Links

Music

Australian Music Centre

A Slow Rip

Brian Eno Home

Brian Eno on the Web

Chill Out - A Guide To Essential Ambient Music

Epsilon - Ambient Music

Oblique Strategies

Fred Frith

Planet Gong

Ruins-Unofficial Henry Cow Site

Sydney Music Web

The Gyorgy Ligeti Site

Music Bizzare

Joni Mitchell Homepage

Center for World Music Home Page

Indian Classical Music

Zulya's World Music

AudioForums

Vintage Synths

Art

WebMuseum

Internet Fractal Database

Carlson's Fractal Gallery

Snowflake and Snow Crystal Photos

Science

Art, Mathematics and music

AUSLIG - Astronomic Information

Geoscience Australia

Cook's Carnivorous Plants

Fibonacci Numbers, the Golden section and the Golden String

Project Gutenberg

Cassini-Huygens Home

Views of the Solar System

Space Today Online

Web Design

css Zen Garden

Meyerweb

Typographica

Pegaweb Web Design

Principles of Graphic Design

Tutoriality

Fireworks Web Design Tutorial

Creating Killer Websites

PageResource

Ultrashock

An Introduction to PHP

FrontPage In the Classroom

Blogs

We Make Money Not Art

Satan's Laundromat:

Gizmodo

Defective Yeti

Create digital music

Scripty Goddess

My Boyfriend Is a Twat.

Noodle pie

 

 

Get Firefox!

 

Apsara Palace Web School Sukhothai MDP Third Island 3D Art SHHS

Talk to me!

Name
Email
Subject
Message
 

 

 

apsara head

Paul's Apsara Palace

Apsaras were the celestial dancers for the God-Kings of the Khmer civilization who ruled the kingdom of Angkor in present day Cambodia a thousand years ago.

The rulers of Angkor were prolific palace and temple builders, and the walls of their buildings were covered with sculptures and bas-reliefs. Some represented stories from the life of the Buddha, or, on earlier temples, tales from the Ramayana. Some, however were dedicated to the Apsara, the embodiment on Earth of divine beauty.

Despite the depradations of wars and the passing of a thousand seasons, many fine examples of these Apsara sculptures still remain. The images on these pages are from a recent trip of mine to see the ancient splendors of the Kingdom of Angkor.

Take a look...

MDP

MDP stands for Major Design Project. If you happen to be a Year 12 Student doing Design and Technology you'll know just what that means. For the uninitiated it's an open-ended design brief undertaken by senior D&T students as part of their HSC course.

It's got two parts, the project itself, and the folio which describes the journey you undertook to create your design.

I'm doing an MDP because I'm retraining, and learning to teach D&T to the fine and upstanding students in our NSW High Schools. The MDP I'm designing is an e-learning website called “WebSchool”. It's about learning web-design, and it's meant to be a resource for NSW high school teachers.

If you click on the ‘WebSchool' link you can see the actual website. The ‘MDP' link takes you to an online version of the folio describing the process I went through to create the WebSchool site.

I daresay this site might be of academic interest to most people, but to those interested parties—namely my lecturers and fellow retreads (you know who you are)—feel free to drop in and browse.

Take a look...

 

 

 

web school logo

Web school

Web School is a project about web design. It is aimed primarily at High School children (I’m a high school teacher, you see.) In particular it is geared towards the NSW ( Australia) syllabus for yrs 7-12. Anyone interested in learning web design, however, might well find something to their advantage.

There are three sections

  • Getting started—hand coding basic HTML in a text editor
  • Looking good—Using CSS for presentation and layout
  • Code Warrior—A look at scripting with PHP and MySQL

Take a look...

robot man

Third Island

Third Island is a musical duo I have been involved in for some time now, with fellow musician and artist and friend Robert Laurie.

Low tech, no budget, backyard, gritty, grainy, hissy, dirty sounds.
Everything you shouldn't do to a piece of musical equipment to make it squeal, crackle, distort and glitch.
Frenetic explosions of orchestral energy.
Loops and samples of everything from Ligeti to La Boheme.
Etherial landscapes of finely drawn ambient sounds.

Polytonal -- Polyrhythmic

Avant Garde -- Ambient.

What more could you ask for?

Take a look...

buddha face

SHHS

SHHS stands for Smith's Hill High School . This site is a mirror of the one I created while working at Smith's Hill a few weeks ago. If you're a student from that august temple of higher knowledge, you can find all the resources you were using in here. In particular I suggest you revisit the ‘Learning Dreamweaver' site to reinforce the skills you learnt last term. (Note to teachers—the registration forms have been removed. If you need access to them contact me using the form-mail box at the top of the page).

Take a look...

 

 

The Buddhas of Sukhothai

 

Sukhothai (literally Dawn of Happiness), founded in 1238, was the capital of a Thai kingdom in the middle of the 13th century.

In 1238 Sukhothai became the first Thai kingdom. Before, smaller Thai principalities had existed, mostly under Khmer rule.

Thais today view Sukhothai as the cradle of the Thai nation, and see Sukhothai as a kingdom of happiness.

Today the palaces of Sukhothai are in ruins, but giant, serene buddhas still meditate amongst the fallen masonry.

I cheated and made this gallery from a Dreamweaver template. I'll do a proper version with larger images at some stage.

Take a look...

Miscellaneous

This site was created using Dreamweaver MX software. The layout and text styles are formatted using Cascading Style Sheets CSS.

Earlier versions of Internet Explorer (5 and 5.5) and Netscape (pre version 7) may not preview these pages correctly. If you are using one of these browsers you should consider upgrading for a better browsing experience.

I recommend Firefox—a free, open-source browser, which not only has excellent security, but is much better than IE at rendering pages created and laid out using CSS.

If you are thinking of developing pages using CSS you should consider using this browser, or the Opera browser to preview your work, as you can be sure it is rendering correctly.



The Hit List

The websites listed on the links page of this site are my picks for use in teaching the IST course in years seven to ten. This course has a number of option topics for teachers to chose from as a vehicle for teaching the core content.

The option topic, Internet and website development is a huge one, and overlaps the digital media, authoring and multimedia and networking systems options.

Some of these sites have lessons on HTML programming, which can produce functional webpages with only a simple text editor, such as notepad, and an internet browser.

Others are specific to particular programs, such as photoshop, dreamweaver or fireworks. Some contain articles about the nature of the web and issues and emerging trends in internet design and usage.

This site is perhaps a bit redundant now, as most of the links in this site are available in the link list on the left. I have included it for the sake of completeness, and also because the resources listed are some of the best online web development resources around. The site was put together as a study assignment, and so is a tad basic. It was done with the help of a Pegaweb tutorial (See link list, Web Design section).

Take a look...

 

Apsara Palace Web School Sukhothai MDP Third Island Hit List SHHS
seated buddhaorchid
a site to behold