LSystem - Step One

Filed Under (Uncategorized) by admin on 29-04-2008

http://adamloving.com/2008/04/29/lsystem-step-one/

These are some songs I wrote and recorded around 1998-1999. Nicole Taylor (vocals on “Goggles”) found me on Facebook, which motivated me to find and upload the songs. Naomi Loving (my sister) sang the vocals on “Swim”. The music is in the style of turn of the century “drum n bass” - an electronic genre involving fast (140 BPM) beats.

LSystem: Step One

Filed Under (Uncategorized) by adam on 29-04-2008

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These are some songs I wrote and recorded around 1998-1999. Nicole Taylor (vocals on “Goggles”) found me on Facebook, which motivated me to find and upload the songs. Naomi Loving (my sister) sang the vocals on “Swim”. The music is in the style of turn of the century “drum n bass” - an electronic genre involving fast (140 BPM) beats.

At the time, I was heavily influenced an ArtCore compilation, and now can here heavy influences from “Everything but the Girl.” Many of the beats took hours if not weeks to create. Also, the other real world sounds are from my big trip in 1997.

Looking forward to trying these

Filed Under (Uncategorized) by adam on 27-04-2008

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HexagonalI haven’t built a static Web site in a while. It looks like the tools have advanced quite a bit. I like weebly a lot after trying it for 10 minutes - they have nice templates. I think all of these will support using your own domain name too.

For multimedia (flash):

http://sproutbuilder.com/

I discovered these in a TechCrunch post about Wix, a new tool that hasn’t launched yet.

How to copy music from iPod to computer

Filed Under (Technology, Troubleshooting) by adam on 27-04-2008

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iPod, do you?Just wrote this in an email to a friend, so I thought I would repost it here… Apple intentionally doesn’t let you copy music from your iPod back to a computer - the best way is to go from straight from one computer to another (via a network, or perhaps you could burn some data-format DVDs, or perhaps you could get an external hard drive - which is good for backups too). That having been said, I did a google search for “transfer music from ipod to computer” and found some $19.99 “iPod Transfer” software (http://www.easyipodtransfer.com/showproduct.aspx). There is a free trial download that may be worth a shot.

A Startup a Week - Day 5

Filed Under (Uncategorized) by adam on 27-04-2008

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With less than eight hours to go, the team comes together one last time for the conclusion to Episode One of “A Startup A Week”. The concept of the show is to bring together top developers and designers, pitch them an idea for a startup, and give them just one week to take the idea from concept to reality.Today the team prepares for the final presentation to the head of the Seattle chapter of the non-profit Room to Read. Our team is building out a Facebook application that can use the viral power of the social graph to raise money for a computer lab in Cambodia.If you’re watching this video right now, chances are that you had access to a computer when you were a child - or your children have access today. In just five minutes, you can help be a part of a community that will share that gift with real children living in Cambodia right now.Here’s how:Click here to view the applicationDedicate a five dollar brick to a friend or loved oneShare the app with five of your friendsThe person at the top of the leaderboard at the end of the project will get to dedicate the school, and everyone who donates will receive updates on the progress of the lab.

A Startup a Week - Day 4

Filed Under (Uncategorized) by adam on 25-04-2008

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It’s Thursday and the team has just one day remaining to complete their project for “A Startup A Week”. The concept of the show is to bring together a few rockstar developers and designers, pitch them an idea for a startup, and give them just one week to take the idea from concept to reality.

For the initial project of this series, our team is building out a Facebook application that can use the viral power of the social graph to raise money for a computer lab in Cambodia via the non-profit Room to Read. On this episode, our developer Adam Loving shows how he used LINQ and SQL Server to keep track of donations, our designer Jay Dokken of Design Commission gives us a very quick sneak preview of his awesome design, and Kyle Cressman sits down with our special guest Dominic Canterbury from D/C Strategic.

With less than 48 hours remaining, can our team come together and create a startup in a week? Stay tuned for the finale tomorrow, and be sure to check out the first three days of A Startup A Week - Episode One.

A Startup a Week - Lab Builder - Wednesday Day 3

Filed Under (Uncategorized) by adam on 24-04-2008

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A Startup a Week - Day 2

Filed Under (Uncategorized) by adam on 22-04-2008

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See what it takes to build a Facebook app.

We never captured on camera the “revolutionary change” I was asking for. Basically, the idea I came up with was to switch from asking for direct donations to going to an ad based model. Making that switch was too risky. We would have to come up with something that was so entertaining it would reach millions of people virally. We had thrown around some ideas on day one like “donate your favorite books.” However, facing the fact that it was Tuesday, I didn’t fight for a revolutionary change. I thought it would be enough to leverage Jay’s great design skills to create something that was beautiful to look at - and thus compel visitors to donate.

Wow that’s some targeted marketing

Filed Under (Uncategorized) by admin on 22-04-2008

What, they are selling ads based on my profile pic now?

A Startup a Week

Filed Under (Uncategorized) by adam on 22-04-2008

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A couple weeks back I did a fun project for Microsoft. The goal was to show Microsoft products being used to complete a real-life project in a week. “A Startup A Week” is the brain child of Kevin Leneway, and he picked me for the pilot episode. The video of the first day is now live on VisitMix.com.

Bringing teams together for short technology projects (whether they go on to become companies or not) is popular here in Seattle. Recently there was a Startup Weekend, and another group meets once a week at Saturday House. It is a great time to be a developer because of the growing availability of Web APIs and excellent tools - you can get a lot done in a short period of time.

I didn’t know the details of this project until the first day (other than that we would use the Facebook platform and Microsoft tools). The project description was simply to raise money for the Room to Read charity on Facebook. From that starting point, we brainstormed the “Lab Builder” Facebook application. This application lets you help build a computer lab in Cambodia.
Check out Lab Builder - if you don’t have a Facebook account, let me know if you’d like me to donate on your behalf. I’m excited to make a difference for a worthy cause. Let me know what you think of the video, and how I can help your company design a Facebook or Open Social application!