Would you open the door to this dodgy-looking character?
This is iPhoneIPCamera being used as a door viewer / security camera - it's close to being ready for release.
I'm thinking of giving the App Store's 'Test Flight' a whirl. If you're interested in being a tester, please email or pm me your email address (Test Flight only caters for iOS8, although the final release will work on earlier systems.)
Wednesday, 31 December 2014
Saturday, 27 December 2014
New Year offer, Scrutiny 50%
Flagship application, Scrutiny, suite of webmaster tools, is used by larger organisations and individuals alike. (Read more about Scrutiny here) It seems fair to give the smaller businesses the opportunity to buy at a more affordable price.
Why not download now and take advantage of the free and unrestricted trial? Any questions - ask Ash: ashley@peacockmedia.co.uk
Sunday, 7 December 2014
Scripting to create effects with your Hue / LIFX bulbs
This tutorial uses Hue-topia (for Philips Hue bulbs) or LIFXstyle (for LIFX bulbs)
It also uses Applescript. Code is provided below (which you'll be able to modify and develop) and you'll need Applescript Editor which you'll find on your Mac.
This previous article explained how to send a command to switch to a named preset. As from version 1.4 of LIFXstyle and v1.8.1 of Hue-topia it's also possible to read and set the state of individual bulbs or groups (on/off, hue, brightness, whiteness) from a script.
Some approximate colour values:
Red: 0
Green: 85
Blue: 170
Yellow: 32
Orange: 20
Purple: 200
It also uses Applescript. Code is provided below (which you'll be able to modify and develop) and you'll need Applescript Editor which you'll find on your Mac.
This previous article explained how to send a command to switch to a named preset. As from version 1.4 of LIFXstyle and v1.8.1 of Hue-topia it's also possible to read and set the state of individual bulbs or groups (on/off, hue, brightness, whiteness) from a script.
Accessing a bulb / group
To get started, type:
tell application "LIFXStyle"# or tell application "Hue-topia"get properties of first lampend tell
The result should be something like:
{class:lamp, hue:39, whiteness:225, brightness:225, title:"Living A", identity:"d073d500cc1c", state:true}
You can access a bulb / group by its name or ID. We're using name here (actually called 'title' when scripting). But of course you can easily change this, so to futureproof your script, you might like to use the ID instead (actually called 'identity' when scripting). You can find the identity of a bulb by using the example above.
To access a particular bulb, use something like:
properties of first lamp whose title is "Living A"
(Obviously one of my lamps is called 'Living A' - change that for the name of one of your lamps)
lamp is one of your lamps
group is one of your groups
lamps gets you a collection containing all of your lamps
groups gets you a collection containing all of your groups
Accessing individual bulbs within a group
(since HT v1.8.2 and LS v1.4.1) group contains lamps so:
set collectionOfLamps to a reference to lamps of (first group whose title is "AllBarSecurity")
set brightness of first item of collectionOfLamps to 80
Changing the colour of a bulb
This example switches the bulb on and sets the colour to red:
set state of first lamp whose title is "Living A" to 1set hue of first lamp whose title is "Living A" to 0 # zero is redset whiteness of first lamp whose title is "Living A" to 0
Note a lamp must be on when you send hue, whiteness or brightness, otherwise the instruction will have no effect. That's just the way the bulbs work.
Note also that the state being off isn't the same thing as the brightness being 0 (LIFX bulbs fade right down to nothing with the state still set to on. Hue bulbs' minimum brightness is still quite a bit of light.)
whiteness, brightness and hue can be an integer between 0 and 255. state is a boolean so can be true/false or 0/1
Some approximate colour values:
Red: 0
Green: 85
Blue: 170
Yellow: 32
Orange: 20
Purple: 200
Loops and pauses
All the usual Applescript program flow applies here. The script below will cycle all of your lamps randomly red, green and white. (Perfect for Christmas)
tell application "LIFXStyle"#or tell application "Hue-topia"repeatset n to (number of items in lamps)set i to (random number from 1 to n)set whiteness of lamp i to 0set hue of lamp i to 85 # greendelay 0.5set i to (random number from 1 to n)set whiteness of lamp i to 0set hue of lamp i to 0 # reddelay 0.5set i to (random number from 1 to n)set whiteness of lamp i to 255 # whitedelay 0.5#press cmd . to stopend repeatend tell
This script cycles a given lamp through the whole colour spectrum:
tell application "LIFXStyle"# or tell application "Hue-topia"repeatrepeat with hueValue from 0 to 255set (hue of first lamp whose title is "Living A") to hueValuedelay 0.1end repeatend repeatend tell
For more documentation see AppleScript Editor's File > Open Dictionary... (choose LIFXstyle or Hue-topia)
If you write a cool script, do share.
If you write a cool script, do share.
Thursday, 4 December 2014
Website content audit using Scrutiny
Scrutiny can crawl very large sites and reports a lot of information about your pages and the internal and external links they contain.
If you don't want to buy Scrutiny or can't run it (eg because you don't use Mac OSX) then why not let us do the work and provide the reports?
You can view some sample files here (in html and csv formats) (download them, don't preview, box.com's previews suck).
For more information, contact Shiela or Ashley at support@peacockmedia.co.uk
If you don't want to buy Scrutiny or can't run it (eg because you don't use Mac OSX) then why not let us do the work and provide the reports?
You can view some sample files here (in html and csv formats) (download them, don't preview, box.com's previews suck).
For more information, contact Shiela or Ashley at support@peacockmedia.co.uk