There’s a number of file sharing websites available for sending files which are too large to email, but the latest offering shines high above the rest…
Ge.tt
It’s free to use with no account required (although there is a signup option), and here’s why it’s brilliant.
- Share size is unlimited.
- Multiple files can be added to one (short) url.
- Files can be previewed before downloading. There’s even a little audio player available when sharing audio files!
- Real-time stats on views and downloads
- Drag and drop files onto the browser to instantly start sharing (firefox, chrome, safari)
- Share the url instantly. No need to wait until the file is fully uploaded. (share via facebook, twitter and email too)
- Signup for an account to keep a history of your shares
It’s still in its beta stage and there are a couple of little bugs which I’ve found but after a few tweets and emails with the developers we managed to fix it.
Sign up and try it now at http://ge.tt
The task was to create a condensed version of the chillitickets.com website which is suitable to be viewed across all the popular smart phone platforms.

Portsmouth Guildhall HDR
This weekend I spent the day shooting a wedding on the south coast. We started with the wedding ceremony in Southampton followed by the reception at impressive Portsmouth Guildhall.
The venue was crying out to be photographed so I decided to test out my new Fisheye lens and some of the new features of Photoshop CS5 at the same time.
The final result makes use of the new HDR processing and the Content Aware fill (to get rid of all the clutter in the shot)
Check out more of my photos on my Flickr page
Recently I posted about some of the new features of HTML5 and CSS3 as showcased over at apple.com. While digging a bit deaper into what HTML5 can do I came across http://www.html5test.com which gives your web browser a score out of 300 depending on how many HTML5 features it supports.
I thought I’d give it a go on all the browsers I have installed on my PC to see which is really the best.
Came across this cool infographic showing a cross section of the Earth from 36,000 ft above and below sea level
Photoshop CS5 removes one of its most usefull shortcuts. Double-Click on the application background to bring up the Open dialogue
Click the image above to see how the latest version of Apple’s Safari web browser, new Macs, and new Apple mobile devices all support the capabilities of HTML5, CSS3, and JavaScript. Not all browsers offer this support. But soon other modern browsers will take advantage of these same web standards — and the amazing things they enable web designers to do.
Safari is required to view these demos.






