Doing a Lynddie. Explanation and photos inside.
Dotting Is, crossing Ts
23 August 2004
Also of note: I finished off a few rough edges on this site at the weekend. We’ve now got individual-entries sorted, but also a new About page, and the Archive page now also works correctly. The monthly archives are also done.
In short: we’re just about finished. I got rid of the grey background; it wasn’t doing it for me at all. Black on white. How it should be. Also, if you’ve got Gill Sans installed, it’ll make a very lovely main body copy font.
That’s the decorating done. Now to fill these walls.
brainhacks1
23 August 2004
Fascinating notes on a talk by Matt Webb on his forthcoming “Brain Hacks” book, courtesy of Phil Gyford. Can’t wait to read the whole thing.
Compliant
22 August 2004
Every now and then, as part of my job, I get to work on building websites – either tinkering with what exists, or creating new pages. Sometimes, I even get to work on brand new ones. This week, I’ve begun work on a new site, and rather than tinkering with the old design for another year, we’ve started from the ground-up. In this case, we’ve also gone with a web-standards based design.
And suddenly, I’m into the learning game, starting from scratch again, checking out resources and remembering what tag goes where. This is the kind of thing I love; knowing what result I want but having to remember how to do it, and thus having to research again, and hopefully drill the code deeper into my memory. The site is nearly done; it still needs content and final tinkering, but the tough stuff – basic layout, design choices, usability – is all there. It’s been really satisfying to work on – seeing something come to fruition – and even though I’ve worked with standards-based design before, it was remarkable just how fast it all developed.
This was in part thanks to the Web Developer extension for Mozilla Firefox, which makes life wonderful. Lots of great shortcuts – for turning styles on and off, outlining block-level elements, disabling images, validating code. If you don’t have it, it’s worth getting Firefox for. Easily the most impressive feature is the ability to edit the CSS of a page live in a sidebar whilst the page alters in realtime in the main window.
This feature is what really saved time in development. I sketched out the page with pen and paper first. Then, I worked out just how many div
tags that would require, and marked up dummmy content with the div
s. Then, I loaded the page in firefox, and started writing the stylesheet direct into the sidebar. It thus took very little time to get the draft of the layout created, and then I could further tinker with styles and add nested styles with great ease. I’m really proud of the result, and will probably link to it in due course. It’s a huge saving in terms of download time compared to the previous site. Also, there’s a certain glow to be had when you see the phrase “THIS PAGE IS XHTML 1.0 (TRANSITIONAL) COMPLIANT!”
This site started out as an attempt at compliance; it didn’t last, as everything got a little sloppier as it went on. Hey, at least I started with good intentions, and at least it’s better than not attempting. Perhaps the thing that made me happiest with the new site was the method of development; starting with markup, styling later, and managing always to keep it tidy. It’s the cleanest code, both XHTML and CSS, that I’ve ever produced. I hope the site serves its purpose as well as its code is neat.
cyberduck
22 August 2004
Cyberduck is the best FTP client I’ve ever used for OSX, and I’ve used a fair few. It’s far, far better than Fetch which was giving me no end of grief. It also does SFTP. And it’s free/opensource/worth donating to. And, even though it says it shouldn’t: it works fine on 10.2.8
suckonthis
22 August 2004
I was actually in my MT install whilst I got hit by a spam attack, this time. Only 140-odd. Vaped them all in seconds with MT-Blacklist. Ha! Eat that! (I feel much better about things).
ipodcassette
22 August 2004
iPod versus cassette tape. And there was me, all ready to go buy an iPod.
Funbags. Bags of fun.
18 August 2004
Well, that was a busy weekend. I’ve been helping my best beloved move house, 900 miles in all – though not all of it covered by me – and blimey if it ain’t tiring. It’s also very, very stressful.
It’s also worth it. Slowly but surely, I’m settling into the whole co-habitation thing. I’ve also got lots of new things that give me delight. A radically upgraded kitchen, with more pots, pans, baking trays and a microwave. A DAB radio, which gives me 6Music flavoured happiness. A funny little coffee-table that I’ve discovered I love to sit and work at – the creativity/happiness boost working on this surface gives me is remarkable. Lots more books. Lots more cushions. Lots more comfort, really; the house is busy but not crowded.
Bags of fun, alltold. Nearly finished the sorting and hiding, though wireless cards and Windows ME have been driving me insane. Creative writing, cooking, and coding is only just around the corner. As is an eight-hour bus trip to Scotland…
Aquascribus
05 August 2004
Memo to self: install X11, get Fink, get AquaScribus. (Forget that: it needs 10.3).