Frazz

I’m not sure how I missed finding it until now, but in the last couple of hours I’ve become a huge fan of Jef Mallett’s Frazz. It’s more than a little similar to Bill Watterson’s late, lamented Calvin and Hobbes, to the point where there are conspiracy theorists that think Mallett and Watterson are the same person. (They’re not… or is that just what they want you to think?)

There don’t appear to be any Frazz collections available or in the works, so for now there’s only a month’s worth of previous strips to peruse. Still, it’s 30 days of one of the better comic strips available today, and one I hope stays around for a long time.

Mallett and Frazz are both into triathlon competition. John informs me that We Tri-Deads dig Frazz.

MovableWordTypePress

I’ve been considering switching weblogging software recently. MovableType 2.6 has been good enough for a while, but it’s stagnated, even with the release of version 3.0. (There’s also the whole freedom issue, although that’s been less of a factor in my thinking.)

I’m most interested in WordPress. However, it relies completely on PHP, which I have an extreme (and perhaps undeserved) dislike for. Call me crazy (you’re crazy!) but I prefer to not introduce a lot of CPU, RAM, network and database overhead just to serve what is, 99.9% of the time, static content; I’m also not a big fan of the single point of failure. Disk space is cheap: my web hosting provider has increased the allocation given to every user by over 150% since I signed up less than a year ago. And I’ve never had an HTML-based site go completely offline due to a typo in a template; sure, comment posting or entry searching may not work for a bit, but the content of the site still exists.

What I’d really like is a form of funky caching, where pages are generated only when they (or their associated resources) change. A request to view any page would retrieve the HTML source directly from disk, not go through the page generator or even a script that redirects to the page.

So, pending a change of heart, I’m going to stay with MovableType 2.6. To slightly paraphrase Weird Al Yankovic,

You’re sort of everything I ever wanted
You’re not perfect, but I love you anyhow
You’re the software that I always dreamed of
Well, not really, but you’re good enough for now.

Damn lies

Via Rebecca Blood is a chart from the U.S Department of Energy that shows, clearly, that recent gas prices are the cheapest they’ve ever been. I’d like to see companion charts that show the amount of fuel used by cars over the same period.

In a similar vein, the Internet Movie Database seems to have removed their lists of all-time highest-grossing movies when adjusted for inflation and average ticket price, although they still have their unadjusted lists (which favour newer movies). I’ve found a similar list at Rave Central, but I’m curious why IMDb dropped theirs. Pressure from Hollywood, perhaps?