Biscarr Framing

January 28th, 2006

Everyone in the entire world (or in DC) should go to Biscarr Fine Art and check out the work there. The best part, you can also get your own art framed there. Say hi to Harry. Tell him Nicholas sent you.

Star Wars + CSS = CSS Specificity Wars

October 7th, 2005

Brilliant and simple (that’s why it’s so brilliant) way of figuring out CSS specificity levels.

You give every id selector (”#whatever”) a value of 100, every class selector (”.whatever”) a value of 10 and every HTML selector (”whatever”) a value of 1. Then you add them all up and hey presto, you have the specificity value.

Add to that the Star Wars reference, and you won’t be able to go to a geek web site for a month without seeing mention of this. Still brilliant, though.

Why Site5.com Web Hosting is the best there is.

September 26th, 2005

At 3:42pm, I submitted a trouble ticket to Site5.com support.

At 3:57pm, I got the following response:

Good afternoon,

I’m sorry you’re facing this roadblock! How frustrating.

I’m transferring your ticket to Beau Henderson, one of our senior engineers. He’s experienced with Fantastico, and expressly requested to help with this issue. Sit tight, and you should be hearing from him momentarily.

If you’re not getting this level of service from your web host, there’s no reason you shouldn’t move your site(s) to Site5. This is by no means the first time they’ve responded to me in minutes. Web hosting is something that should just work. And Site5 has consistently done that for me for years.

And it’s not just simple things that get taken care of in a jiffy. I’ve had seriously complex issues completely resolved wihin minutes and with nary a question from them or need for me to explain more. They just get it.

I have an referral program link that I could use, but I like them so much, I’m not using it for any of the above links. These guys are so good, I want people to move to them just for their own sake. Check out their hosting packages, and you’ll see that in addition to their top-knotch support, they offer some seriously hefty disk space and bandwidth as well.

(If you want to join up with Site5 and you want to throw a few bucks my way in the process, there’s really no harm in that.)

—-

UPDATE: Before I could even finish typing up this post, I got a resolution:

I have had to re-install fantastico on your system which has applied a solution to this issue. Give this a try now and let us know if you encounter any further issues.

Flight of The Conchords: It’s Business Time!

September 24th, 2005

Flight of The Conchords is probably the funniest comedy act I’ve heard in awhile. And they are definitely the funniest folk parody duo I’ve ever heard. I’m not sure if there is a bandwagon on which to jump yet, but if there is I’m ready to go.

I first caught them on HBO’s One Night Stand, and I’ve been in tears ever since.

I’ve also been collecting whatever media I can. So, here’s what I’ve found: Flight of the Conchords Audio/Video.

If you have any mp3s or videos of the fourth most popular folk parody act in New Zealand, send them to me, and I’ll post them. (Also, if any authority figure would like to tell me that me posting these is illegal in any way, I’ll take any of them down that are illegal to post, but I’d have to think that the guys would like it and benefit from the fact that I’m posting these…)

Life hacks from Heloise?

August 19th, 2005

So-called life hacks are starting to smack of the insipid Hints from Heloise. And this excerpt from a “Finding-your-car hacks” post on LifeHacker is up there on the list of most obvious things ever put into print:

Once you start paying attention to where you parked, it soon becomes an easier-to-remember habit.

#1 finding-your-car hack? Remembering where you parked it.

I predict, nay, I hope for a backlash against all these life hacking sites. I don’t know how one would stage a backlash against a slew of web sites, but I hope some enterprising person figures this out and employs these tactics on these bandwidth-wasting, time-sucking (GTD?) sites.

Murphy’s Law: The first time you try out a web-based app (Basecamp, in this case), it’ll go offline for maintenance.

August 18th, 2005

Go up to try out Basecamp for the first time, and it goes down for maintenance five minutes into getting going.

At 11pm EDT. When do they think people work? During the day?

Web apps like Basecamp should never go offline. And if they do, it should be in the middle of the night (say, 4am, since I have to think most of their users are in North America).

Dreamhost Recantation

August 18th, 2005

I feel a bit guilty about my previous post on Dreamhost, and feel that at the very least some more information and clarification is in order.

Dreamhost is rightfully held up as one of the best and most responsive hosts in the industry. Not just out there to make a buck but to provide top-notch service to their customers. They see the value in good hosting and the importance of it to their customers, many of whom rely on them to run their own businesses.

Let me also add that Dreamhost does offer a variety of great and unique services, such as its easy to use list management system, which I wish I had known about before I wrote my own for my company.

They are also to be recognized for thier involvement in civic causes.

My only real gripe about them (since pretty much everything else about them has been positive) is that their control panel is not as easy to use as some others I’ve come across.

So, I apologize to Dreamhost for dragging your name through the mud unnecessarily.

Dreamhost Web Hosting ain’t so dreamy.

August 14th, 2005

I am convinced that the reason why so many bloggers are so gung-ho about Dreamhost Web Hosting is because they have a fairly lucrative referral deal going. Because, in reality, their control panel is an eyesore, and worse, is often confusing. Most of all their concept of users is so varied and confusing, I’m still not sure what my passwords are for the various different users they make you create for each thing (admin, mail, ftp…).

All that said, everyone should use Dreamhost, because I’ll make a bunch of money if you do.

Save less than $1 a year!

August 14th, 2005

I don’t understand it when places offer minuscule discounts on multi-year subscsription purchages. Here are some examples:

Flickr: 1 year = $24.95. 2 years = $47.99. Savings = $1.91 or $0.96/year. Woohoo!

Network Solutions: 1 year = $34.99. 2 years = $29.99. Savings = $5 or $2.50/year. I’m rich.

I would guess that the same principles that say pricing something at $34.99 instead of $35.00 will generate more sales are at work here. Some people aren’t really looking at the actual savings. But still, how does the prospect of saving less than a dollar a year provide an incentive for me to basically double my out-of-pocket expenses right now?

If people are still falling for these Jedi-marketing tricks, I wouldn’t be too quick to jump on the bandwagon that the internet is making smarter consumers.

NetworkSolutions.com (Update: does not at all) Goes Table-less

August 14th, 2005

While “researching” another post, I noticed that Network Solutions has redesigned their site using fancy, table-less, web standards-loving HTML (4.01) and CSS.

Update: Too quick a glance on Sunday morning. So, basically, NS just redesigned. I guess I was too hopeful that a company so central to the web for so many years would embrace the latest in standards-based, table-less coding practices that I saw a bunch of DIV tags and jumped the gun. Sosumi.

Let me also take this opportunity to say that the actual redesign - the look - is really bad. After working at a graphic design and marketing agency for over 7 years has taught me anything, I’d say that this redesign effort started over a year ago when that gradient-laden look was in. And can someone point me to the Art Director who approved and the Junior Designer who implemented the shading on the yellow buttons that are all over the place on this site? Hideous and unreadable, they are.

I will give them props, though, for simplifying the interface on their home page and drastically reducing the number of options presented to the user. A lone bright spot.