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I'm Now a Full Time Freelancer

3 days ago, I started my new career as a full time Web design professional freelancer...

Well, it's actually not a new career because I've been doing it for over 12 years now. But for a while in the mid 90's, it did play second fiddle to music and working a production job in a screen printing company. But as it became clear I would not succeed professionally playing in my band, I put more and more time into working and learning the Web design craft. When the band ended in early 2000, I put all my "free" time into the Web work and built my clients base and kept on learning new skills.

In 2001, I got promoted at the screen printing job into a multi tasking position. I worked as a Customer Representative but also worked in the design and drawing of membrane switch keyboard circuits. I spent a lot of time in Illustrator which I'd started learning in 1996. I will keep doing that on a contract basis for the foreseeable future. I'm now realizing how much the customer rep work taught me even if it was truly challenging for me. I learned how to interact with clients, be there for them and support them and realized how much easier it is in a service industry like Web and new media design than it is in a commodities B2B market like industrial screen printing.

I've been getting a lot of positive feedback on my service and attitude from my Web design clients and it makes me happy I didn't rush into going into it full time until now. My basic work skills never worried me but I feel like it's not until recently I developed the business skills that now makes interacting with my clients easy and fun.

I feel very excited about this new chapter of my life that is just starting and, although I'm the kind of guy that tends to worry about a lot of stuff, this decision and move just feel right and I have very little worries about the future. For now, I have a lot of work on my plate for clients I love to deal with and I feel like the luckiest guy in the world. I feel like I just took back control of my life and it feels very empowering...

Twitter One Week Later

It's been a week since I signed up on Twitter now and, in spite of my expectaions I must say I'm loving it. There are a lot of very helpful people there and it makes me feel like I'm more part of the community.

As I said before, the experience is made a lot more enjoyable by using a good Twitter client instead on the Web interface. I still use Twhirl which I mentionned in my last post and it works great for me. Seems popular too. But the one thing that is really annoying is the limits Twitter puts on the number of "API requests" such clients make. For some reasons, this number is set to 20/hour these days (usually around 70) so I can't get as frequent updates as I did last week.

Twitter's infrastructure seems quite fragile and is frequently overloaded which is too bad because the service is great and far more useful than I expected (more on that later). So it seems I'm there to stay...

Now on Twitter

I resisted for a long time as I didn't see the usefulness but I am now on Twitter and posting once in a while. My Twitter page is http://twitter.com/pixelyzed

I would have given up almost right away if i'd had to do it through the Web interface but I found a great Twitter client called Twhirl based on Adobe Air which makes the experience a lot more fun for me.

I'm planning a design refresh of this site (as well as my professional freelance site) and I may add the Twitter thing to it then but I'll see.

In any case, Twitter turns out to be far more interesting than I expected so I'll stick to it for now.

The Year 2007 on Pixelyzed.com

An overview of the last year on pixelyzed.com

Now that 2008 is just about to start, I thought it would be a good idea to write a pixelyzed.com style year end review.

There's been a lot of activity in our little world last year as well as in other areas of the software industry. Throughout 2007, I discussed products and technologies that can help our work flows and processes in new ways and my own process has evolved significantly. Now I'll try to summarize some of it and share some of my best finds of the year in several categories. There are some new things in here I didn't discuss before so enjoy!

pixelyzed is growing

Although I still am not a very prolific blogger, Pixelyzed has grown in readership last year and I have made an effort to share my more interesting discoveries as they apply to Web designers and creative professionals. I have also tried to write about more varied topics and I will keep doing so in the new year.

2007 has been a year of growth and change for my career as well. I have tackled a couple of large Web design projects and have started doing sub-contracting work again.

Behind the scenes, I have been working on a new version of my professional site webfocusdesign.com and started marketing locally more aggressively. Once the new version of that site goes up sometime in the next few months, I will intensify these marketing efforts.

Another project I've been working on is my wife's portfolio site as she is a gifted artist- painter. I've gone through a few design iterations and we finally decided to go with a very simplified and uncluttered look. I've looked at dozens of painters and photographers' Web sites and realized that the better ones really put the emphasis on the artist's work and everything else recedes. We also decided to go Flash all the way which means I'll have to re-acquaint myself with it and give myself a quick crash course. If anyone has good advice on good Flash books, I'm all ears. I don't want books that go through the basics but books that teach solid techniques for real world projects and functionality.

The year in software

This is a really quick overview as I will write a separate post dedicated to the year in software to be published later. I must say that 2007 has been a very exciting year for me. Here are a few of the standout products I've been using last year which have been helping me get my job done more efficiently.

Adobe Creative Suite 3

The major new software suite release from Adobe... and the first iteration of the integration of existing Adobe products and former Macromedia ones. There was a lot to get excited about here as most products received serious upgrades. Standouts for me include Illustrator and InDesign.

Fireworks CS3

In spite of all our speculation, Fireworks is still alive and got better under Adobe's care. After the extreme disappointment that Fireworks 8 was, Fireworks CS3 was an encouraging release. But Adobe still has a lot of work to do to fulfill Fireworks' early promise as key areas of the application have been neglected for years and still have got no love in CS3. Looking forward to CS4, there are several key areas I'd like to see improve. More in my next post...

FreeHand MXa

Creative Suite 3 is the release that finally and officially marked the death of FreeHand and the official word from Adobe is that FreeHand users should now migrate to Illustrator. This decision leaves a lot of long time FreeHand users who feel that Illustrator is not an adequate replacement in the cold and I feel for them. Removing competition is never good for any industry and this is no exception. More later...

MindJet MindManager 7

MindManager is my best software find of 2007. It's the application that had the biggest impact on my process and work flow. It is a fantastic knowledge and information management tool that is flexible enough to help through all phases of a Web design projects. I would really encourage every creative professional to at least try it. I will keep sharing tips and ideas on how I use MindManager in my own work through the new year so stay tuned!

JCVGantt Pro 3.0

The perfect companion to MindManager, JCVGantt can both be use as a standalone application and as an add-in for MindManager. Planning and scheduling projects has always been a hard and tedious task for me. JCVGantt Pro makes it a lot easier and integrates seamlessly with MindManager. It is extremely flexible in how it lets users set resources parameters like working and non-working times and days, hourly and fixed costs and more. It updates the Gantt charts, total costs and the MindManager maps it is tied to in real time as you make changes to resources or tasks. A great discovery for me.

Studiometry 5.0

The other piece in my project management and administration puzzle. I've been using Studiometry since mid 2006 to track and keep client and project information, track communications but also as a timer for billable time and then for invoicing. Studiometry does a lot more than that and it got a major upgrade to version 5.0 in 2007. Check it out!

FeedDemon 2.5

Control information overload and get the latest info from all your favourite Web sites in one place. I've been using FeedDemon to subscribe and read RSS feeds for a while now (since it first came out) and I couldn't live without it. It this age of information overload, it's the main "hub" through which I get industry news and more. It has too many features to go into here but if you use Windows, this is the only feed reader you need to consider...

Windows Vista

Vista got a bad rap last year for a variety of reasons but I love it myself. Moving to Vista has brought me little trouble and a real boost in enjoyment and productivity. It'S true that my new computer has the powerful hardware to support it so Vista for me is fast and extremely stable. Much more so in fact than XP ever was for me. A great surprise for me and I can't wait to see the improvements SP1 brings.

The year in music

Many of you know I'm a musician and a music fanatic in general. 2007 was a great year in music for me as well. I'll also post a separate entry on my musical finds of the last year but here's a little taste of my 3 best musical discoveries of 2007. More later...

XM Radio

2007 is the year I discovered satellite radio and more specifically, XM Radio. It is where I discovered several of the artists who's music I fell in love with in 2007. XM Radio has more varied playlists than Sirius and more interesting channels. I carry my radio from the home to my car and the office and I re-discovered the joy of listening to music for hours. I discovered many new talents on XM and I bought more CDs in the last year alone than in the prior 5 because of it. Couldn't live without it now...

Grace Potter and The Nocturnals

My biggest musical crush of the year... on more levels than one ;-). If you never heard of Grace Potter & The Nocturnals, you have to visit their site and listen to some of the samples.

They play great music lead by a phenomenal voice with amazing raw emotional intensity. And Grace is adorable to boot... ;- ) Just give them a listen if you like rootsy but intense rock music based on well above average songwriting. Current stand out songs for me include "Apologies" and "Loose Some Time" (next week it may be two other songs...) both of which are slower numbers but the band also excels at the more intense rockers that fill out the rest of the album and fuel their live shows.

The music press is simply gushing about them and her and the band apparently gives amazing concerts. Don't miss them if they come play in your city. If they ever come play in Montreal, I'll be first in line to see them... In the meantime read this review of one of their recent shows to whet your appetite.

Missy Higgins

Another young and extremely gifted female songwriter. Higgins is folksier than Potter but just as intense. This Australia native was another XM Radio discovery for me. Not long after hearing her music on XM, my wife and I had the pleasure of seeing her perform on the Australian segment of Live Earth and we were immediately hooked. Great melodies sung with a very noticeable Aussie accent that just adds to the charm of her music. I'm really surprised she does not get more airplay or exposure in North America.

Again, give her music a listen, you'll be glad you did.

The year in learning

One of the more exciting aspects of working in the Web design industry for me is the need to continually learn new things. I have discovered a few great resources last year that I will now share with you.

Some of those resources or sites that may seem pretty basic to those who've been in this business for a while but I like reading about different approaches so I can look at my work from a fresh perspective from time to time. Some of this stuff will be known to you but it may still contain great refreshers.

Less experienced Web designers would be wise to look at some of those resources closely, spend quality time at those sites and absorb some of the wisdom their creators are spreading mostly for free.

Learning keeps your mind young and fresh so, enjoy!

Before & After PDF Subscription

For any designer interested in reading excellent practical articles with great design tips and ideas published on a regular basis, Before & After delivers great value for the money and teaches you how the pros do it and why. Even pros will learn new things and will at the very least be inspired to try new approaches to solve design problems. I know I have.

I've actually been a subscriber for a couple years now but it seems the quality of the articles has kept improving throughout the year. If you subscribe you'll also get access to a number of past issues. Before & After magazine is one of the best of its kind so take a look at the sample PDF's on the site and you'll see what a great value it is.

Save The Pixel - The Art of Simple Web Design

I discovered this e-book through the feed of the "Web Design From Scratch" Web site created by Ben Hunt. Every working Web designer should probably read it as it is shock full of great tips and advice for creating efficient Web sites that succeed at creating great user experiences.

The book is very well written in that it does not just explain the principles behind Hunt's "Save the Pixel" design philosophy but also provides numerous case studies of Web site re-designs. Each case study shows the original site and explains why it wasn't exactly successful. Then it shows the redesigned version and explains why it works better and why key design decisions were made.

The book would be an excellent resource even for seasoned Web design pros but it should be required reading for all aspiring and new Web designers but especially wannabes who think that what they do is design when they have no real process and just like to make "pretty things" without forethought, planning or direction. Sadly, there are a lot of people like that in our industry vying for the same projects we're pitching for. This book demonstrates very well why real design is a lot more than mere decoration and why every pixel counts when your site tries to communicate a brand or message as clearly as possible. Best $30 I spent all year...

Start creating better, more effective designs too. Get "Save The Pixel" through my affiliate link here.

Web Design from Scratch

Ben Hunt's Web site which claims to be "A complete guide to designing web sites that work".

This site is an extensive resource that contains a lot of free content as well as paid stuff like the "Save the Pixel" book discussed above. One of my great finds of the year.

ideasonideas

A site I discovered through another site's feed in FeedDemon. IdeasonIdeas touches on a wider variety of subjects than pure design talk. One of the recent discussions centered on the pros and cons of Requests For Proposal or RFPs and started the discussion by stating why they thought they were bad for designers and why.

If you've ever had to deal with such issues (and what designers hasn't) then you know what a pain and a waste of time RFPs can be. Commenters brought up other good points and that is what that blog is about. Great discussions on subjects that matter to communications professionals and brand strategists.

Looking forward to 2008

While I don't like to play the guessing game of predicting the future, we should probably all look ahead to the future now and plan where we'd want this year to take us. Our future is ours to create and imagine so here's a few things I'm looking forward to in 2008.

Continuing growth

I'm planting the seeds of a growing business by re-designing my own professional Web site. We might all benefit from re-visiting our own branding and marketing efforts. As a freelancer it is sometimes more difficult because what we are marketing is our own expertise and our brand is ourselves. I'm looking forward to improving my own marketing skills as this will also benefit my clients.

Waiting for Fireworks CS4

Readers of this blog know how important Fireworks is to my design process. I have been a vocal Fireworks evangelist for years now. As I stated above, I think that Fireworks CS3 was solid transitional release under the new care of Adobe. But Fireworks is not without problems... In my next post which will be about the year 2007 in software, I'll discuss how I now see Fireworks' place in mine and a typical Web designer's arsenal and where I would like it to go next.

2008 on Pixelyzed.com

All in all, 2007 was a great year on many levels for me and for the industry but I feel it was a transitional year. I'm really looking forward to what 2008 brings and hopefully, some of the bigger personal changes I have been planning on for a long time will finally happen. Stay tuned!

Regarding the blog, I don't like to make promises and break them so I will not claim that I will write more often in 2008. All I can promise is that I'll keep working on building my "voice". What I try to share with people here are ideas and resources I feel are worthwhile. What this blog and site will never become is a link whore that simply links to other content with little or no new take on it. If that means I post less often than some other bloggers because I don't spread the latest "meme" without critical thought or commentary then so be it.

I will keep speaking my mind and try to strike conversations on issues that matter to me and which I believe should matter to other design professionals.

Thank you very much to all who follow this site and blog and those who have commented here or sent me e-mail throughout the year. It's good to know people appreciate what I try to share and care enough to comment on it. See you all in 2008!

My Search for Mind Mapping Software

In the last few weeks I have been researching and evaluating Mind Mapping software to aid me in the early planning stages as well as structuring of Web site design and re-design projects. I think the concept of Mind Mapping offers a very efficient manner of gathering large amounts of data or ideas quickly then organize it, format it, tag it, transform it into an action-plan, schedule, to do list or re-use it in a multitude of other formats.

If you are intrigued by the idea of Mind Mapping or have been looking for such software yourself, here's some comments on my recent experience and short reviews of the 5 applications that made my short list and why. I've tried several others but I quickly "rejected" them for several reasons and I won't mention them here.

You probably should know right off the start that I am quite new to mind mapping to begin with so my criteria and experience may differ from someone who's been using it for a long time. I also plan to mostly use mind mapping in relation to the planning and management of Web site design and re-design projects. During the course of my evaluation, I've created and re-created a map of a Web site I've been hired to re-design. It's a large Web site with a lot of content as well as llinks to external resources. Re-creating its structure as a mind map has permitted me to identify and note repetition in content, out of date content and links as well as find relationships between elements found in separate sections of the site. It was the perfect project for me to try out mind mapping and I loved it.

The Mind Mapping Process

About the applications I tried themselves, the first thing I have to tell you is that, aside from one exception, it seems you really get what you pay for in the area of mind mapping software because most mind mapping apps only excel one area and are really weak in others. In order to understand what I mean by that you have to know that I divide the process of mind mapping into 3 areas or steps. Not all areas may be as important to you as they were to me. Those area for me include, brainstorming, editing/adding information and exporting.

These 3 areas are explained below:

1- The mind mapping or brainstorming process itself:
At this stage you need an app that gets out of the way and let you add topics and sub-topics (sometimes called ideas, nodes or items) and navigate them with the smallest amount of effort possible. You're trying to get your ideas or data down as quickly as possible without any thought flow interruptions.  The best apps let you start a map, then type your main idea/topic directly then hit enter to "finish" it then hit enter again to move to the next "sibling" topic or press Insert (close to Enter on most keyboards) to start a sub-topic then type text again, Enter to finish, Enter or Insert to move on. You would be surprised how many apps complicate this process needlessly. Navigation is done simply using the arrow keys. You should never have to touch the mouse to click in the map or worse still, click a button in the mapping app's UI to add an item. Quick and simple is the key here.

2- Editing and refining the map by adding data and adding formatting:
This is where you add icons, relationships, links (URLs or links to local documents or internal map topics, Web sites, etc), notes or attachments. This is also here where you format the look of specific items to differentiate them from one another and add further hierarchy than the natural topic/sub-topic/sub-sub-topic hierarchy the map contains naturally. This area is where all the mind mapping apps I tried vary the most. The one I chose has the richest set of tools here (and I'm just starting to skim the surface), including named styles you can use to format nodes/topics easily and spread changes automatically to others who have the same style applied. You also need to be able to add notes to further "explain" certain items or ideas further. Not all mind mapping apps offer the ability to add and format notes. You also should be able to change the layout of the entire map. This area is very deep so I'll stop here for now but there's a lot of stuff you can do here to enrich the basic map data and give it more meaning. Some of them even give you the ability to transform an item/topic into a task with start and end dates, icons to denote percentage of completion and more. Several apps excel here but none of those I tried go as deep as the one I chose.

3- Exporting to other formats (for client deliverables like outlines or interactive maps they themselves can play with for example):
This is the area where most mind mapping apps fall very short for me with a couple of exceptions. To me and I may be one of the few thinking this, what's the use of creating a detailed map if you cannot export this data into other useful forms. A simple hierarchical text outline really is something very basic that should be easy to export. Even better is if links, icons and notes are exported along with the outline and basic formatting applied to differentiate all elements. Better yet is tying the outline levels to styles in an existing Word template file directly. Again, only one app goes the extra mile and many do not go past the first step which is a pretty useless simple graphic export (inserted in a Word, Powerpoint or PDF file). Here, you'll here a lot of promises of MS Office integration and what-not. But if, like me, your idea of integration goes further than adding a solid bitmap image copy of your map to a Word or PowerPoint file with no text whatsoever, then many mind mapping apps will disappoint you here. Only 3 apps amongst those I tried offer anything really useful here and all 3 actually go above and beyond in different ways.

The Reviews

So what are all these apps I've kept hinting about. I'll spare you the worst and will only highlight 4 of them and mention a 5th because I think it has great potential and offers much more than mind mapping.

1- In first place and the top of the crop for me is MindManager 7 from Mindjet. It is also unfortunately one of the most expensive of the lot at $349.00 but it's already helping me greatly start a redesign project on the right foot. This one is deep and although it doesn't offer the stunning Flash export of the next second place app, MindJet offers a free reader application you can point your clients to if you want them to interact with the real app and see things the same way you did. Otherwise it can export to Word with a full outline, TOC, full map images and all the data and "metadata" you added to the map. Amazing. It also has 2 flavors of Powerpoint export which I haven't really explored yet. Next is Visio export. As I don't have Visio I cannot comment. Next is MS Project export which ties to the tasks oriented editing I hinted at earlier. I don't have Project either but think Gantt charts and the like. Seems quite powerful. Next still is what seems like great integration with Outlook. Think tasks again, schedules and the like. I don't use Outlook anymore and never did in that way so I cannot say how it does here. PDF export could be better but i goes beyond inserting a simple solid graphic in a PDF file. Think editable text here (it's rarer than you'd think). I'm still learning the app so I'm sure there's much more I could mention. Last point is about the UI. MindManager (like my Honorable mention app below) use a MS Office 2007 "ribbon-like" UI. Not everyone likes this but I use Office 2007 at work and although it took me a few days to get used to it, now love it nd would never go back. MindManager's UI is definitely the most sophisticated of all the apps I tried and it's very uncluttered for an app that offers so many tools at your fingertips. See it here:

http://www.mindjet.com

2- In second place for me is FreeMind... yes the free, open-source mind mapping app. It excels at brainstorming, does an adequate job of formatting and it offers the most incredible and unique interactive Flash export. It also export to a few other special formats like the also open-source ToDoList application. It has good Word export as well but it's been a while since I used that so I cannot remember the level of detail. Drawbacks include some rough areas due to the fact that it's still beta software (0.8.0 is the stable release, latest is 0.9.0 beta 12). Well worth considering. See it here:

http://freemind.sourceforge.net/wiki/index.php/Main_Page

3- In third place for me is MindApp from Varatek software. Very inexpensive at $29.95 and very good at steps 1 and 2 (brainstorming and formatting). Where it fell short for me is export. Well worth downloading the trial, especially if you don't foresee needing very detailed exporting into other formats. It was on my short list. See it here:

http://www.mindapp.com

4- In fourth place is The Brain's PersonalBrain. A most intriguing app which I really tried to like more. It may serve someone else's needs better. It is on the expensive side (not far behind MindManager) and doesn't have nearly the same depth in the formatting department. Maybe I would have discovered more had I spend more time with it. Great brainstorming abilities and very good Web export with a data pane at the bottom and interactive map at the top. See it here:

http://www.thebrain.com/

Honorable mention goes to SmartDraw 2008. It doesn't have as seamless brainstorming abilities as the 4 others but it still does a good job of it. It excels at the formatting aspects. It also offers a lot more than mind mapping so, eventhough that's not its core purpose, it's very good value for the money. Great formatting abilities, disappointing exporting. Not exactly cheap either but I'll keep an eye on its growth. Another point against it for me was a very cluttered ribbon-like UI. Much less successful here than MindManager. It sometimes feel more like a big glorified Microsoft Wizard than a drawing application. It may be that it's aimed at business people and I'm a designer used to apps like Fireworks, Illustrator, FreeHand or InDesign. Still well worth trying but you better be quick about it... it only offers a pityful 7 days trial. For an app sold at nearly $300 USD, this is rather cheap IMO. See it here:

http://www.smartdraw.com/

Last topic I'd like to touch is support and user community. Only two of the commercial apps I tried have forums: MindManager and PersonalBrain. FreeMind has a forum on SourceForge where developers seem to be active. I've also tried to contact two companies. One is SmartDraw which I contacted to express how disappointing I though their exporting abilities were (forgot to complain about their ridiculous trial's lenght). I then had a very interesting email conversation with one of their sales rep over the course of 2 or 3 days... even though I was clear I would not buy their product. They seemed open and eager to get user comments and suggestions. Kudos to them for this.

On the other end of the spectrum was MindApp. I wrote them with a couple of pre-sales questions using a form on their site. Never heard back. To me this is unforgivable, even when your product is as inexpensive as theirs is.

Conclusion

I hope my comments in this post will help anyone looking to get into mind mapping. The process of trying out mind mapping apps has definitely sold me on the idea of mind mapping itself. I find that using software to enter and organize ideas and data quickly very freeing. It also creates something tangible and much more malleable than scribbles on a piece of paper. You can come back to your map, refine it, add to it and re-export or re-purpose it in a variety of useful forms (denpending on the app you choose of course). It's also a lot quicker than doing it on paper would be for me.

I love mind mapping now eventhough I'm far from being an expert and can't wait too apply the process to other areas of both my professional and personal lives and see how it can help me further.

Adobe CS3, A Very Different Experience On My New Computer

Since I got my new computer, I've been busy installing software, installing Office, email and other basic applications as well as setting my new Vista environment and getting familiar with it. I'll post later about my impressions on Vista.

But Saturday, I finally installed Adobe Design Premium CS3 on the new machine. All I can say is wow! I liked CS3 a lot before but I really LOVE it now. The Suite was workable in my old computer but load times were excruciating. I also couldn't have Dreamweaver and Fireworks open for example and then run a Skype session with a client to discuss a project detail while I was making edits which is a common occurence for me since I do sub-contracting work for other Web design firms on top of working for my own clients.

Now, even the "heaviest" apps like InDesign and Photoshop open in seconds and Fireworks CS3 seems to almost "pop" open. I'm sure the AMD Dual Core CPU helps a lot as well as the 4 GB of dual channel DDR2 Ram on the machine but mostly, I think the 250 GB Seagate SATA NCQ hard drive I use as my main system drive contributes a lot to the incredible application load (as well as system boot up) times I get. Also, I though that once they were loaded the CS3 apps were pretty responsive on my old machine but I was quite wrong...

My only disapointment with Adobe software on my new machine is that I cannot install ColdFusion MX7 on it as I'm getting blocked ports and other problems even if I'm not running a firewall since I'm behind a router now. Worse still is that ColdFusion 8 will not support 64 bit systems (either Vista or XP) which is disapointing. Server apps are exactly the kind of software that could benefit most from using a 64 bit architecture so I do not understand Adobe's decision in this instance.

The workaround I'll be using is to have my old XP box run ColdFusion and I will use that as my local testing server. I'll need to format and re-install XP on it though as Networking is hosed on that box. Vista sees it but the XP box won't let it connect and it does not "see" the Vista box. As soon as I get all of my settings files out of the old machine I'll format it and install a clean copy of XP SP2 on it. I'll leave it as a barebones installation running minimal software like ColdFusion and MySQL and hope it still has a few more years in it like that.

Got a New Computer!

...and it's a screamer! I can't believe I lived with my other one for this long. The new one is so much faster it's not even funny. I'll be keeping the old one as a backup so I got a Belkin swicth to use the same keyboard, mouse and monitor with both and plugged them into a router. That way I'll always have a backup. Now I just have to figure out how to network them together..

If you're interested, here are the key components I chose to build my new power machine.

First, I went with an AMD Athlon 64  X2 5200+ Dual Core processor. I figure the only reason my old 2001 era 1 GHz machine remained workable for this long (it even runs all the CS3 apps very well except for start time) is the AMD Athlon chip in it. The new Dual core chip is another beast altogheter though. I can't wait to install CS3 and my other creative and productivity software but mostly I can't wait to see how my music software will run on it.

To run the Athlon 64 X2 chip, the sales rep at the store that built my machine recommended the ASUS Crosshair motherboard. Hard to get excited about a mobo you'll say but this one is a thing of beauty. Things have evolved quite a bit in the last 6 years since I was in the market for a new computer. If I had more desk space, I think I'd run that machine on top of it with the side panel removed just to look at the beautiful lights on that board... ;-)

This motherboard is also a technological marvel with an LCD at the back that gives you error messages and codes as well as the status of the PC in human readable form. It's also a tweaker's and overclocker's delight. If you are in the market for a new machine and you thought of getting an AMD processor, take a hard look at that motherboard. The reviews I have read were all overwhelmingly positive. Follow the link above and look at the specs. You'll want one too. To complement the motherboard and processor, I had them put 4 Gb of Kingston 800MHz DDR2 Ram on it. No more problems running Dreamweaver, Fireworks, Studiometry, Skype and other apps at the same time... And my music software will run so much smoother.

Storage is handled by two Seagate Barracuda SATA 7200 hard drives, the system one is a 250 Gb NCQ and the other is a 500 Gb (media, backup, data, etc).

Next and following a dicussion of my needs with the rep, he recommended the NVidia GeForce 8800 GTS 640 Mb video card. I actually got the EVGA version but it's the same card. I haven't run any graphics heavy app or game on the machine yet but the display is absolutely beautiful. I don't play that many games but I'm a huge fan of two series: the Legacy of Kain / Soul Reaver series but especially the Thief series. THose are the most immersive game "worlds" I have experienced and the Thief 1 and II Looking Glass Studios legacy lives on through a large community of fan mission makers and players. My old machine could handle Thief I and II no problem but I really didn't have the specs to run the much newer Thief III Deadly Shadows. Not an issue anymore so I ordered Deadly Shadows this morning... ;-)

Last in the major components, I chose the SoundBlaster X-Fi Elite Pro from Creative. If I only did music I would have bought a dedicated music creation sound card like an M-Audio but since I'll also be gaming and using the PC to watch DVDs for example, I decided on the SoundBlaster. The X-Fi Elite Pro has Digital Analog Converters that are very high quality which rival those in medium range dedicated audio cards, and the break out box is very useful to plug my different instruments into and to control the card itself. I just hope the low latency ASIO driver works well with my music recording and authoring appplication (Sony Acid Pro 6).

But the bottom line is, getting a new powerful computer is so much fun! :-)

Testing Windows Live Writer (2nd try)

I just installed and am now testing a nifty little app called Windows Live Writer which is used to write to your blog through XML-RPC from your computer without the need to log into your blog's admin area.

Among the benefits of using such an app, you can save post drafts locally and have access to more sophisticated formatting options. I already had that since I was using FCKEditor in my blog's admin area but Live Writer also adds spell checking which I didn't have. In any case, FCKEditor did not work in Opera 9.2 which is my favorite browser these days (Firefox is just too slow on my aging machine but that will change soon... more on that later ;-)

Live Writer is just a cool little lightweight app that I can leave open for hours without my Web session timing out and which can automatically save drafts at timed intervals like most text editors can do.

For fellow BlogCFC users, you can look at this post from Ray Camden which links to this post from Dan Vega to get a step by step of how to set Live Writer for BlogCFC.

Update: Just an addition to test Live Writer's ability to update an existing blog post.

Update 2: Updating seems to be working fine...

Host Switching Completed, Testing Blog

I completed the host switching I mentioned in my last post sometime last week and this is my first blog post since then. I'm very happy with my new host so far and all the errors with the blog I was getting have now stopped. I'm now testing the posting, pinging and I am also testing a new app called WIndows Live Writer that is still in beta with which I can post to this blog from my computer without needing to log into the admin area of the blog.

Anyway, this post is just a test and you can ignore it.

Just Switched Host... Again

Last week I started the process of moving 3 sites to a new hosting company including this one, my business site (webfocusdesign.com) and a client site. My business site was registered at Network Solutions and I also switched registrar for that one and, of course, they made the whole process take forever... I'm glad to be rid of them completely now.

While the thew new Name Servers (DNS) propagate, reaching me via email may be difficult and messages may bounce. If you need to reach me urgently use my ISP email which is "stephberg (at) videotron (dot) ca".

The main reason I moved the sites was because my prior host was unable to solve the many database connectivity issues I was having with this blog. They had me move it to MySQL from Access which was definitely a good thing but the timeout errors did not stop and at some point last week they got worse than ever (I get an email everytime there is any kind of error with the blog). So, I'd had it and decided to move and I now pay a lot less than before for more features and better service.

Also and most importantly, you now should see little to no ColdFusion errors when visiting this site and navigating the blog.

Going Forward with this Blog...

Anyway, enough of the criticism for now. I really didn't mean for my first comments on CS3 to be critical but this suites packaging issue has been bothering many people and I wanted to address it.

I'll soon post more about the new apps in CS3 themselves and explain why I think this is one of the best upgrades ever for many of the applications. As for Fireworks specifically, a lot of groundwork has been done in terms of integration that will pay off in the future, but the Fireworks team has managed to deliver very compelling new functionality as well. More on that later.

Also, you have probably noticed that the look of pixellog has gone back to normal. As I expected, going from the default BlogCFC template to the pixelyzed.com look has been far easier than doing the same with BlogFusion had been.  I really have to give kudos to Ray Camden for the incredible work he has done on BlogCFC since the 3.x version. I also updated the software from version 5.6 to 5.7 yesterday and the process was quite easy. I'm very happy I have switched back.

In the next few weeks you may encounter errors when accessing pixellog as I work on moving it from an Access database to MySQL. I've struggled quite a bit with this so far but I'm working with my hosting company to resolve what are probably my errors. I'm usually good with the technical side of Web design but this MySQL thing has not been easy for me so far...

So, see you later to dicuss Fireworks CS3 and other CS3 apps!

I'm back!

It's been a long time since I posted here. I mean a long time even for me ;-) If you read this soon after it was posted you'll see that I have gone back to bloging using Ray Camden's BlogCFC and the layout of the blog is BlogCFC's default skin. I wanted to wait until I re-skined it before switching but I was starting to have all sorts of problems with BlogFusion (the blog software I was using before) and I needed to switch ASAP. In the next little while I will gradually give pixellog the same look as thge rest of the site. I'll also post again later to explain why I gave up on BlogFusion and went back to BlogCFC.

Anyway, going back to my not posting in a long time, the last year has been very crazy for us here (more on that later as well) and it left me little time for posting. But it was not just that. I used to think that if I didn't have something really important or useful to say then I shouldn't post at all. I missed out on on sharing many discoveries and things I have learned in recent months that could have been of interest to the like minded people who come to this site. I have the intention to post more frequently from now on and live up to my original goal of making this site a vehicle for self expression but also an experimental ground and a way to share my experience.

I came to the realization that I had not found my "voice" yet... that unique style or tone that makes one's writing interesting to its readers and have them coming back for more. I read several blogs because I like the particular blogger's take on a variety of subjects. They have helped me broaden my outlook and I want to find a similar "voice". I already have a style that is my own but I was pusposefully limiting the kind of things I wrote about here. This means there may be more posts of a somewhat personal nature in the future and more stuff about things not related to working the Web. But there will be more of that too of course. Spring is out in full force up here and I feel as good as the weather looks outside and I want to share that energy with you all...

Back to the Fold!

Well, it's been quite a while since I've posted here... it's been a very long, busy summer and fall so far. On top of all my usual work (and more time spent playing music and recording ideas), we've ben doing a lot of work on the house and more is coming.

A lot of it was long tedious work (re-doing major plumbing in a 4 feet high, sand floored basement), changing our bathtub and walls after discovering the old tile had been leaking for a long time, causing some rotting and forcing us to redo some of the floor and wall bottom. All that led to redoing the entire bathroom... New (gorgeous) tile floor is down, new bathtub and walls are installed and looking great, drywall has been replaced where we removed the old white tile on the walls. The toilet was changed too. We still need to install the new sink and vanity and paint after the drywall compound is done (we're having that one part done as it is hard, messy, precision work better handled by a pro). This should be finished this weekend.

Later this month we're moving outside to redo the exterior wall siding in gorgeous wood (it's old white aluminum siding now) as well as add insulation. After that is done there won't be an area of the house we haven't touched either for major or minor work in the 8 years we've live here but it is worth it... We love our home and plan to live there a long time so we're taking care of it.

In the days to come I'll try to fill you out on my current and coming projects.

Apologies and a bit of news

Just a quick post to apologize for my slacking and the lack of activity on the site in recent weeks. I have been very busy with other things and didn't have time to finish the articles and tutorials I have started not to finalize the formatting of the blog. If you look at an individual entry you'll see that the comments part at the bottom still looks all wrong. I should fix that soon. I also plan to finalize my "Why Choose Fireworks" article this weekend and have it posted.

I've also received a phone call from the French Canadian chapter of a well known international activist organization and I have been asked (through my company, Webfocus Design) to send in a proposal for the redesign of their Web site. I have until the 23rd of December to send it in so that's gonna keep me busy as well... wish me luck! :-)

First Official Post

At long last I decided to make this site live and post my first official blog post. I wanted to take this opportunity to explain what I want to do with this blog and the rest of the site but the new of Macromedia's acquisition pretty much rocked my world yesterday morning and that's all I fee like talking about at this time...

Like most people who were discussing the news in Macromedia user forums and mailing lists, my first reaction to the news was one of shock then of fear of loosing two of my most used applications in the Studio: Fireworks and FreeHand. Since both of those apps are in direct competition with Adobe products I'm really afraid that they'll be killed. Even if they are not they may be kept only to die on the vine like HomeSite has been doing since the Allaire acquisition by Macromedia a few years ago.

The other thing that might happen and a hot topic of discussion amongst Macromedia users today is the possibility of merging Fireworks or FreeHand or both into existing Adobe products (Photoshop or ImageReady for Fireworks and Illustrator for FreeHand). I guess the future looks bleakest for FreeHand at this point but today, I don't have much hope for Fireworks either and it is probably the most important Macromedia application in my workflow.

I guess that Dreamweaver is not immune to either being merged with GoLive or receiving a sort of GoLive treatment down the line and this is a scary though for me as well. The reason is that GoLive may be an intuitive tool to purely visual thinking designers who are used to work in print apps but Web design requires a very different approach that GoLive is very ill suited to support. Dreamweaver is by far the superior product here as it was designed by a company that truly "gets" the Web as a medium.

I know that it is way to early to speculate about anything at this point and some other long time Macromedia users are able to keep a cooler head that me today but I can't help but feel apprehensive about the future of the tools of my craft after this transaction is completed and decisions about specific products are made. We'll just have to wait and see but it happens that I hate waiting... ;-)

Later this week I'll post the "first" post I intended to write tonight and we'll see where this adventure takes me.

BlogCFC was created by Raymond Camden. This blog is running version 5.9.1.