I embrace innovation from concept to reality – much of my time has been spent in observation and reflection (where possible, away from urban din). I take the ideas that emerge and synthesise, seeking holistic solutions. Hence, I cover the full spectrum of theory and practice in digital technologies, from writing and presenting scholarly articles and papers in many subject disciplines to writing coding and maintaining systems. I have written a great variety of software, especially whilst employed at Oxford University Computing Services (as was).
Here are a few highlights. For details, pleased browse the portfolio.
March 2000
Open Source Wisdom
I delivered a paper, Open Sources: A Higher Consciousness in Software Development, at To Catch the Bird of Heaven: A conference on ‘wisdom’, which took place 27-29 March 2000, at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge. I’ve kept a brief programme summary.
4 November 2001
Public Release of NetWedit
I released NetWedit with GPL license, possibly the world’s first cross-platform JavaScript-powered rich text editor, deployed in a teaching-based CMS, where Oxford’s Theology Faculty could maintain their own profiles. Read more in Adventures in the Read/Write Web.
2002
Editing XML with XSLT
The Interactive Audio
Comprehension Materials (IACM)
project at Oxford University’s
Faculty of Medieval and Modern
Languages enabled academics to
generate learning paths,
including audio segments, with
all data stored in XML.
I devised a means
of editing XML using XSLT,
based on correctness preserving
transformations; changes to
specific nodes were targeted
with XPATH. Beyond the
technical achievement there are
significant reflections
on
structure and flow.
2002-2003
CD2Go – A static web production system
I conceived and implemented an extension of a CGI/Perl website to a static web production system, preserving all the interactive multimedia content. Inherently secure, the content remains online, though browsers no long support most interactive functions. The same system was used for a Japanese site.
09/2004 – 04/2005
RAMBLE project
As Principle Investigator of this ostensibly technical project at Oxford, showcasing service-oriented architecture (SOA) between personal learning spaces and institutional LMS, I uncovered insights into the conditions that foster deeper learning, as intimated in an article for Ariadne.
December 2010
New Architecture for Social Networking Online
I gave my first paper on a multi-dimensional relationship model based on the Buddha’s teachings, the foundations for the Sigala project. This was in the social sciences track at the 3rd World Conference on Buddhism and Science at Mahidol University, Thailand.
2019-2021
A Vision for the History of Science Museum
On a different note, I have applied a holistic approach to envisioning how a museum can be a hub for a scientific ecosystem with proper accountability across the University. The blog post illustrates the ongoing process of refinement to my ideas.
2021
Offline Search for WordPress
Twenty years after starting
work on CD2Go, I returned to
the problem of searching static
snapshots of CMS, now updated
to WordPress. After some
radical changes to an existing
plugin, I now have a solution
(which you can try out by
downloading the Sigala research
site.)
Tags
blue skies, Buddhist ethics, history of science, IACM, mobile, multimedia, NetWedit, open source, originality, RAMBLE, rich text editors, Sigala, XML, XSLT
This page was published on 9 May 2022 and last updated on April 16, 2024<!-- by Paul-->.