Archive for June, 2008
Monday lunch feeding on RSS
Many thanks Mr Mullenweg. Now I know TopGear have moved to WordPress and have some more homework to do re 2008′s design trends.
And Mr Stobist — thanks for introducing me to the work of a great modern photographer (modern with a small M) and reintroducing me to Wired.
Finally some ornamental inspiration via BrandSpankingNew.
Back to work…
Ken burns effect slideshows in Flash for the web
Posted by admin in Web design & development on June 11, 2008
Finding a Flash slideshow generator to use for a fancy site we’re working on…
The Daddy
Monoslideshow. Fully featured and customisable Flash slideshow generator. The best bet for us cheap ass developers. A bargain at $19.95.
The also-rans
Slideroll. Free Flickr/Youtube-like web2 thingamabob. Pro version for $35pa.
Amara Photo Animation Software. PC only photo panorama slideshow and animation Flash software. $49.
Setting up Drupal 5.7 on Powweb
Posted by admin in Technology, Web design & development on June 10, 2008
- Upload Drupal files
- Create MySQL database using phpMyAdmin
- Goto CGI and Scripted Language Support:
- Update PHP to version 5.
- Create php.ini file click edit and the save — no actual changes needed
- Goto new site where Drupal will now kick-in its instal routine and ask for MySQL user, database, password and host (in this case xxxxxxxxx.powwebmysql.com)
Which CMS?
Posted by admin in CMS, Web design & development on June 10, 2008
Right now trying to develop a web magazine. Also bearing in mind the need to be able to bash out other smaller websites with minimum hassle. Solution should allow Mac OS X and web based editing.
Drupal is proving to be a pain in my backside – at version 6.x. Too many stumbling blocks. Excuse the pun*. TinyMCE doesn’t want too play. Will continue the study – but will start running another test install of Drupal 5.x.
WordPress – not sure if I’ll be pushing it too hard for the magazine site
RapidWeaver – definitely not for the magazine site – but could be a goer for the smaller sites – if we can get it to work with includes and if the WebYep CMS plugin for RapidWeaver does what it says on the tin…
*Drupal is a modular CMS built on the priciple of “Blocks”. The modules I’ve tried so far have not been… cooperative.
Clean, formatting-free XHTML from Word for posting into blogs and CMSs?
Posted by admin in Technology, Web design & development on June 5, 2008
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Update 2
Thanks to this great list of open-source apps for Mac OS X there another option to look at: AbiWord. I’ve not tried it yet but it looks set to beat my non-starting attempts with OpenOffice (office Mac is PowerPC without X11). Even better – it seems to state that it can do the job. TBC.
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Update
What a difference a day makes
Despite yesterday’s test proving otherwise – today it seems that I can use Paste Special in to GoLive and keep all formatting. Today I can “Paste As” and chose “Cleared HTML (Removes exotic Markup)” over the limited “HTML” option which was all I could do yesterday. Just a few extra non-breaking spaces and p tags for the line breaks – but otherwise perfect unicode for the web.
I think that I may have not been pasting directly from word. Not sure. Anyway this is now the best solution for when I’m about to help update content.
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[Posted to the Microsoft Word forum here]
I’ve been searching for a while now and have found no simple solution for this issue. I’m working to set up a CMS (Drupal in this case) and want to find a way to enable the writers – using Word 2004 – to upload their own content, properly styled in clean XHTML.
I want to avoid any extra steps as more steps leads to more chances for errors to creep in. The only formatting needed is semantic content; just HTML body content without extraneous Word Roundtrip information or formatting at all as all design should be defined by using CSS stylesheets.
I just want the basic stuff i.e. h1-h6 headings (defined at the authoring stage, using Word’s standard styles), bold, italics and quality typography (all accents, “curly” quotes and em-dashes) properly encoded into human readable XHTML entities (ie “&” becomes “&”).
I’m worried that I’m going to have to compromise on quality or make, what to my mind should be basic functionality, a laborious and error-prone process…
Does anybody have a solution? Is this doable by hacking/editing the “Word Conversion Options” or “com.microsoft.Word.prefs.plist” files?
[The basic structure: headings and paragraphs; bold; italics and accents (as unicode) can be handled by the CMS's interface thanks to TinyMCE and its Paste From Word function - but this cannot handle typographic features such as proper curly quotes and em-dashes.]
Clean URLs for Drupal in a subfolder
Posted by admin in Web design & development on June 4, 2008
I couldn’t get Drupal to generate Clean URLs yesterday despite following all the steps. Couldn’t work out why my test install wouldn’t do this simple trick when this blog already has a mod_rewrite (RewriteEngine) activated – and the Drupal test site in question is located in a subfolder of this blog.
Seems the answer is simply that there needs to be another .htaccess file in the Drupal install directory — one that ships with the package but was not uploaded by Transmit if “view invisibles” is off. Transit is not my favourite FTP client tool right now. Not just for this – but its also very prone to crashing in normal use. Must confirm this was due to Transmit and caused by dragging the instal folder from the Finder into to the remote directory.
“People I shot”
The great work of others pt1

The great work of Jim Schomberg. Found thanks to Steve Smith’s Tumblelog.