Blog

  • I’m the Start Page, and your under my power!

    Am I the only one that feels… “compelled” to use the start page? Both in Flash and Dreamweaver, I’ll like hover for a few seconds while I decide which button to press on the Start Page… and then I realize I can just CTRL + O. This is like the 2nd time, the 4th time in 2 days that I’ve just sat there for about 3 seconds. I don’t have to use it, but I feel like I should!

  • Weird Email

    GF got the same email this morning. Anybody download the FLA’s and SWF’s yet?

    *******

    Subject: inquiry View Full Header
    View Printable Version
    From: janet jameson <queenbee398@yahoo.com>
    Date: Wed, September 17, 2003 1:39 am
    To: jesterxl@jessewarden.com
    Priority: Normal

    Jess,
    I hate to bother you but I was wondering if you could just help me with a simple
    dimple little FCMX script.
    All I am trying to do is have a button in one movie execute a sound in another movie.
    I don’t want to fill up this email with my code but if you get the chance (and find
    it in your heart :) my files are located here:
    http://66.34.126.41/test/remoteobjectsitetooladmin.fla
    http://66.34.126.41/test/remoteobjectsitetooladmin.swf
    http://66.34.126.41/test/remoteobjectsitetool.fla
    http://66.34.126.41/test/remoteobjectsitetool.swf
    thanks much.
    janet

  • EOLAS: Ok, maybe I was premature & Interactive Planet

    Ok, I’m sorry, maybe I was a little premature in my downplaying of EOLAS’s patent case against Microsoft, but if you search aggregators like I do 3 times a day, and all you see is that topic, you start to think the only thing happening in people’s world is that one thing, and your curious why when you don’t see what’s so important about it. One thing I can’t relate to is still frustrating.

    Regardless, talked to the head hizz-noncho over at IPI tonight and we discussed it in length over dinner at <a href=”http://www.namrestaurant.com/”>this phat Vietnamese restaruant, Nam</a>. A gent that used to work for him as a designer opened it. He has a sushi place too that got rave reviews, and I can see why. He designed everything, from the interior to the outfits the waiters/waitresses wear. Very cool place.

    Anyway, yeah, regardless of what you’ve read, who’s professional opinion & examples downplay this case’s weight, it turns out making patents and collecting on them via licensing fee’s or the court battles is a profitable business. Now, you may say, “Duh”, but I didn’t know this. I usually seperated licensing fee’s and court battles over patents as 2 different things. I didn’t even know how one obtained the right to collect licensing fee’s in the first place. In the US, it takes about 50-90k and 4 years to patent something + a bunch of weird rules in talking about the idea and showing how long the idea was in play by you. In UK it is a lot harder. The laws involved + appeals & lawyer involvement is just jacked and drawn out.

    Bare bones: You come up with a good idea, and when people use that good idea in the future, you either collect licensing fee’s/royalties, or sue their ass.

    To me, this is actually a brialliant plan, and foster’s innovation. Personally, I can definately account for some negatives: GIF for example. What a crock of shit that stifled the internet’s growth. Still, encouraging people to come up with good ideas and spend money to protect them is great. Granted, it’s a gamble. You have to have some futurist in you, and there is no guarentee that any of your patents will actually be used by the public.

    How does this apply to Microsoft? In the words I heard, your lucky a lot of times, and others you just not. This is one time Microsoft isn’t and they’ll probably have to pay. However, what’s the end result? Nothing that big, it seems. True web developers would know better than me, but in reality, the end user will never see the effects of it. Developers will, but not those people that use our products. The average person doesn’t download the 20meg patch on their modem’s (broadband bs regression, eh?), and window’s update is hardly used by the average user either (really). Therefore, the majority of people will still have windows 2000 with IE 5.5 or XP with 6+, ALL with plugin technology. The only time this would change is if they bought XP or upgraded to Longhorn in 2 years. Do you know of many users who own 2k and are rearing to upgrade to XP after they just bought it? Last I heard, people are leveraging what they bought (cept us geeks of course). So, even though Microsoft will have to pay and have no plugin change, or pay but change things which doesn’t seem likely, either way, little affect would happen to the end user in which case a solution would HAVE to be in Longhorn anyway. That still doesn’t leave us Developer’s out of the picture, nor the mini browsers.

    I heard an example of one company that was sneaky. They would wait 3 years until the company using a technology they patented was well established, and hit them with an astronomical bill and warnings until they paid, all the while documenting rebuttals so if it comes to court, they win easily (just like Microsoft’s case). That’s why small guys either ignore it and/or get off easy in the beggining. It’s like planting a garden; you wait for it to come to fruit before you reap the rewards. Just take’s a good idea and patience.

    *******

    On the flipside, met some cool peeps. It was nice to see a true design studio still existing. I guess in my defeatus attitude toward the continued removal of myself from any resemblence of a design community, I had assumed the traditional design firm had gone WAY underground, or in house and out of sight. The whole place had a ton of Mac’s, always a good sign, and had your traditional Atlanta warehouse studio feel.

    That’s not what got me, though. They said that <a href=”http://www.gmunk.com/”>Bradley from Gmunk</a> had actually worked there a week, as well as one fo the video dudes from heavy.com. I freaked. Not only that, but the little blond girl in the Fin video Gmunk did was the head honcho’s neice. Craziness! But it didn’t stop there. One of the dude’s who put on the B4D (forget the exact name) conference in Atlanta while I was in Sydney in February, big design convention done by <a href=”http://www.designforfreedom.com/”>peeps like this</a>, was who I went out to dinner with! Insanity.

    Anyway, they said they all get together to get pizza in Buckhead (or was it Midtown?) and hang out and chat. Have to go to one of those…

    …off to read about management.

  • _parent Who? & Can’t Drag A Button Natively

    First gothca is if you attach a movie clip/button and assign a handler to it such as “onPress”, it doesn’t know what _parent is. You have to use this._parent instead, as _parent will equal undefined.

    Secondly, in optimizing my project using Buttons (as opposed to movie clips that just have button events assinged to them), I forgot that the Button class doesn’t natively support startDrag (2nd time I got bit), so instead of doing this.startDrag(false), you must do startDrag(this, false) instead. Same goes for stopDrag.