Categories
Just Shelley Weblogging

Nudging Burningbird out of the way

Recovered from the Wayback Machine.

Another change I’ve made recently is add my full name to both my syndication feeds and to the weblog pages.

Perhaps I’ll be more careful with what I write, now that my name is so prominently attached to the pages. Or I’ll feel more ownership of what I write, I don’t know. But I want to begin the process of nudging Burningbird to the side; I am no superhero, and don’t need a mask to protect my identity.

Last week I received an email from a weblogger I’ve been reading some time, and I totally blanked on his name – I was so used to thinking of him by his weblog name. In fact, I’ve been doing this too much lately, an unfortunate consequence of using an aggregator such as Bloglines or Feedster.

Now that we’re nameless in aggregators, yet another step away from the person, does this make us a little meaner to each other? Do we hurt each other with more impunity? Dammit, I don’t know the names of half the webloggers I read. That doesn’t seem right.

In fact, I remember someone suggesting a while back that all non-anonymous webloggers attach our names to our syndication feeds, just so we don’t forget who the people are behind the links. That was a good idea and I should have made my ‘name’ change then.

I am Shelley Powers. I write a weblog called “Burningbird”. Now who are you?

Categories
Technology

Stuck battery in new TiBook

Recovered from the Wayback Machine.

I have one of the first runs of the TiBook released in 2001. Yeah, I know – never buy a first anything from Apple.

Anyway, it’s a wonderful computer that puts up with all sorts of abuse. However, I can’t get my battery unstuck. I can get it to the point where it seems to release just a tad, but it’s caught on something that won’t come lose. I gather this was a problem with the early TiBook designs, and they’ve since fixed the design.

Anyone have any suggestions on how I can get the battery out without breaking the laptop? Or sending it in to Apple? If you do, well, I’ll think up some suitable reward to go with my sincere appreciations.

Categories
People

He never met an offer he could refuse

I liked him for the fact that he had no problem with telling Hollywood to stick it.

I liked him for his acting, especially when he was younger.

He defined “Godfather”. But he blew me away with “On the Waterfront” and “The Wild One”.

And he’s finally met an offer he can’t refuse. Rest in peace, Marlon Brando.

Categories
Burningbird

Time to trim

Recovered from the Wayback Machine.

Now that I’ve had fun with CSS and stylesheets, it’s time to cut back on their number.

A dynamic stylesheet is a very effective approach to styling your site, but not if you also combine this with a dynamic stylesheet selector as I do. The reason is that when each page is accessed, all stylesheets are loaded the first time you access the page. For regular visitors, once loaded, static stylesheets should be cached and not loaded again unless they change. Dynamic stylesheets, on the other hand, are always loaded.

Having one dynamic stylesheet isn’t a bother because I’m using a lot more resources just to serve this page, the recent comments, and other functionality.

However, three dynamic stylesheets, two of which access external files, combined with multiple static sheets isn’t thrifty, and I am a thrifty developer.

Now that I’ve had fun with styles, time to cut back. Which styles to drop, though, is an issue.

Question for those with a spare minute: what is your preferred stylesheet at this site, and why? Is anyone using the dynamic stylesheets?

Categories
Burningbird

Setting expectations

My ISP, Hosting Matters made several changes to our accounts on the first without any prior warning.

Yeah, darn them. First, they increased the amount of disk space each customer has, which means that now I’m just going to have to go out and find something to fill all that extra space–such as add back the photos I had to remove when I merged all my old accounts. Then they increased our bandwidth a month so that even if my Flash movies were to take off–ahem–I would have bandwidth…and to spare. Oh, and they actually had the nerve to increase the number of databases for each account, too. I suppose now I’m going to have to use that extra database for some development work, or something useful.

And to make matters worse, when I emailed them to ask what’s up with the accounts, they responded back in five minutes.

Just for that, I’m just going to have to continue being a customer with them. That will teach them.