to make really good use of car time. Currently I use an iPhone, prior to that I used my Treo, before that I used my Audiovox PDA running Windows Mobile (*cringe*, but I thought it was cool at the time). I have learned a ton doing this and would sooner lose my Tivo than my Audible subscription. I highly reccommend developing an audio book habit if you don’t have one already.

Of the 150 books in my library, I have gone out and purchased physical copies only three times. I am just finishing Kieth McFarland’s The Breakthrough Company and will be going to the book store to buy the physical book as soon as I’m done.

The majority of business books seem to focus on either the start-up stage of a company (think Starting on a Shoestring by Arnie Goldstein) or large company issues and sustainability (think Good to Great by Jim Collins). The Breakthrough Company fills a gap by focusing on the stages between start-up and massive. It profiles nine companies (much in the style of Good to Great) and through research and comparison has teased out principles and tactical priorities that have differentiated successful, growing mid-stage companies from those less successful.

If you don’t have the time to read it, go to Audible or iTunes and give it a listen – it’s well worth the price of admission.

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Adobe AIR 1.0 Ready for Take-Off

Wednesday, March 5th, 2008

Last week, Adobe officially announced the release of AIR – Adobe Integrated Runtime. My December post on the power and integration of AIR only scratched the surface of what it is capable. In fact, it may have only tilted some heads and failed to communicate the potential of the new technology…

Adobe AIR

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Desk-Ridden Developers? Hardly. ArcStonians Kick 5k Asphalt

Tuesday, March 4th, 2008

On February 16th, 6 ArcStonians raced in the Minneapolis Valentine’s Day 5k around Lake Harriet. We survived, and I have the pic to prove it:

Valentine’s Day Race

From left to right: Me, Ryan, Bart, Jess, Jess (friend of Tim), Tim, Nik. Don’t ask me what kind of face Tim is making.

Go ArcStone!!!

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Web 2.0 for Hypochondriacs

Tuesday, March 4th, 2008

In addition to self-diagnosing your ailments online with tools such as Web MD and Healthline.com’s symptom search, now you can track the spread of sickness.

Who Is Sick Map

I don’t know about you, but the colors in those symptom pies are making me feel a little nauseous.

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Lies and the Lying Women Liars of Craigslist Who Tell Them

Monday, March 3rd, 2008

There’s a new book by Susan Shapiro Barash asserting that women are better liars than men. (I haven’t read it.)

True enough, any woman with a wee bit of guile knows how to tell a proper lie. But basing your thesis on the data collected from a test pool of women who responded to Craigslist ads? Please. That’s begging for skewed results.

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