Quoth the geek

[7:35:07 PM] Josh Street says: hey :( you’re offline in face­book :(
[7:35:20 PM] Tori says: sorry inter­net explorer annoys me
[7:35:32 PM] Tori says: im online in opera but stu­pid fb chat doesnt work
[7:35:58 PM] Tori says: (blush)
[7:36:07 PM] Tori says: theyre gonan fix it tho right?
[7:36:17 PM] Tori says: can i send them an email or some­thing?
[7:36:38 PM] Tori says: and what is flock!?

We are com­menc­ing an incred­i­ble journey.

Multiple IE with IE7 considered harmful

Please do not do this.

Espe­cially do not do this and say that ‘it works fine for us’ to vis­it­ing developers!

I’m cur­rently installing a won­der­ful free XPSP2 image with IE6 from the lovely folks at Microsoft’s IEBlog that actu­ally works when test­ing web­pages for legacy browsers. Please do this instead!

# by Josh on September 24th, 2007 Tags: ,
| No Comments »

Equal height non-faux columns with background images

I’ve had a fairly painful day exper­i­ment­ing with the One True Lay­out Equal Height Col­umn tech­nique in con­junc­tion with a design that requires lots of rounded cor­ners in all the wrong places (no, design will not yield to CSS!) and put out a call for help on the WSG mail­ing list for the first time in a while.

That place is magic. Gun­laug Sør­tun came back in under six hours with another tech­nique I hadn’t even heard of that looks pretty good, the com­pan­ion columns method. He also has a page ded­i­cated to CSS table– styled columns, but it looks like it could involve a bit too much browser hack­ing (yes, IE) in order to be worthwhile.

More exper­i­men­ta­tion doubt­less to come.

# by Josh on September 20th, 2007 | No Comments »

Peekaboo IE7

I haven’t had to do any real CSS hack­ing in IE7 just yet, but was nonethe­less sur­prised to dis­cover that that Peek­a­boo bug is still hang­ing around. Thank­fully the old faith­ful height:1%; still instantly resolves it, but… wow. Still lin­ger­ing after so long?!

# by Josh on September 12th, 2007 Tags: , , , , , ,
| No Comments »

Too much nostalgia for a computer

What fol­lows is writ­ten far less well than it deserves, but — iron­i­cally — I’m drown­ing in other work at present. This needed writ­ing sooner than other things did.

Michael’s pulling the plug on the server that this web­site has run on since 2003.

The ‘server’ has changed dra­mat­i­cally in con­sti­tu­tion since it all began way back when, but… wow. An aston­ish­ingly large part of my teenage years. For the longest time, it seemed as though the Inter­net had alto­gether ceased to exist every­time Dale’s con­nec­tion went out. In the early days, we were all run­ning servers on port 1200 to cir­cum­vent ISP restric­tions on port 80. phpBB was the order of the day, run­ning Apache — on a pirated copy of Win­dows 2000 (those were the days in which “legit­mate soft­ware” con­sti­tuted an oxy­moron). Oper­at­ing on an early ADSL link with 64kbps upload, forum emoti­cons were hosted on free web space pro­vided by iiNet in order to con­serve band­width. You laugh now, but the speed boost was incred­i­ble. Every time iiNet dropped out (to future read­ers: that’s what hap­pens when the inter­net goes out for a cou­ple of hours, none of this occa­sional con­nec­tion time-out rub­bish), an irate explana­tory post from mwd­meyer would emerge and life would con­tinue as nor­mal. Until par­ents dis­cov­ered the server run­ning and turned it off again, which would spark an effort to con­ceal yet another com­puter in a room crowded full of equip­ment. About halfway through 2004, they gave up searching.

These were the days (for me) of NE2000 clones pow­er­ing Smoothwall/m0n0wall routers, recy­cling hard­ware, a sub­scrip­tion to Atomic before all the other kids (I bought more geeky mag­a­zines than any­one I know – I think it was that strange meet­ing place of compters, cre­ativ­ity, and cant that I later became com­fort­able with), when GeForce 2’s and Pen­tium 4’s (the first ones with RDRAM that every­one despised) and DDR-supporting Athlons were still zippy. When frame-based redi­rects passed for domain names — .tk, anyone?

Mostly, it was about the forums… but as for per­sonal pub­lish­ing, this was no small resource. My first dynamic web­site was a blog hosted on that server — I don’t think it yet had a name — we all rolled our own web soft­ware in those days (it’s not that long ago). Some of us still do. The first domain name acquired was Dale’s, in March 2004, co-inciding (more or less) with the forums’ first birth­day. Twelve US dol­lars later (Joker.com’s prices still haven’t changed), we were all still using frame-based redi­rects — sta­tic IPs were the stuff of pipe-dreams, and Dynamic DNS, though around, was out­side of the expe­ri­ence of most of us. Steve ran a notoriously-flaky IIS server with real domains and Exchange, but paid about $150 a month for the priv­i­lege: sta­tic IPs being avail­able only on busi­ness grade inter­net connections.

These are mere details. The forums them­selves con­sti­tute an amaz­ing chron­i­cle of the lives of mwd­meyer, ucosty, Sammy, i_am_a_n00bie, Smile:), smKz, n|cktangents, angelicde­ity, baibai, Sphinx^, lud­vikas, and a hand­ful of oth­ers over a fairly tumul­tuous time. There is so much not recorded explic­itly that sur­rounds the nearly 16,000 mes­sages from these eleven users alone. Some has been sup­pressed, other parts for­got­ten, but all of it inex­tri­ca­bly linked together in the momen­tum of time. There are some things about that time which will never be shared with those who weren’t around.

The forums didn’t sur­vive post-school. This shouldn’t be sur­pris­ing, given the amount of research that says this will be the case for any given rela­tion­ships faced with that man­ner of tran­si­tion, but it was still bizarre wit­ness­ing what would have been sev­eral months of time spent on a sin­gle web­site evap­o­rate into (not much). The server moved from Bal­main to Mar­ian Street, even­tu­ally find­ing its way into a rack there. This is where things get hazy for me. I think the last time I saw Michael might’ve been New Years’ Eve 2005/2006… I feel some sense of guilt about that, but recog­nise mutual busy-ness had a role such that nei­ther of us should be blamed alone. I don’t believe that a blame­less “but things changed” is ever suf­fi­cient when talk­ing about close rela­tion­ships. I’m fairly cer­tain my clos­est friend for about two years at school is some­one that I no longer have any­thing to do with, but can’t explain why. And I know that I can’t in any way blame him, because I’m so guilty of fail­ing to keep work­ing on rela­tion­ships myself.

I sup­pose the point of all this is that the com­puter for­mally known as ‘Metro’, now ‘Loki’ (I don’t know how it got that name — Loki to me is an amaz­ing con­trib­u­tor to Linux-based gam­ing, 2000 – 2002 RIP, but it could just as eas­ily have been named after the Norse trick­ster and Odin’s wily accom­plice!) isn’t just the lat­est in a series of bits of elec­tronic gear that some markup and pix­els have been piped off for a cou­ple of years. This is just one step closer to a com­plete clo­sure of a very large chap­ter of my life… and, yeah, that’s incred­i­bly sad.

Please don’t for a minute con­sider this to be my argu­ing that Loki should stay switched on — it’s about some­thing far greater and more per­sonal than a star­tlingly reli­able FreeBSD web server that just hap­pened to host a web­site for free for a long time.

There aren’t too many peo­ple you can make sit in the back of a car on their 18th birth­day, much less who will laugh along with as it happens.

This isn’t an obit­u­ary, just a poor expres­sion of remorse at the (human) dis­con­nec­tion and ‘drifted’ rela­tion­ships of that era. Michael, once all this stu­pid uni crap gets out of the way (maybe after you move again?), I owe you a fairly large drink.

Thankyou.

Microsoft interoperability — Outlook 07, Hotmail, & UTF8 dramas

Out­look is a Microsoft prod­uct. Hot­mail is a Microsoft product.

Outlook 2007 & Hotmail character encoding all stuffed up

These sorts of things really shouldn’t be pos­si­ble in this day and age. Grum­ble grum­ble. I may need to (very reluc­tantly) stop send­ing email in UTF-8. UTF-8 should be manda­tory, seriously.

And that’d be another geeky post. :|

# by Josh on March 10th, 2007 Tags:
| 3 Comments »

Shopify launch OpenID support

Wow… the tim­ing is so bizarre I can barely believe it.

I stum­bled across this post announc­ing sup­port for OpenID on the Pix­el­soup blog of Jad­ed­Pixel, mak­ers of Shopify. I’m not entirely con­vinced this even makes sense here, but what­ever — it’s fascinating.

On the plus side, Shopify appeared to have dis­ap­peared off the face of the planet (in terms of stag­na­tion) for a cou­ple of months there, but their blog at least is alive and kick­ing. Cer­tainly not for con­sump­tion by tomorrow’s audi­ence, but poten­tially good for some e-commerce applications.

There is no Word­Press of online shop soft­ware, which is slightly irri­tat­ing. A great oppor­tu­nity for a very high pro­file open source project: take OsCom­merce and make it user-friendly and gen­er­ally not-crappily-interfaced right out of the box! Word­Press has done a few inno­v­a­tive fea­ture things, but I reckon most of its suc­cess has been built on the grounds that it’s free soft­ware (heck, it wouldn’t exist if it couldn’t have forked B2) and the work they’ve poured into the interface.

I’m post­ing too much geeky stuff. Some­thing non-geeky to come soon, I hope.