My name is Michael Nolan and I started working at Edge Hill in September 2006 on a six month contract as the Web Services Project Officer, initially working on the Education Partnership website and latterly the Hi applicant community. Since then I have worked as Web Applications Project Manager and was recently appointed Head of Web Services.
I have been programming with PHP for seven years and currently prefer to develop using symfony, a web application framework. Current projects within the development team include developing GO, this blog system and the eProspectus.
6 responses to “Michael Nolan”
Hi Mike, I want to drop you a line about the Jabber stuff we talked about at IWMW2007 – say hello on [email protected]
[…] have guessed, was in London. It lasted one day and was scheduled to run from 9:30 until 17:00. As Mike and I were driving this meant that our conference day started at about 4:30 with Mike picking me up […]
[…] by colourising the code. I was writing a blog at work and wanted submit some colourised code. Mike suggested the geshi plugin. So I’m trying it here first and if it works (which it does), […]
[…] having been here about 6 months I have finally succumbed to the pressure from my boss to make a blog post. Normally my ideas for such posts would be large and grand, take too long to […]
[…] wasn’t until today that Mike recommended that I “canonically link” Rose Theatre event pages because they are almost […]
Dear Mike,
Thank you for providing information that helped drive my photography project earlier this year as part of my degree. I refer to your blog posts about the mystery town of Argleton. I thought you’d may like to see the final piece.
http://www.tomjohnrose.com/the-trap-collection/
The link above takes you to my website where you can see my project, titled ‘The Trap Collection’ (scroll down to see the final exhibition piece and statement).
I got a cartographic company onboard who were willing to reveal some of the trap streets they use in their maps. I visited their supposed locations and documented what I found, the question in mind being “can the truthful medium of photography document places that don’t actually exist?”. I presented the photographs in a museum style cabinet to deceptively reiterate a certain authority onto the images.
Please feel free to send this around to any colleagues or peers who would find this interesting. I would happily welcome any feedback.
Thank you for your unknowing help, it was much appreciated!
Regards,
Tom John Rose
Portfolio: http://www.tomjohnrose.com
Blog: tomjohnrose.wordpress.com
Twitter: @tomjohnrose