GeekSugar made MoodMill as their Website of the Day! Here you go:
How are you feeling today? There’s now a new website that will help you track your moods and share them with friends and family so they can be warned when you’re in a less than friendly mood. Moodmill is a social mood management site (ever heard that before?) that will help you stay in touch with your online contacts by creating a log of how you are feeling. (more…)
I present you, for the very first public appereance, moodmill!
Please note that moodmill currently in crash-test version. We apologize for any errors & bugs that might come up.
For bug report, comment & suggestion, kindly post it here. (more…)
We develop moodmill by our ideas & imaginations. However, we are just a small team. We always welcome your critique, comment and suggestion to support the moodmill developing path.
You can post your feedbacks here.
Thank’s
These weeks, we’ve been doing extra work (rushing and lots of late-night works) giving final touch before the moodmill crash-test launching.
I was fixing the whole links for mod_rewrite thingy and building the RSS service before setting-up this blog. Xtin got a little things to do like: optimizing database query, etc. (more…)
moodmill is a social mood management website. The first idea came up in July 2006, because I was always having difficulties knowing what my friends are doing. I wanted to know their mood fast. I also found out that I was very lazy to update blog (2 blog sites had already abandoned). I want a good personal mood management, a log, a quick ‘n easy application for managing and sharing my short logs.
The research and development continued. The mock-up was done in October 2006. After hair-pulling domain search phase (nearly 1 month), the project officially named: moodmill.
Due to the lacking of my spare time, the project was abandoned for nearly 3 months. Just the moment before I decided to launch it, Twitter launched! I was thinking that moodmill really needed more developers, especially a decent designer and a programmer. The condition was: 80% code, 0% design.
The search for a team didn’t go quite well. One local ex-office mate designer said no, another ex-office mate designer never gave an answer. And one well respected Australian designer said yes but he never worked it out eventually.
Finally, when Christine (a.k.a xtin) joined the moodmill wagon, I decided to stop searching for any designer. We’ve decided that she will focus on the code and I’ll take care of the design & marketing.
Xtin is my ex-office mate programmer. We knew each other very well when we were working as a team in Cystage.
So here we are, ready to begin our dream.
Cheers,
Felix.
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