Posts Tagged ‘Tony Thomas’


My Private Summer of Coding

Tuesday, May 13th, 2008

A couple of weeks ago I met with Garrick VanBuren to talk about cullect.com. I came away from the lunch excited about two things: Trying out some of the features in cullect that I hadn’t quite understood before and giving Ruby on Rails another shot.

I went to lunch with Garrick to offer him some feedback about why I hadn’t adopted cullect yet. (I’ve had an account for about 7 months.) A few colleagues were raving about it. I knew I had to be missing something. I was.

While I think cullect has a way to go before widespread adoption (it runs a little slow on my PowerBook), I see what everyone else likes about it and more importantly, I see lots of potential. So, nice work Garrick. I drank the Kool-Aid. I now curate a small batch of feeds about music and “recommend” posts so the best rise to the top in my “Important” list. This way I can also repurpose those same articles to Minneapoliscast. In other words, I can repurpose content so that relevant reading is included with what I publish. It’s fun and it’s cool.

I’m not even going to talk about how you can pay cullect so that part of your monthly subscription goes to publishers you read. I can’t even tell you how cool I think that is.

What I really wanted to write about is how I came away from our conversation inspired to try Ruby on Rails. I’ve been toying with RoR for about a year now. As I started working my way through Agile Web Development on Rails last year, the realization gradually dawned on me that I was going to have to sit down and learn Ruby. So I bought a pdf version of Programming Ruby, but I didn’t really get very far before other duties called. I just didn’t have time to learn a new language.

After talking with Garrick I was determined to give it another shot. Then I thought, there has to be a Rails-like set of tools for PHP–a language I’ve been working in for years. That thought and a quick Google search led me to CakePHP.

Two weeks later and I’m near completion of the first module to manage clinic and lab data here at work. Once I got my head wrapped around MVC and the built-in helpers in CakePHP, the development got faster and faster. (Disclosure: The database was already fully envisioned and built beforehand. An important first step.) I can’t tell you how gratifying it is to quickly code something in a few lines, test it and have it work. I have a whole summer of coding ahead of me. I’m very excited to deploy this application by fall.

On a final note, I was feeling a little cocky, so I coded my first Wordpress plugin yesterday too. Again, easy. It’s not quite ready for public release yet but with a little tweaking, I might just release it. Basically it just pulls in PodPress data and lists the ten most popular podcasts on Minneapoliscast.

I was a little worried that with our research slowing down over the summer I was going to be bored. Now I’m really looking forward to the coming months. Fun stuff.

Busy Spring

Thursday, April 24th, 2008

Spring is slowly opening up upon us here in Minnesota and I suddenly find myself busy to the point of nearly being overwhelmed. I say “nearly” because I’m getting to do an awful lot of what I want to do, so even though I have very little spare time, I’m happy.

I’ve started work with Scott Flaskerud from The Dear Sweet Villains on a new CD project. Scott asked me to engineer and produce the CD for him. I gladly accepted. I’ve been able to fill a few gaps here and there by playing on it too. A real pleasure, even if it leaves me bleary-eyed after late nights poring over the sesssions.

Several sessions are lining up for Minneapoliscast in May and June including Luke’s Angels, Brian Just and Aviette.

Finally I’m evaluating a new client’s website for SEO as well as helping them leverage some social media technology to keep present and potential clients up to date on their latest projects. An old client has contacted me about a new project and of course, I’m busy helping my current clients.

Did I mention I have a full time job and family?

I love this time of year. I’m generally operating on the verge of exhaustion, but I certainly get a lot accomplished. If I had to complain about my current status, the only thing I’d say is that I was hoping to work more on my own music. What can I say? I’ve got to pay the bills.

Radiohead’s Chicken & Egg Marketing Conundrum

Monday, April 7th, 2008

Radiohead does it again. By now you’ve probably heard that Radiohead is offering the raw tracks of their “Nude” single for remixing. A few years ago this sort of thing would not have been possible, but with advent of GarageBand and other free and low-cost digital audio suites, thousands of people can participate and engage with Radiohead’s music in a new and exciting way. I haven’t purchased the tracks yet, but I’m about one visit to the iTunes Music Store away from doing it.

Radiohead has been able to position themselves at the forefront of this new model of distribution. So far it’s been very successful for them, but can other artists leverage this same concept as successfully? Probably not. Radiohead has a huge and extremely devoted fanbase already in place. It’s arguable that anything they do is going to be successful.

Still, I think the concept is still new enough that independent artists can use the same idea to connect with their fans. I used to be in an indie band called Anchorhead. In 2001 and 2003 we gave both our CDs away on our website for free before either one was released. Our fans and friends were familiar with our songs before the CDs came out and would often sing a long in the crowd. They also bought other merchandise, such as t-shirts and posters. We didn’t get rich, but we weren’t setting out to do so. A more serious band could replay that scenario in cities around the country. There’s still a lot of work to be done for independent recording artists to gain a following, but with the right combination of good music and new distribution models, there is a myriad of ways to establish ongoing communication, feedback and personal connections with fans. Radiohead brings that to popular culture. Indie bands can bring it to their friends.

I Was There

Thursday, March 27th, 2008

On a geological scale, I’m just a nanosecond. Smaller probably. By internet standards, I guess I’m an old man. For a while I was worried that I’d missed the boat. You know, came along too late. But as I look back, I’ve been on the internet for 14 years. Ever since I installed a Gopher client on my first 386 running Windows 3.0. I was there when Mosaic was a breakthrough for browsing the web–quickly replaced by Netscape.

Sure, I didn’t jump into website development right away, but by 1999 I was working on websites. If anyone remembers the first iteration of mp3.com, they got social networking back in 1998. I was in a band at the time and bands could link to “friends”. How colloquial that all seems.

By 2003, I’d built my own PHP-based blog CMS. By 2005 I was podcasting. In 2007 I got hooked on Twitter.

What’s next? There are a lot of folks out there trying to be the next big thing. Personally, I find it all quite inspiring. I think in the next few years, some standards will emerge and all of these tools will be available to us.

Imagine using Twitter for research. All your followers get an update from you and they simply report on back with a direct message “d @truetone I’m doing this.” Blam! Instant feedback. Somehow that just seems incredibly exciting to me.

So I used to worry that I’d waited too long. No more. This is only the beginning. It’s only going to get better.

Hello world!

Wednesday, March 26th, 2008

I’m leaving the title. I’ve actually been blogging since 2002. This year my old blog was lost in what I can only call the great server crash of aught-eight. So here I am with a shiny new URL named after me. Anthony G. Thomas. You can call me Tony.

Hello World!