Recovered from the Wayback Machine. Joel Spolksy just spent several thousand words and accompanying diagrams saying one thing: we did things crappy in the past, and we should continue doing things crappy in the future because crap is easy. Where do I start? This upcoming battle will be presided over by Dean Hachamovitch, the Microsoft veteran currently […]
Having one’s cake
Recovered from the Wayback Machine. I’ve now mapped out a plan for moving forward on the organization of my site, including which tools to use, where and even some preliminary designs. I’ve also played around more with incorporating SVG into a site design, as well as trying out some of the newer CSS3 design attributes. […]
XHTMLate WordPress comments
Recovered from the Wayback Machine. I’ve pulled the plug-in. It cleaned out the comment text, but not the name, URL, and email of the person. The email isn’t an issue, as WP ensures the email is clean; the URL and the name, however, are still an issue. A new comment isn’t the problem; edited comments […]
Recovered from the Wayback Machine. Great idea on the part of Yahoo to begin incorporating semantic web information into its search open platform. How deep the semantics will go, and in how many directions is still TBA, but I’m please to see interest in microformat and more structured semantic data via RDF. I’ll be even more pleased when we […]
Recovered from the Wayback Machine. Anil Dash had a clever and humorous, as well as telling, guide titled, A WordPress 2.5 Upgrade Guide. His advice? As you might know, WordPress 2.5 is about to be released, and we wanted to encourage WordPress users to upgrade. To Movable Type. I wasn’t even aware that a 2.5 upgrade […]
