Blog

  • Bio-Markup Language

    No, I’m not talking about some propellarhead DTD… I’m talking about either it’s really late and I’m tired and my eyes & ears decieve me, or XML has gone to far. The text format you love to hate, but still frikin use in your day to job has some-frikin’-how made it into the GOA Trance land… I’m sitting here late night jamming to a band called Penta with a song called XML. wtf… who makes a techno song about XML? It sounds like that dude from Korn echoed out with sliced guitar riffs. I don’t make the strict markup connection… whatever, I’m still not asking what XML is and how it affects me, I refuse. It’s bad enough it had to latch onto all the conferences while techies were dying left and right in an attempt to be some sort of super-tech fungus to keep the love alive in an apocolyptic tech economy, but now invades my music? I wish it would just stick to being the new playlist format, and stay the $%)*( there!

  • JXL FCS Bandwidth Table Updated

    Per suggestions per Peldi and Bill Sanders:
    – add the ability to enter in custom bandwidth values
    – add more values for DSL/Cable & add 3.3 for 56k realistic

    Also added:
    – ability to save and delete custom entries
    – saves last values you had selected

    <a href=”https://www.jessewarden.com/downloads/JXL FCS Bandwidth Table.mxp”>JXL FCS Bandwidth Table v1.1</a>

  • JXL FCS Bandwidth Table

    Took a breather from werkin’ to create this quick Flash panel. Spawned from a question on the Flashcom list, this panel allows you to see what to set the Microphone and Camera settings to based on the users bandwidth.

    <a href=”https://www.jessewarden.com/downloads/JXL FCS Bandwidth Table.mxp”>JXL FCS Bandwidth Table</a>

  • FCS Chat in 16 Lines

    A Flashcom chat in 16 lines; was trying to beat <a href=”http://psychlonex.dyndns.org/”>John Robinson</a> who had less if I remember correctly, but don’t think he was using components. Anyway, here’s my best with some readability still intact. Word wrap obviously doesn’t count.

    Look ma, a 520 byte chat program!