RikWare
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Redirect domain names using UrlRewrite.NET

Tuesday, 30 October 2007 16:43 by admin

UrlRewriter.NET is a great tool for url rewriting in .NET. It can even be used to redirect domain names with.

e.g. RikPVR's main address is http://www.rikpvr.com/, but it can also be found at http://www.rikdvr.com/,http://rikdvr.com/ or http://rikpvr.com/ but ideally these should just redirect to the primary address. Using a host condition in UrlRewriter.NET makes this easy:


<if header="HOST" match="^((www.rikdvr.com)|(rikdvr.com)|(rikpvr.com))$">
<redirect name="RikDVR" url="^(.*)$" to="http://www.rikpvr.com$1" />
</if>
Categories:   General
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RikPVR 1.0 Released

Friday, 19 October 2007 12:28 by admin

RikPVR is now available to everyone. After a beta program including testers throughout Australia, the UK and Europe, RikPVR v1.0 has been released.

And to celebrate the release a special introductory price of $30 (Australian) is available till the end of November. This gives you enough time to download the free 30 day trial and still purchase RikPVR at a discounted price.

Head over to http://www.rikpvr.com/ to find out more.

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Herbie Hancock on Wired

Monday, 1 October 2007 12:37 by admin

There's a great interview with Herbie Hancock out on Wired - http://blog.wired.com/music/2007/10/herbie-hancock-.html

Herbie is one of my favourite artists. I can't say I like all of his work, but I like a lot of it... and in many cases I like it a lot! I like looking at jazz legends and picking similarities between myself and then so I can keep deluding myself that one day I'll be able to play something like what I'd like to play (I'm a loooong way off that at the moment). In the case of Herbie I of course pick the fact that he did electrical engineering for awhile, and he obviously did it for a love of technology which led him to his later work as a synth pioneer.

Anyway, the interview's good. One point he makes which is very important for both mussos and tech people is this:

My advice is, don't depend on the technology. 
The music has nothing to do with the technology.
If you're doing music, the music has to come first.
And the technology is a tool for being able to produce
the things that you feel. Not the other way around

This holds for programming too. The point is the end result, not what language or platform you use to get there. Obviously you need to choose the best tools for the job, but ultimately the focus should be on what you're actually trying to do, not insisting on using your favourite tool, or the latest fad.

The other good one is something I've noticed in my own experiences too:

Interviewer: As a young child, you had serious talent 
in the classical area, and a passion for electronics early too,
later double-majoring in music and electrical engineering. My
dad is also a pianist, and he also almost went into engineering
at one point.

Herbie: (laughs) I think there's a relationship: math.
Particularly with jazz, but not necessarily only with jazz,
with classical music too. There's also a sense of exploration
that's involved with science and with music that links them together.
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