Listed November 20th 2007
This is Studiosity's second version of a web site for Glebe House nursing home in Chaldon, Surrey. The Flash interface communicates with a MySQL database via PHP and XML to pull the text into the page, and this site also features three custom communications icons designed by Studiosity. A full set of these icons will soon be available for download.
Listed September 24th 2007
This secure, members-only repository of some crazy jazz tunes is now complete and fully operational. The Studiosity Audio Player has been updated to suit the site's requirements, and now members can enjoy the music at the click of a mouse. Featuring PHP/MySQL security and javascript-based interaction between the page and the Flash movie, all that now remains is to populate the site with more music. Members of the public can sign up to the service, pending a review of their application.
Listed pre-update
Studiosity's Audio Player is the latest addition to the portfolio. Built using a custom audio player class, and featuring some of the music to which I like to design, the player may well feature in an upcoming music site I'm currently working on. Approximate design time: seven hours.
Listed pre-update
Weird Croydon, Studiosity's flagship site, has been upgraded to version 8. Designed and built in approximately four days, it is an all-Flash XML driven site published for Flash Player 8. The site itself has been online since February 2001 and has grown immensely since that time.
Listed pre-update
A recent addition to the Studiosity portfolio is an all-Flash site for David Ward Films, a Brighton-based film company. David James Ward has won two Emmy awards and continues to push the boundaries of modern film-making in the UK.
Listed pre-update
An idea I had for some years was to create a blog site made entirely in Flash. Studiosity Flash Blog is the result of this idea, a fully operational blog site with auto-update, a contact form and a list of recent entries. It is currently in beta, as there are some further ideas to be put into place.