This is a cooperative blog: a co/blog. We've really just started this experiment, so give a few months to get some momentum. Each of the five charter authors involved are responsible for a different set of topics, and each will post on their own schedule. We hope you enjoy the content provided here, and find it useful. The information provided is meant as opinion and editorial purposes only, and should never be taken as professional advice.
Blogs, Spam, and Deterants
Archived in Technology, Design | No CommentsThere are a number of great plugins available for FREE to prevent (or usually merely reduce) spam from appearing in the comments section of your blog. This site relies on a number of actions to prevent spam within these pages:
1. The first line of defense is Akismet. You may have heard of this fantastic plugin. It uses a central repository for known spam and spamming patterns and filters those posts directly into a temporary holding bin. Usually a quick visual scan of the list lets us know what is good and what isn’t.
2. The second line of defense is reputation. Having posted a comment previously on this site will give you some credibility and you will more easily make it through the filters.
3. If this still leaves us with too much to handle, we are thinking of implementing a captcha that will layer a please-retype-the-characters from the blurry-image-above question as part of the submission process.
We find that with these three lines of defense, and having a heavily scoured blog, we tend to only get one or two messages that don’t belong through our filter every few days.
I was thinking of writing a plugin (or adapting a plugin) to add a small extra feature to the spam filter. I’d like to have the ability to redirect a known “spammer” to a different URL. In this way I could set up a kind of “please fuck off” message on a separate domain that would result in a dead end message if someone began spamming the site. If anyone knows of something like this, please post a comment. I’ll try not to filter your suggestions.
Popularity: 10% [?]
Read more posts by Brad K (About the Author)
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Useful Plugins for WordPress - Part 1 >> You may have noticed that this little experiment that our faithful leader has cobbled together is (a) built in the form of a blog and (b) managed through a little content management system called WordPress. The system itself highly useful for
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DJ Modular Remix Engine - Part One
Archived in Music, Technology, Design | No CommentsThis is the first part in a series of articles I’m putting together to sketch out some ideas for a fully automated electronic music synthesizer-tool. In the long term I’d like to do a little more patent research and move towards finding some venture capital to actually build the thing. But for now, I’m sharing the concept because (quite simply) I’m more interested in OWNING one than I am in being the MARKETING agent for such a product. If you want to build it, please…
The Background
Recorded music has freed us from live performance. While portable players have freed us from bulky home stereos. Music compression (MP3, iPod, Zune, etc.) has freed us from the obstacle of large physical storage limitations. What the problem is now is content and the inability for music itself to be freed from the process of creation. Electronic music has taken us a step in the right direction, but rather than freeing us from static songs and creating a new world of dynamic music creation, we’ve been limited to pre-mixed, pre-recorded samples. This has built the power behind an amazing new genre over the past two decades, but until we FREE ourselves from this final barrier, we will forever be trapped by the very nature of recorded music itself: a fragment of sound recorded somewhere else and only vaguely related to our current experiences.
What I would like to create is a portable music player that performs a number of tasks simultaneously:
- REMIX: Live, continuous remix of samples, sounds, beats, tones, chords, and recorded noise into a dynamic, continuously adapting sound.
- MODULAR INPUT: The player understand the environment through a number of input devices that measure the world and the responses of the user to build and adapt the music to the present situation. This could include light, heat, sounds (that affect but also incorporate back into the song through recording tools), a GPS to track relative speed and velocity of the user, gyroscopic sensors that can detect smaller movements such as dancing, running, or other actions, and other similar modules that influence the final sound.
- LEARNING: Adapting algorithms that compile and analyze user preferences about what they have been listening to for incorporation into the final remix.
This is an ambitious project and I will add more detail to the project as I elaborate deeper in part two.
Popularity: 9% [?]
Read more posts by Andrew S (About the Author)
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Gary’s Construction Anecdotes >> For your convenience, here are some of the articles I've written on my landscaping and contruction experiences. As usual remember: I’m just a guy who has done this work for myself, once. This is just my experience, so do more research
Useful Plugins for WordPress - Part 2 >> You may have noticed that this little experiment that our faithful leader has cobbled together is (a) built in the form of a blog and (b) managed through a little content management system called WordPress. The system itself highly useful for website