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Meta
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…
How does your site in Safari?
How does your site in Safari? Service: Through the eyes of a Mac browser. [via Lounge72]
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!
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.
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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HausFrau deck of cards: Heiße Öfen
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?
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] P� 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
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
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.
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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ReUSEIT! Contest Entries now on display
Remaindered
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So what blogger team are you on?
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: Leverpostej — A-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…
PlayDamage
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