Prevn’s samtaler

Prevn’s sam­taler, barske beretninger fra detail­han­de­len. “Jeg elsker at score damer i byen, og jeg er n�sten helt sikker p� at jeg har pr�vet sex”.

Remaindered
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Trackback my ass

Ouch, the miss­ing track­backs were miss­ing for a rea­son. Some­how back in March (!) I must have mis­placed the required TB-data — which explains a lot… And while deal­ing with my own bit of Warnock’s Dilemma I think I should have been able to spot the error myself in the past 6–7 months… Hmm…

Pollas.dk
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Template trouble

As you may or may not have noticed (I guess you are all aggre­ga­tor peo­ple), I’ve been mess­ing around with my design/templates the last cou­ple of days. Live redesigns aren’t really the smartest thing to do, but I’ve done it any­way — and hope to get it all fin­ished within the next week. But Anger­mann just brought to my atten­tion that my track­backs don’t seem to work. I’ll try to get it fixed; if you dis­cover any­thing else that appears to have bro­ken down, please let me know. Thanks. Apolo­gies in advance for any strange test post­ings in the days to come.

Pollas.dk
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CSS: The Underscore Hack

The always fabo­lus Petr Pisar just found out: A very sim­ple and clear way to set CSS prop­er­ties for WinIE only. Superb!

Web Development
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Illustrating “Wrong”

From Gaz­zaniga (ed.): Cog­ni­tive neu­ro­science — the biol­ogy of the mind. Gotta love it…

wrong.jpg

Misc.
2 Comments

How does your site in Safari?

How does your site in Safari? Ser­vice: Through the eyes of a Mac browser. [via Lounge72]

Web Development
3 Comments

Standard compliant XHTML from OpenOffice

Great news: Andreas from web-graphics found the Writer2LaTeX util­ity, that does a great job at con­vert­ing OpenOf­fice doc­u­ments to XHTML 1.0 strict, and wrote a quick­guide on how to get it to work. Nice work, everyone!

Web Development
2 Comments

The proper place for micro content

Jason Kottke’s lat­est redesign is already get­ting quite a lot of com­ments here and there, all of it good stuff — just as the thoughts Jason has him­self behind the whole thing. I’ve thought a bit about content/blog orga­niz­ing before, the point being about the same; why should other bits of con­tent (moblog­ging posts etc.) live some­where else just because of plat­form technology.

At that time I sim­ply put the lat­est moblog images on the top right, added a side­blog just below and kept on going as pre­vi­ously. And while I still con­sider inte­grat­ing my moblog posts in the stan­dard weblog, I actu­ally like the idea of hav­ing my low-threshold stuff kept out of what hope­fully some day will become thought­ful reflec­tions, heavy knowledge-based obser­va­tions etc. (for the time being they’re not really, sorry about that). I do, how­ever, agree that a bet­ter use of cat­e­gories should be able to do the trick, keep­ing the idea of “one blog” alive. So I guess it all comes down to how you define your blog — and the con­tent in it. For now I think it makes good sense seper­at­ing my con­tent as most peo­ple propably like the idea of being able to pick and choose from the three types of con­tent I’ve got going here.

Which leads to my actual point: I’ll put some work into gen­er­at­ing cus­tom XML feeds instead. First of all, it gives total end user con­trol over what and how the con­tent trav­els from here to there with­out doing real cus­tomiz­ing fea­tures (doesn’t really pay off, remem­ber) and I’m pretty sure the reg­u­lar read­ers of my lit­tle weblog are aggre­ga­tor peo­ple, all of them (if not, please leave a “think again, stu­pid geezer”-post in the com­ments). Sec­ondly, if just the weblog is designed right, in most cases I believe the divide of dif­fer­ent types of con­tent gives a bet­ter overview of what is going on. But again, this is true when the dif­fer­ent sec­tions equals dif­fer­ent con­tent. In Kottke’s case I can see it doesn’t which makes his redesign quite cool! No mat­ter what: Respect for exper­i­ment­ing with the for­mat. I’m look­ing for­ward to see­ing what the nice Mov­able­Type / Type­pad (they’ve com­mented Kottke’s post) are up to next. And what every­one else will do.

Blogging
2 Comments

Ruining a surprise

Damn, tveskov just ruined my blog­fo­rum sur­prise. They got the shirt in a store just around the cor­ner from where I live, so I was plan­ning on going FC Stry­hns at the con­fer­ence. Now I see no other way out than build­ing a big card­board cos­tume resem­bling the real thing

Misc.
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The truth about factory farming, Matrix style. Escape THE MEATRIX.

The truth about fac­tory farm­ing, Matrix style. Escape THE MEATRIX.

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HausFrau deck of cards: Heiße Öfen

heisseofen.jpg

Heiße Öfen, das Quar­tett für Fre­unde des gepflegten Karten­spiels und der feinen Kochkunst. Found this in some Berlin shop, my girl­friend bought it, great fun.

Dan­ish note: Findes kon­ceptet ‘bilkort’ i en oversættelse, der yder det danske mod­stykke retfærdighed? Og hvad er det her — ovnkort?

Misc.
3 Comments

McDonald’s anger over McJob entry

BBC NEWS: McDonald’s anger over McJob entry in the lat­est Merriam-Webster’s Col­le­giate Dic­tio­nary. Come on, McDonald’s, you’re under­pay­ing your work­ers, pulling the old Nike “we’re not respon­si­ble for our suppliers”-crap and hon­estly, with all due respect for peo­ple work­ing in the ser­vice indus­try, even if you do

start work­ing at McDonald’s and later get a real job, it’s not necce­sar­ily because of your excel­lent way of run­ning a busi­ness, now is it. Slap in the face? Well, you asked for it. “Low-paying and dead-end work” doesn’t really strike me as being “an inac­cu­rate descrip­tion”. Wanna raise your kids true White Trash™ style? Buy the McDonald’s cash reg­is­ter (via genstart.dk). Want to know how it really is? Read Fast food nation.

Misc.
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[DK] ¯Â¿Â½ internettet er der ingen der ved … at du er overv�gtig og fra Lolland

[DK] ¯Â¿Â½ inter­net­tet er der ingen der ved … at du er overv�gtig og fra Lol­land

Remaindered
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Mark Pilgrim on weblog spam

Mark Pil­grim posts a harsh, but true, com­ment to the whole blog com­ment spam thing. A good sum­mary can be found else­where, but his point is that no one has ever really stopped email and Usenet spam, so despite the com­mon belief that the weblog com­mu­nity is some­thing dif­fer­ent; peo­ple who won’t put up with it and is ready to do some­thing about it, we shouldn’t get our hopes up, espe­cially as spam­mers are doing what they’re doing 24/7 — and doing it for a reason.

Unfor­tu­nately he’s quite right. What he misses though, in my hum­ble opin­ion any­way, is that ordi­nary spam seeks to tar­get the end user — blog com­ment spam (for now any­way) is made to increase Google rank­ings. Which means sev­eral things:

First of all, it means that a sim­ple solu­tions like MT-blacklist works for me as well as for any other “I-don’t-have-a-lot-of-traffic” blog own­ers as we are sim­ply not that inter­est­ing. Even if spam­mers can buy truck­loads of kids for peanuts to man­u­ally pass Tur­ing tests, it has to be bad busi­ness to do so, as minor sites don’t have any real prob­lems delet­ing spam before pages are vis­ited by robots.

And yes, spam­mers are buy­ing more domain names as we speak and host­ing a list (just a small, 3-page list) will even­tu­ally cost loads of money if the whole world are down­load­ing con­stantly, but in the near future there will hope­fully be some sort of cen­tral­ized way of doing this; one reg­is­tra­tion — no spam­ming. I’m well aware of the pit­falls and the big money involved in this, but I’m quite pleased with recent court rul­ings, slowly mov­ing towards tak­ing a stand.

And I wouldn’t write off the weblog com­mu­nity just yet. Email spam is hap­pen­ing, but the com­mu­nity feel­ing has to be just a tad bet­ter than among email users, blog­gers own their own lit­tle plat­forms, hope­fully giv­ing them the advan­tage of exper­i­ment­ing and com­mu­ni­cat­ing. And: If we all just take the time to close com­ments on older posts (it should be easy to imple­ment “if you want the dis­cus­sion re-opened, mail me”), con­sider if we need them on new posts at all and gen­er­ally work on how to do some sort of spam fil­ter with­out mak­ing inter­ac­tion too dif­fi­cult, I sin­cerely hope that we’ll all be able to make it as hard for the spam­mers of the evil empire as pos­si­ble. Some mights say, that peo­ple with bad inten­tions and/or more money always win in the end. I don’t buy it — we’ll always out­num­ber them, it’s just a ques­tion of priorities.

Update: Maybe this approach, found on Slash­dot, is worth a shot?

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3D tube map of London

3D tube map of Lon­don — amaz­ing

Misc.
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just take a picture of the ISBN on the book to comparison shop at Amazon.com right on the screen of their wireless Web browser

Cam­phone killer app? “Just take a pic­ture of the ISBN on the book to com­par­i­son shop at Amazon.com right on the screen of their wire­less Web browser“

Remaindered
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Smartphone joy

Sit­ting in some bus on the Auto­bahn headed for Berlin, I’m quite happy with my Nokia 3650. With GPRS roam­ing I can stay in touch with clients via mail while eat­ing break­fast on the ferry, do blog posts, even use instant mes­sag­ing. Online with a pocket sized device rocks.

Uncategorized
2 Comments

Multiple IE’s in Windows

Chicago Web Design — Insert Title Web Designs posts a solu­tion to a well-known prob­lem: How to run mul­ti­ple IE’s in Win­dows. A lit­tle hack­ing and you’ll be able to run dif­fer­ent ver­sions of IE (oh, how I’ve “missed” that 5.5…now I can actu­ally see for myself what my clients mean when they com­plain…) [via web­graph­ics]

Web Development
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How LEGOs are made…

How LEGOs are made…

Misc.
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ReUSEIT! Contest Entries now on display

ReU­SEIT! Con­test Entries now on display

Remaindered
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Andy C @ Sophonic — 02 October 2003

D&BTV, Andy C @ Sophonic. Dark, aggres­sive set. Baaad intro.

Remaindered
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So what blogger team are you on?

blog_shirts.jpg
To fuel the fire started in dis­cus­sions about the upcom­ing blog­fo­rum (regard­ing A-list blog­gers as opposed to every­one else), I bring to you: Team shirts.

So which one are you? A-list or Lev­er­postej (Dan­ish for liver paté)? Down­load the appro­pri­ate .pdf, get your­self a shirt and some cloth­ing dye and start work­ing. Please note how the A-list shirt fea­tures the very styl­ish Hel­vetica Neue while the Lev­er­postej ver­sion is made using the oh-so-common Times New Roman.

Down­load: Lev­er­postejA-list

If every­thing goes wrong, peo­ple will seat them­selves based on what every­one else is wear­ing, only talk­ing to fel­low team­sters — ide­ally, teams will exchange shirts at the end of the con­fer­ence, just as after a good soc­cer match, where some com­mon under­stand­ing is achieved after­all. The exchange will fea­ture a cer­tain amount of naked­ness as well which is always a good ice breaker…

Per­son­ally, I hope the event (which I look for­ward to a lot) will be about every­thing else.

Update: the real thing is here…

Blogging
3 Comments

PlayDamage

Play­Dam­age: Curt Cloninger’s doing scary stuff; Magritte meets AC/DC (the disco plumber) — and other great stuff. Google Image Search style nav­i­ga­tion included

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Electrohype, Sweden: Mac christmas calender. Classic and Classic II

Elec­tro­hype, Swe­den: Mac Clas­sic Christ­mas Cal­en­der.

Remaindered
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Escher’s “Relativity” in LEGO®

Escher’s “Rel­a­tiv­ity” in LEGO

Remaindered
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